Same for Indian food, there are way too many varieties and cuisines to be lumped into one. India is literally a subcontinent with so much diversity.
@Pratchettgaiman7 ай бұрын
My family was doing the “if you only got to eat one country/culture’s food, what would it be?” And I picked Indian. My sister was surprised, thinking it’d get boring, and my response was “it’s an entire subcontinent, it’s not going to get boring”
@ArnyBoy7 ай бұрын
@@Pratchettgaiman you're so right. I lived in India for ten years growing up and I think I've only cracked like 15% of the cuisine
@dhribbler73037 ай бұрын
Exactly categories like Chinese or Indian are better understood as macro cuisines containing wide diversity within while maybe sharing certain common threads, still differ a fair bit internally.
@roop1287 ай бұрын
In the UK it's unversally known as 'curry' not to mention that over 90% of Indian restaurants are run by the Bangladeshi community serving up varying combinations of curry, rice and naan which is a far cry from authentic regional Indian cuisine. You very rarely see pani puri, masala dosa, dohkla, thepla, khichidi, chole bhature, idli etc. on any menus here.
@GL-iv4rw7 ай бұрын
@@dhribbler7303 Not so or else the same standard/logic applies to language, we still say "Chinese language" and not "Sinitic languages/food". Likewise, we still say "China" and not "Mandarin Empire" or "Sinitic Federation" depending on the political system.
@arklu83414 ай бұрын
Hangzhou is not in Jiangsu
@eli-wj1ju5 ай бұрын
the food in 7.47 we call it "葱油饼" in china , it is a delicious food in chinese
@to_cya_7 ай бұрын
Same for Chinese language. It’s should be Chinese languages.
@JT-yj3tr7 ай бұрын
I beg to differ when you said “Congee” is for kids, elder and sick. It is a comfort food eaten by any age at anytime. And the variety of choices what goes into congee is huge.
@jyy96247 ай бұрын
Adults are either congee eaters or not congee eaters
@asdkotable7 ай бұрын
Yeah, I feel like congee for the sick is like a Korean thing?
@ishouldbedoingmyhomeworkno5356 ай бұрын
Wait I thought congee is just porridge. Like what the difference btw them?
@jyy96246 ай бұрын
@@ishouldbedoingmyhomeworkno535 congee is rice porridge
@carlossiu8884 ай бұрын
There are 24 hour zhou or congee places in China. There are also regional variations.
@mylesjude2337 ай бұрын
Great video mate. Maybe down the line you could cover Chinese Diasporic Cuisine ( ex. Chinese x Indonesia 🇮🇩 🇨🇳 ).
@factualclass7 ай бұрын
you should look at Chinese Peruvian food. the history of that is crazy, and the food is held in high regard in Peru and part of the national fabric, unlike traditional American Chinese food that is seen as greedy and quick, and no one would say American Chinese food is a cornerstone of American national culture. Great video as always, can't wait to see more
@jckbquck6 ай бұрын
Great video! I wish all my non-Chinese friends could watch this... One thing, though; I encourage you to do a deeper dive into the origin of Dim Sum. It actually originated in Shanghai. Ritzy folks there wanted to mirror the cafe bite-size dishes in European cities; something the Europeans would have with their coffee became something the Shanghainese would have with their specialty tea. (Your Cantonese parents would tell you that Dim Sum is also referred to as Yum Cha, which means "to drink tea" in Cantonese.)
@MC-gs6cz7 ай бұрын
Your are fine if you go to China, I hold many political view as you do, and been there multiple times. However they don't care if you are not vocal about it to Chinese people there, which is hard for you anyway, because u don't speak Mandarin or on the Chinese Social Media Plus why would you go to China and constantly think about politics, that's not something most people do, and most people just wanna live their lives. Plus keep in mind your political views can be biased, no one is above that Plus you will be interacting normal people in China, and I think you do not understand how good many people have it over there
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
I personally suspect Matthew Li is either a closet self-hater or cajoled/coerced to be an Anti-Chinese basher .
@patryk887 ай бұрын
@@peekaboopeekaboo1165exactly.
