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| Dong'an chick |
Also known as Xiang
Cai, Hunan cuisine has already developed into a famous culinary school in
China. Hunan dishes consist of local dishes from the Xiangjiang River area,
Dongting Lake area and Western Hunan mountain area. Hunan's culinary specialties
are akin to those of the chili-rich Sichuan dishes. It is also characterized by
thick and pungent flavor. Chili, pepper and shallot are usually necessaries in
this division. However, Chili, peppers, garlic (suan) and an unusual
sauce, called "strange-flavor" sauce (guai wei jiang) on some menus,
enliven many dishes, with a somewhat drier intensity than that of their Sichuan
counterparts. Sweetness, too, is a Hunan culinary passion, and honey sauces are
favored in desserts such as water chestnut or cassia flower
cakes.
Hunan is known as "the land of fish and
rice". Like the west in latitude, it has the added bonus of lowlands for rice
cultivation and a rich ocean's edge for fish.
Hunan food is characterized by its hot and
sour flavor, fresh aroma, greasiness, deep color, and the prominence of the main
flavor in the dishes. Hunan food is hot because the climate is very humid, which
makes it difficult for human body to eliminate moisture. The local people eat
hot peppers to help remove dampness and cold. The main cooking methods for Hunan
dishes are braising, double-boiling, steaming and stewing. It is also renowned
for its frequent use of preserved meat in cooking.
Rice is the staple in Hunan, but
northern-style side dishes and fillers are also popular: bean curd "bread" rolls
or dumplings and savory buns. They are further signs that Hunan is one of
China's culinary heartland, incorporating many flavors and regional
influences.
Typical courses include: Dong'an chick;
peppery and hot chick, stir-fried tripe slivers, tripe in duck's web soup, lotus
seed with rock candy, Xiaoxiang turtle, steamed pickled meat, and hot and spicy
frog leg.