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| Sweet and sour carp |
As an important
component of Chinese culinary art, Shandong cuisine, also known as Lu Cai
for short, boasts a long history and far-reaching impact. Shandong cuisine
can be traced back to the Spring and Autumn Period (770-221BC). It was quickly
developed in the South and North Dynasty (960-1279), and was recognized as an
important style of cooking in the Qing Dynasty (1644-1911). Shangdong cuisine is
representative of northern China's cooking and its technique has been widely
absorbed in northeast China.
Shandong is a large peninsula surrounded by
the sea, with the Yellow River meandering through the center. As a result,
seafood is a major component of Shandong cuisine. Shandong's most famous dish is
the sweet and sour carp. A truly authentic sweet and sour carp must come from
the Yellow River.
Shangdong cuisine is famous for its wide
selection of material and use of different cooking methods. The raw materials
are mainly domestic animals and birds, seafood and vegetables. The masterly
cooking techniques include Bao (quick frying), Liu (quick frying
with corn flour), Pa (stewing), roasting, boiling, using sugar to make
fruit, crystallizing with honey.
Condiments such as sauce paste, fistulous
onion and garlic are freely used, so Shangdong dishes usually taste pungent.
Soups are given much emphasis in Shangdong dishes. Clear soup (or thin soup)
features clear and fresh while milk soup (or creamy soup) looks thick and tastes
strong, both of which are often choicely made to add freshness to the dishes.
The dishes are mainly clear, fresh and fatty, perfect with Shandong's own famous
beer, Qingdao Beer.
In addition to sweet and sour carp, typical
courses in Shandong cuisine include braised abalone with shells, fried sea
cucumber with fistulous onion, fragrant calamus in milk soup, quick-fried double
fats (a very traditional Shandong dish consisting of pork tripe and chicken
gizzards), and Dezhou stewed chicken. Dezhou stewed
chicken is known throughout the country; the chicken is so well cooked that the
meat easily separates from the bone although the shape of the chicken is
preserved.