@astupiddvdcaseАй бұрын
@@peekaboopeekaboo1165he is hk background lol i wouldnt be surprised plus he is clearly a johnny harris fan with this damn vox style presentation and narration. I think its funny he talks about “chinese” food so much and has been hk macau taiwan and japan but never been to china. Like wut? Just go shanghai or guangzhou or smthin for a few days lol instead of just yapping about china china china
@SugaBubbles3 ай бұрын
Yall need to get into yunnanese food. Some parts and folks of Yunnan are perfectly combining influences from Sichuan, Vietnam/Laos and Tibet and they have such an abundance of natural resources. I also think it would be super interesting for you to research traditional buddhist vegan/vegetarian cuisine as it has existed in china for more than 2000 years. Loved the video
@haruzanfuucha6 ай бұрын
This guy has no idea what he's talking about and has never even stepped foot in mainland China. For starters, Hangzhou is a part of Zhejiang province, not Jiangsu.
@iamsheep7 ай бұрын
No one cares if you made a video criticising China. It doesn't stop you from going there on holidays. Sure if you go and start protesting, promoting the downfall of the government, then you might get into trouble, but the political scaremongering of China these days is insane. You can watch videos on people travelling to China all over KZbin to get an idea of it. For regular English content on Chinese food you can check out BlondieinChina, which is made by an Australia girl who lives there and makes videos mostly about food.
@freeman100007 ай бұрын
Sichuanese and Hunanese cuisine is to die for 😋 my mouth is watering just thinking about it.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Food ... not "cuisine" . That's why Indian, Japanese, Filipinos...lumped their different ethnic food as a singular cuisine .
@Moemuntz7 ай бұрын
Another incredible episode. Well done. One food that’s not mentioned was Hakka cuisine. Is it considered Cantonese as well? I find is so unique and different than the other south China cuisines.
@Col3Jaeger6 ай бұрын
Hakka cuisine is considered to be in the category of Cantonese cuisine. I think
@takonoko17434 ай бұрын
@@Col3Jaeger Hakka food is its own category. Also Hakka people are not only in Guangdong, but they have large populations in west Fujian, south Hunan, and is even the second largest ancestry of Taiwanese people (I'm part Hakka from Malaysia btw) This makes Hakka food one of the most diverse yet distinct from the rest of Chinese food, and not just a sub category of Cantonese.
@stevenr55343 ай бұрын
I've heard Hakka cuisine mentioned; but, I've haven't seen a lot of information about it. Here's my vote for Hakka cuisine as future episode subject.
@lehit79617 ай бұрын
You could say the same about any large, multicultural country in the world. “Chinese food” is the sum of its parts, and I doubt most people outside of China would recognize these regional cuisines by name. Also, these regions share history, culture and languages - often influencing each other and their cuisines. Your argument ignores their commonalities and is akin to a “cuisine Balkanization”.
@railpressureflip7 ай бұрын
THANK YOU! Exactly what I was thinking too.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
@@railpressureflip True . I personally suspect Matthew Li is either a closet self-hater or cajoled/coerced to disparage/marginalize on Chinese cultural identity .
@hultonclint3 ай бұрын
Respect for the video, but I think you should *wait* a bit to gain more knowledge/information *before* making. There is a lot of inaccuracy and misrepresentation. I mean, I guess some people here with practically zero knowledge see this and think they are getting some special info, but that's deceptive-it's basically a quick Google search collection of info mixed with some seemingly authoritative voicing ("I'm ethnically Chinese." "I've seen people eat 粥...but I don't like it"). Hopefully you can travel to at least one of these regions and see its specifics. Like, if you go to Shandong you won't see that stuff; these stories about hundreds of years ago and royal chefs and emperors are a lot of hot air. You'll see normal people eating big mantou (steamed bread), cornmeal porridge, lamb offal soup, braised sea cucumber, a lot of seafood (clams), roasted chicken.
@chinescarioca7 ай бұрын
I highly recommend visiting China and eat in each province. You won’t find the variety, quality and deliciousness outside of China.
@EpicvidsKetti085 ай бұрын
One thing that really interesting is Mongolian/Chinese Food especially with the Shear Reach of the Mongolian Empire influences all the way from Europe to Japan. The cooking bring done in Mongolia was a eye opener on how effortlessly adaptable food culture can be
@n0etic_f0x7 ай бұрын
Honestly, I would say this is why no "American food" exists. Texas, Maine, California, and Florida are all going to have food with basically nothing in common. Maine and California are likely the most similar despite being as far apart as... well Maine is from California.
