So I know it's been a hot second since we've posted. We might've been a bit guilty of feature creep on this one - we wanted to make a nice guide, and it was a little difficult to know where to stop. We went into much, much more detail in the accompanying substack post too: chinesecookingdemystified.substack.com/p/63-chinese-cuisines-the-complete The video definitely glossed over some things. If you're interested in the topic, I'd definitely recommend checking it out. We tried our best to be comprehensive... but Chinese cuisine is basically infinite in its breadth and depth. It's always equal parts exciting and frustrating to know that you're only ever scratching the surface. Huge thank you, again, to Wu Zheng who helped us out a bit with Northern cuisines. We did some of his thoughts a bit more justice in the full written post :) Definitely check out his Instagram too - instagram.com/woksteampunk/
@ektran42058 күн бұрын
cantonese is also first chinese cuisine brought over to the west
@peterhug58668 күн бұрын
Have the two of you ever thought about sitting down and writing something along the lines of what Joseph Needham did with "Science and Civilization in China"? Perhaps organized along the lines of "A Mediterranean Feast: The Story of the Birth of the Celebrated Cuisines of the Mediterranean from the Merchants of Venice to the Barbary Corsairs, with More than 500 Recipes" by Clifford Wright. And include Southeast Asia and eventually Central Asia while you're at it. (I do realize I just described a project that would occupy both of you and a bunch of others for the rest of your lives, but it would create something pretty cool.)
@peterhug58668 күн бұрын
One volume (at least) for each regional cuisine. I would be happy to buy that (and support the project when I have the money) and I'm sure I'm not the only one. And if it ends up with something like the Needham Institute (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Needham_Research_Institute) it would be an ongoing resource for everyone.
@DoesItMatterAtAll8 күн бұрын
I've found myself greatly interested in the peanut soup featured in the Honghe section of the video, but found nigh zero information about it while looking on KZbin or Google, it's basically all just Tong Sui. I'd greatly appreciate further information on how to approach this dish.
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
@@DoesItMatterAtAll Good idea! We'll try to touch on it soon. It's an interesting dish and not too difficult :)
@abydosianchulac28 күн бұрын
I'm sorry, weren't you apologizing a few weeks ago for the fact that we'd have to go without recipe videos for a while? And then you drop _this?_ Why the hell would you apologize for content like this? This video was fantastic.
@kilrathi8278 күн бұрын
Absolutely 100% this. I was drooling through this whole video, and has NOTHING to do with the pot of chili im making.
@TacticalKiwi48625 күн бұрын
Right! I loves these deep dive videos! They bring so much content and history to the dishes they cook and show us!
@JelenaBraum3 күн бұрын
Yes, it was an excellent video. However, I now absolutely need the top 3 recipes from every culinary region. :D
@rezthered3 күн бұрын
Agreed. Incredible research and brilliantly presented.
@conho48987 күн бұрын
"I'm not Hakka, and I'm sure neither are you" Me, a Hakka: 👁️👄👁️
@neofils17 сағат бұрын
Mauritius Hakka , fun fact I feel more Hakka than chinese
@uranusjr4 сағат бұрын
Another one here
@Buchinator128 күн бұрын
Sir another 40 minute Chinese Cooking Demystified video has hit the algorithm
@abhijaman47926 күн бұрын
goddammit 🤣
@macaroon6935Күн бұрын
HAHAHAH REAL
@alx17198 күн бұрын
God.... as a chinese myself im really shocked by how well you researched and knew about chinese cuisine, and comparably how ignorant i am myself.... Super meaningful and exciting, Thank you!!!
@cwong62047 күн бұрын
+ 1
@TacticalKiwi48623 күн бұрын
@alx1719 Honestly, that's what I love about this channel. They bring so much to the table (no pun intended) in terms of quality research.
@itsover90082 күн бұрын
That's how experts are compared to people of any country. It's sometimes funny to me how people expect a lay person to know more than an expert just because the lay person is ethnically of the country you are asking the question about, while the expert is of some other ethnicity.