@offthemenuyt7 ай бұрын
Keep an eye out for a future video 👀
@offthemenuyt7 ай бұрын
Keep an eye out for a future video 👀
@howardng853415 сағат бұрын
MacDonald hamburger is an American food common in all fifty states and is found in many countries in the world.
@1998tkhri7 ай бұрын
Here's where I disagree with you. When people talk about Chinese Food, they aren't usually referring to the food in China, but rather Chinese-American cuisine, which is based off of a mix of some of these actually-Chinese cuisines, and then modified again to meet American palates. So "Chinese Food" isn't a bad name for what Americans eat.
@aadhavanbalachandran71647 ай бұрын
The same thing applies to so-called "Indian" cuisine - The food of say, Kerala and Kashmir is so wildly different that its insanely reductive to call it one cuisine.
@mrjourney43477 ай бұрын
I love the cuisine from Xinjiang. Its flavors are refreshing.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
It's oily too .
@parker44067 ай бұрын
cumin mutton skewers from uyghur restaurants are famous
@mrjourney43477 ай бұрын
@@parker4406 those are fire🔥
@parker44067 ай бұрын
You've just landed the next idea for your new video on how indian food doesn't really 'exist' Basically Punjabi=Sichuan (in terms of popularity)
@mylesjude2337 ай бұрын
Any specific regional indian cuisine you enjoy/familiar with
@parker44067 ай бұрын
@@mylesjude233 Honestly Maharashtrian food is the best(from the western province of India)
@quakeroatsisnothealthy7 ай бұрын
Do chinese diaspora cuisine Peranakan malaysia cuisine Chinese thai food Chinese indonesian food Chinese philippines food Chinese burmese food Chinese latin american food
@parker44067 ай бұрын
You forgot Chinese indian.. possibly the most popular chinese diaspora food (nearly one and a half billion people love it). Indians have been eating food served by teochews since 1773 :)
@HFC7867 ай бұрын
Part two indo Chinese
@mylesjude2337 ай бұрын
Yes, make that video next ❤
@parker44067 ай бұрын
Hell yeah..it is very underrated
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Many Indo-chinese people originated from today's Yunnan province ...
@parker44067 ай бұрын
@@peekaboopeekaboo1165 They're teochews like the current Singapore Prime minister
@deioped4 ай бұрын
It's fine. Chinese people see burgers and hotdogs as American food ALL OVER America.
@9grand3 ай бұрын
Hong Kong people have forgotten how it became a colony . The Opium war when the west made war to sell opium
@krono5el3 ай бұрын
makes me curious what these people called cuisine before they were introduced to chili peppers and tomatoes.
@maha20047 ай бұрын
Congee is similar to "Kanjee" in South India and Sri Lanka it is rice porridge usually people have for breakfast or during the time of Sickness.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Chinese have their own name for rice porridge .
@parker44067 ай бұрын
Well Portuguese introduced kanji to China, when they traveled from Tamil Nadu to the South China sea
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
@@parker4406 Ancient Han-Chinese cooked rice similar to porridge .
@parker44067 ай бұрын
@@peekaboopeekaboo1165 But the word Kanji and the cooking style is derived from India (TN state). We know this through historical records.
@hongqi57347 ай бұрын
@@parker4406 Rice porridge was introduced to Southern India by Chinese Admiral Zhenghe and his 28,000-strong crew during their stay in India. The Indians named it Kanjee and we Chinese called it Chuk.
@jckbquck6 ай бұрын
"Cong" is pronounced "ts-ong", which means scallion. ("Ts" as in "cats"; not "s" as in "song".)
@ThePelitin3 ай бұрын
Yunnan, Guangxi, Guizhou, Hunan, Shanxi, and Shaanxi cuisines are my personal favorites alongside Sichuan. Also they're always so underrated in the west, apart from maybe Xi'an food.
@Lucas_Wong5 ай бұрын
the cognitive dissonance of an chinese person but pronoucing the names with completely off pronouciations haha still enjoyed the video great work!
@Janovial7 ай бұрын
Uighur is actually south of Xinjiang where Kashgar is. Laghman originated in China. The food you see in Kazakhstan was brought over by the Chinese Dungan people who fled China. Steppe people don't do no stirfry yo.
@w4nkd4ddy7 ай бұрын
Sweet and sour sauce def from Jiangsu not Shandong. Shandong food is known for being not sweet.
@walkerharnden1728 күн бұрын
Your videos rule man pls keep making more !!!!
@ishouldbedoingmyhomeworkno5356 ай бұрын
You know i have this funny story from my mother. So back when she was either a teenager or young adult. She was hanging out with her friend for a whole day and they decided to visit one of her friends's house to eat. Her friend's mom whom if i remember correctly, is a Shanghaiese. And she have said that Shanghaiese tend to have a small appetite so their dishes tend to be on the smaller side. Ok so when the mom is done preparing the meal. It was a bunch of small dishes up against a bunch of starving teen/young adult since the friend's mother thought that was enough to fill them up. Everyone both agree in secret that once they done eating, they gonna just to eat out. Although I am curious what you mean by unsure if china is safe to visit. I just visited Chongqing a few weeks ago and it is still as normal and safe as it always has been
@tktyga776 ай бұрын
Macanese food & culture shan't be ignored, especially since those are hidden gems in their own right & the history behind it even more so including the art scenery & has plenty of stuff to check out
@sktrudel3 ай бұрын
chicken feet become all gelatinous and are toothsome.
@bokuwa90035 ай бұрын
Watching these sorts of videos I would expect at least hundreds of thousands of subscribers because of how well the video was produced but I’m surprised by how small your channel is. keep it up! I love learning more about my country
@dawana2036 ай бұрын
This dude will go on about how diverse Chinese food is while also denying Taiwanese food could fall under the Chinese food umbrella lmao.
@vin96492 ай бұрын
Hi from Philippines, I like chicken feet🎉❤
@dirkgoldman11556 ай бұрын
Matthew always looks as if he has to explain himself during a police interrogation
@felaykasu6 ай бұрын
If you like Sichuan food, you’ll love Hunan food!
@nanakomatsu74253 ай бұрын
.-.
@Michwyii3 ай бұрын
every province in china had different cuisine
@greenmachine56007 ай бұрын
No mention of Tibetan food? Thats dissapointing
@erinomani91056 ай бұрын
The music is very annoying . Better ditch it
@Gepap37 ай бұрын
As other have said, any cuisine of a large area with many internal variations will have immense regional diversity. That doesn't mean there are some overarching similarities, like the use of certain techniques or ingredients that form a commonality between the foods of these regions vs. others.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
In the case of Chinese cuisine ... Chopsticks, stir-frying and steaming are use throughout Mainland China .
@robmello32455 ай бұрын
Hong Kong is China and has been like that for centuries. The culture is chinese, the language, the people. It's officially and internationally recognized as China; the time under shameful british colonial rule was just a small part of Hong Kong history. It would be a complete non sense to not include HK as China.
@robmello32455 ай бұрын
Also, it's really sad how biased you are towards chinese. You said that you feel you wont be safe in mainland China because of your video about Taiwan when in fact there are more than 400 thousand taiwanese living in mainland China normally and safe. And why highlight Xinjiang with another color as it isnt part of China? There's no claim it isn't part of China and once more you spread western disinformation and prejudice against chinese people and it shows how "american" and "westerner" you are.
@lilSaltee3 ай бұрын
Please do episode for indian food.
@archiguy15713 ай бұрын
Please do a video about hot pot.
@shanicestella22267 ай бұрын
When i visiting Beijing with my whole family , i was very fortunate enough to ever encountered a Yunnan cuisine which not something very mainstream even in my country , I must say its not very typical mainstream Chinese cuz its has influence of South East Asia cuisine , particularly Thai or Lao style cuisine
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Yunnan food isn't "Southeast Asia cuisine" . Origin of several Indo-Chinese tribes emigrated from China in prehistoric time .
@XIXCentury4 ай бұрын
Brush up on your Mandarin :)
@Xrey-ek5sh7 ай бұрын
I never heard anyone call it Singapore chicken rice, it’s always been called hainanese chicken rice even in Singapore.
@pedroserra53717 ай бұрын
Great video! Surprised that you didn't talk about Macanese food! Food from Harbin, the Manchu’s.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Chinese cuisine is what they're all are . Chinese is the nationality . Even the Mongol Man-chu rulers recognized this fact .
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Kudos to you for calling it "food" and not a separate cuisine .👍
@parker44067 ай бұрын
You should check Manchurian food which is wildly popular in India
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
@@parker4406 It's fake "Manchurian food" .