@franky.3782 күн бұрын
Don't be that impressed, if they fetishize your race, it's not that hard to do
@alx17192 күн бұрын
@ hahah you’re right! It’s kinda cringey what I said, but still watching their videos for sometime I was always taking them as very invested and interesting Chinese cuisine enthusiasts, rather than experts, but now realizing they’re actually really really good!
@meowmeow-en6iv9 күн бұрын
It's honestly incredible how unique, well researched, and genuinely practical your videos are. For an English speaker trying to learn about China's food culture there is legitimately no one better. Getting english-speaking explanations of lesser-focused on regional cuisines like those in Fujian, Zhejiang, and Hubei is really hard, so I especially appreciate a video like this.
@user-gv6kd9sv6j3 күн бұрын
One of the best KZbinrs I’ve come across. Orders of magnitude above the average
@tommyso38234 күн бұрын
Not even 10 mins to the video, me, as a Chinese, already felt ashamed that I don't even know that much of the cuisine in my own province than a foreigner that is making a video on KZbin. Mad respect to you with the amount of research and preparation.
@jessrow12758 күн бұрын
What a love letter to Chinese food. I’m blown away. You really should write a book.
@elucified8 күн бұрын
omg yes I'd buy that book, especially if it includes a highlight recipe from each place aaaaaaa I would love it 😍
@wowswc6 күн бұрын
Just a highlight recipe? Gotta add 3-4 eavh. It could be an encyclopedia. Thats a VR series id love to watch.
@TheSmokey15238 күн бұрын
I’m Toishanese so I can tell you that it’s like a rural home cooking version of Cantonese cooking. The home cooking has meat stuffed tofu and vegetables like the neighboring provinces but flavoring is very different. In Cantonese restaurants they won’t necessarily serve home cooked items as it’s assumed that these hunmble every day dishes are too cooked common to offer on a restaurant menu but focus on fancier restaurant specialties that people come to restaurants to specifically eat.
@ribbontoast7 күн бұрын
One of my grandmothers is Toishanese and the other is from Shenzhen and while there's a good overlap of dishes they cook they have extremely different vibes and flavors. I think a lot of the overlap also becomes muddled by the fact that a lot of the Toisanese chefs in the US cook Cantonese food and don't really do Toishan specialties unless someone specifically asks for them, like a secret menu or something, because Cantonese food is the food that sells / people in the US want. Most prominent example: Made With Lau. Daddy Lau is 100% Toishanese but the channel has, to my memory, very few Toishan-specific dishes and lean much more Cantonese.
@williamaitken75338 күн бұрын
Ok I finished watching this. 3 things that really caught my attention: 1) Incredible amount of effort, research, and attention to detail on y'alls end. This is probably the most accessible English overview of the whole culinary map available. 2) I now appreciate, having watched most of your videos, how many dishes you have shown off from all over the country. It was awesome seeing dishes that I recognized specifically because y'all talked about them before and introduced me. 3) In regards to your ending plea for people to travel to China to eat the food, I would absolutely LOVE a video on that topic. Like, what apps/docs should foreigners set up in advance? How would you go about ordering food in a Chinese restaurant so you don't look like a jerk? Stuff like that. Just an intro video for how to do culinary tourism in China.
@ssatva8 күн бұрын
Low priority add on to the last part: how to manage food restrictions and diets, or if it's worth it to try. Can you be vegan and not a PITA? Can you be Indian vegetarian (avoid eggs but not milk) and not be utterly baffling? Can you be careful about gluten meaningfully? I don't travel myself, so there might be a whole general understanding of this I'm missing out on! But I am in the utterly baffling category above, and know folks of a lot of different dietary restrictions for medical reasons, and I wonder how to best serve those respectfully in other parts of the world, or if it's not wise to even try.