@parker44067 ай бұрын
@@peekaboopeekaboo1165 probably not authentic but the cuisine was invented by Chinese immigrants like the famous Celebrity Chef Nelson Wang who is Indian Chinese.
@Sacto16547 ай бұрын
Why should we just call it the "cuisines of China." The modern definition is called the _Eight Cuisines of China_ , defined by People's Daily journalist Wang Shaoquan in 1980.
@durand1017 ай бұрын
Love that you talked about uyghur cuisine which is one of my favourites. Yunnan cuisine is also pretty special. They even have their own types of cheese which is not seen in other parts of China!
@pandabear1536 ай бұрын
I've never had tomato with scrambled eggs. Never heard of it until I saw several KZbinrs. I was born here in America 🇺🇸 😊 Late parents were originally from Hoisan.
@stevenr55343 ай бұрын
I love that you are starting by explaining the vastness and diversity of Chinese food. I'm afraid that this is something that Westerners, yes I mean primarily caucasian Western European, and North American people, tend to not realize, or at least they frequently forget if they've been told. Full disclosure, I'm a white US guy who thinks he's a more adventurous eater than the stereotypical white guy; but, I've still got a lot to learn. This channel looks like a good place to learn more.
@michaelfung46297 ай бұрын
you may want to research your Hainan comments. The Hainanese immigrants in Singapore invented the “dish”. I’ve spent time in Sanya and Haikou. They have no clue.
@ShubhoBose7 ай бұрын
This seems just like "Indian cuisine", each state having it's own unique cuisine. And many times different cuisines even in the same state depending on religion/ethnicity.
@yungfiend68307 ай бұрын
Most Americans are ignorant to Chinese food not by choice. My state only has a couple restaurants that are still only partially authentic and that’s how most rural states are tbh. Especially in the Midwest. If you’re lucky you live on the west or east coast where they infinite opinions for authentic food. Also Taiwanese food is so underrated our fried rice and our stir fry is better too. We also invented bubble tea your welcome 🇹🇼
@Kivas_Fajo7 ай бұрын
...and then?
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Matthew Li is a secret anti-China operative . Filipino cuisine encompassed all foreign influences as it's own . Japanese cuisine encompassed Ainu and Ryukuan food . And so does Indian cuisine... Thai cuisine ... Vietnamese cuisine ...et al .
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
It seems like Matthew want to abolish Chinese Cuisine ... Suspicious to say the least ! Here in the Philippines ... both Conservative and Liberal Pinoys recognized only Filipino Cuisine ... which encompassed all "cuisines" from different provinces and regions .
@Kivas_Fajo7 ай бұрын
@@peekaboopeekaboo1165 ...and then?
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
@@Kivas_Fajo I'm just saying . There's a lot Chinese persons (vloggers/content creators/ influencers) doing propaganda against their own identity .
@shreychaudhary44773 ай бұрын
If you're ever in the San Francisco bay, there's a Shanxi Noodle place in Sunnyvale next to the Vienna light-rail station!
@lincredibleJC7 ай бұрын
As a Singaporean, I've never heard anyone call it Singaporean chicken rice. Here it's called Hainanese chicken rice, based on Wenchang chicken (文昌雞) from Hainan. Good job on the rest of the food history thoughbased on
@Alisse.notavaliable3 ай бұрын
I believe that most food traveld on the silk road and people did change some ingrediens to their native produce and taste.
@moizahmed89877 ай бұрын
Can you please make a video on Indo-Chinese food? There is so much fascinating history of cultures mixing together, and sometimes food having little to do with China proper For instance an Indian restaurant favourite called Chicken Manchurian has little to do with the region of Manchuria and was invented in india but its a popular Indo Chinese dish
@giraffestreet7 ай бұрын
Indonesian restaurants in Indonesia usually make it clear which region of Indonesian food they serve. Places like Sundanese Restaurant and Padang Restaurant represent two of the most iconic regions known for their food, which has not only different menus but also different dining experiences.
@josephmao50776 ай бұрын
Note that Hangzhou is in Zhejiang province, so its categorization as Jiangsu cuisine is a little debatable.