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
@@ssatva The unfortunate answer regarding dietary restrictions - from friends that have done this personally - is that to eat well you generally need to lower your standards. People keeping Halal could likely eat very well in the Northwest of the country, sticking to Halal eateries. There *are* Buddhist vegetarian restaurants, but it would be difficult to organize all of your meals around these. Restaurants certainly aren't going to lengths preventing cross-contamination. I have a friend that keeps vegetarian, and when they go out to eat they'll simply order vegetable and tofu dishes. Sometimes these will contain some oyster sauce, stock, or bouillon powder. The way they square that knot is that they don't order things with meat intentionally, and if there's some little meat bits in the dish they'll simply eat around it. I had a friend that keeps kosher that had a similar don't ask, don't tell policy. The restriction itself matters much less than the strictness of its application: a strict pescatarian might not have the best time, but a vegan that blindly orders tofu and vegetable dishes will eat fantastically. I definitely do know that that sort of... flexibility... might feel a bit alien to a lot of Americans. People tend to be quite strict about their personal dietary restrictions, and that's certainly okay too! In that case, the reality is that China might not be the best fit as a food travel destination. And of course, if you have any anaphylactic allergies, I would *heavily* suggest doing a bevy of research before travelling, and perhaps skipping for a different location. I've met expats in China that live with peanut allergies, but knowing Chinese is an enormous help and they would never go anywhere without an epipen (they also cook at home quite a bit).
@DashBranaghan6 күн бұрын
@@ssatva I spent 10 years living in China, 8 of them in Beijing, and had a few expat friends/associates that were vegan. It is manageable, but it also depends on where you are. To this end, they had the Happy Cow App - can't say whether it still works, but it did back in 2016 before I left for Hong Kong, and it did include Chinese locales, so that might make it easier to navigate places in China and let you know if there are options for you in smaller towns.
@tarikshenzhen74636 күн бұрын
3) first get a vpn, (not express or Nord, better Astrill or Shadowrocket), then for food you need Meituan (food delivery), Dazhong Dianping (like a mix of tripadvisor and yelp), Xiao Hong Shu (Little Red Book) and a good translation app like Baidu Translate.
@sariyahm5 күн бұрын
@@ChineseCookingDemystified i'm not gonna lie this video is making me reconsider veganism when I travel to China, even though it's been 9 years... there is just so much creativity in all these dishes
@acateatinganegg97308 күн бұрын
this is one of the absolute most comprehensive Chinese cuisine resources ever put into English. A true magnum opus. Amazing work! thank you for this!
@roastyrockets46268 күн бұрын
You guys are he biggest ambassadors for Chinese cuisine not only to westeners but to other Chinese people alike. Thank you so much for this content
@JK12345-z7 күн бұрын
I'm a Chinese, also a lover for food. But somehow you made me think about my career as a scientific researcher. Great work is driven by real passion, what an inspiration!
@kenice56247 күн бұрын
I'm from Sanming, Fujian, a small city between mountains. I was very happy to hear about my hometown in a video from a foreigner. In fact very few even Chinese food bloggers can articulate the differences between so many local cuisines. You have done a wonderful job.
@xavierputh69426 күн бұрын
Shaxian County street food is awesome, spreading across the whole country and even abroad!
@dylanglynn57038 күн бұрын
wow … just a simply great video. im a professor of linguistics and i can promise you - man your method is crazy and creative - but its systematic and replicable and just simply great. as i am sure you aware, this is ultimately a futile exercise because , well at some level granularity, there is always a continuum (gradient as you said) and modern linguistics actually talks about clusters of characteristics rather than discrete categories like dialect and language etc, but what a fun and informative exercise - fun interesting and informative - and one of the best you tube videos i’ve ever seen! keep it up!
@davyocean87577 күн бұрын
As a Chinese myself, I even couldn't tell this well about cuisine of all different areas in China. Very well-researched and the accuracy is pretty high! Job well done.
@garchomowner8 күн бұрын
I'm a 5th generation hakka immigrant, and you just described a lot of my childhood cuisine. Those fluffy rice cupcake are often used in offerings for relatives that's already passed away. We still eat a lot of stuffed tofu with pork too. Of course a lot of family's cuisine has been intermixed, fused, or forgotten but it is interesting you still see the shared DNA within those in mainland china.