@totot997 ай бұрын
You forgot to mention Malaysian "nasi ayam" which is a Malay variation of Hainanese chicken rice. The rice is cooked with cinnamon sticks, star anise and cardamom, a part from the usuals and sometimes lemongrass tooand has a yellower tint due to the use of turmeric. Its served with chicken fried instead of roasted (one of the ways chicken is cooked for hcr, other than steamed/boiled) but with similar marinade, the dish served with salads/lettuce and tomatoes alongside the usual condiments (soy sauce & chili sambal) and sometimes topped with fried shallots and coriander leaves.
@purpelnoon3 ай бұрын
Thank you for this excellent explanation!
@lorgnetteify7 ай бұрын
Curious about Hunan. And Sichuan i see or possibly tried.
@rob-neill-aus6 ай бұрын
Very informative - thanks for making this to allow us to understand origins of food.. fantastic...
@pox91276 ай бұрын
Henan cuisine should be mentioned, hui Mian (lamb noodle soup) is kino
@Pratchettgaiman7 ай бұрын
I once ate at a Shandongese restaurant in the US and was startled that the dish I got tasted almost exactly like spaghetti bolognese
@runforrosemixx7 ай бұрын
Your channel has some of the best content out there man
@shakiMiki7 ай бұрын
All great food cultures are regional & not at all unitary. From Italy & France to India & Thailand. Great over view.
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Matthew wants to abolish Chinese Cuisine . He's motive is similar to that of so-called "Hongkongers" and "Taiwanese" ... that invented a faux identity .
@datboishiz34746 ай бұрын
Ok, now make it a tier list
@nigellokai7 ай бұрын
Awesome work -- keep it up man!
@امالبناتلتحضيرالشهيواتوالخياطة6 ай бұрын
بالتوفيق❤❤
@calex93987 ай бұрын
Lets gooooooo
@nikchi7 ай бұрын
☐☐☐☐ ☐☐☐☐
@joydrive_6 ай бұрын
Thoughts on shaanxi cuisine?
@ThePelitin3 ай бұрын
Inferior to Shanxi cuisine.
@asdkotable7 ай бұрын
FYI it's pronounced "tsong (the o is pronounced closer to the o in "sombre") yoh bing" By the way, you missed out on a lot of Northern Chinese food, like so many versions of wheat noodles, Northeastern sauerkraut, dumplings, roujiamo from Shaanxi, Northeastern goubaorou, liangpi, mantou, etc
@harrisbuild7 ай бұрын
The same could be said for every country
@peekaboopeekaboo11657 ай бұрын
Matthew Li is biased against his nation's cuisine . A sign of self-hating...?
@Catherinezhang-v7m6 ай бұрын
When you outlined the map,you forgot taiwan,it’s one of China 😊
@KrasMazovHatesYourGuts6 ай бұрын
No.
@phoeberiley82053 ай бұрын
I have a question. How did the Chinese have tomatoes during the Qin Dynasty, if tomatoes are a new world crop? I thought tomatoes were introduced in the 1500s by way of the Portuguese colony’s in Macau.
@ThePelitin3 ай бұрын
Pretty sure he meant Qing dynasty.
@aka-bo6ej2 ай бұрын
We didn't. During the Qing, yes.
@totot997 ай бұрын
You should highlight the weird obsession in China with using MANDARIN names for regional cuisines/foods. E.g. for Uyghur cuisine, polo is called zhuafan, samsa called kao baozi, kawap/kawaplar called kao rou... like wtf is that?
@merukit6 ай бұрын
Unlike english, mandarin isn't a language where it's easy to construct foreign words from their sounds to call them how they actually sound locally (due to not using an alphabet). So it's much easier to call things based on what they are. kao baozi=baked bun, kao rou=roasted meat. Which is what those things are, and also how similar dishes are called.
@ruedelta6 ай бұрын
Mandarin has been the court language for a long time, so calling things by their Mandarin names is just a matter of centuries old centralization. It is traditional, by at least 500 years.
@mafiaboy877 ай бұрын
You orientals speak as if ya’ll the only ones with diverse regional cuisines. America has diverse food too. There’s Texas bbq, Kansas bbq, memphis bbq, Tennessee bbq, New York hot dogs, Chicago hot dogs etc
@tomtom97927 ай бұрын
The only Chinese i eat and enjoy is Panda Express. Sorry i dont like weird slimey food sprinkles with tons of MSG🤢