@Bojoschannel8 күн бұрын
Here in Mexico, people usually guide themselves culinary by the classic 7 culinary zones which are: north, pacific center, pacific south, bajío, centro, gulf and southeast. And while there may be a lot of similitudes between the states in these areas, there are also a lot of differences. I have lived in the north all my life, more specifically in the northwest and just here there are many "subcuisines", the Baja peninsula could be its own cuisine, while it may be similar to Sonora and Chihuahua in Mexicali, once you go beyond the Rumorosa mountain the climate changes to a Mediterranean weather, changing the cuisine completely, also there is the whole pacific ocean for fresh seafood, Nuevo Leon's cuisine also it's specific details, being a little more complex than the food you find in Sonora or Chihuahua, but one thing you'd find true, is all the north is united in it's love for beef and flour tortillas, flour in general really. Then there's the pacific south zone, where Oaxaca alone could be considered its own cuisine (and it sometimes is), same with Chiapas. Or the gulf, where both Veracruz and Tabasco are unique on their own. And so on and on, while those 7 zones might be helpful, they don't tell the whole story.
@robbymunoz68407 күн бұрын
Agree having been born in Guanajuato which would be considered bajio I found it to be lacking a strong identity but I also have Oaxaca family members who have amazing food with strong identity
@caelumleamhain40586 күн бұрын
I live in Texas and I can definitely say the beef and flour culture has migrated north (even though I prefer corn). I have a question though, so I make a pretty good deal of mexican food, and I notice that mostly me and my neighbors prefer to wrap our steamed dishes (mixiotes de pollo, tamales, etc) in corn husks, but sometimes for christmas or something one of my neighbors will give me some tamales wrapped in banana leaves and I always think, that is so odd. Is this wrapping controversy just a texas thing, or is it a greater divide in mexican cuisine at large?
@Bojoschannel6 күн бұрын
@@caelumleamhain4058 it's just a texas thing. In most tropical zones, which include the gulf, pacific center, pacific south and southeast (yucatan) zones banana leaves are used as much, if not more, than corn husks, some states like in Michoacan even use maize leaves for corundas, which are really similar to tamales or there's even the use of hoja santa, which has this wonderful anisy, minty taste to it. There's also the use of banana leaves for barbacoa, cochinita pibil and other dishes where they are not used exclusively to wrap masa, but to wrap meats or fish or just to infuse its flavor. Overall it's not right or wrong to use either, it's more of a matter of availability and personal taste, you can find banana leaves anywhere in Mexico now, you just will see less banana leave tamales in the north. But even if you can use whatever leaf you want, there are some tamales that just don't taste right without banana leaves, like mole or chipilin ones.
@mayalimon09296 күн бұрын
What zone does Guadalajara fall under?
@poolerboy4 күн бұрын
@@caelumleamhain4058banana leaf-wrapped tamales are a southern thing, the most famous of which are Oaxacan but also Chiapas (southern most state) and Yucatán (the eastern peninsula) also use banana leaves.
@frankluo90548 күн бұрын
As a foodie who lived in and travelled numerous cities in China, I'm shocked about the level of details of this video. The video is extremely informative and you presented it in a super objective and humble way. Probably the best intro video for Chinese food that I can find on KZbin.
@Tinil08 күн бұрын
Thank you for the substack post so much. As someone who doesn't know chinese and is only a novice at writing characters in the correct stroke order, I often want to search for foods you mention on your channel but it's just so hard manually trying to type the characters in the food's name. Because it can be RIDICULOUSLY hard to find Chinese food not written in Chinese. Having something to copy/paste makes it infinitely easier. Speaking of, the fact that the English internet has so little on Chinese cuisine is why I am so grateful for your channel, it is one of the best sources for learning about Chinese cuisine in English. What you and Steph are doing is irreplaceable and legitimately makes the world a better place in a small way.
@ViollinneElizabeth7 күн бұрын
As a Chinese descent and honestly the level of knowledge, research and detail that went into this video puts a lot of us to shame. I've been following your channel since early COVID, and this might be one of your best videos yet. Respect!
@Ulcerbloom8 күн бұрын
Oh my god, this is the motherlode. I had no idea it was coming, but this is something I have been trying to piece together for years! Thank you!!!
@Dragons_Armory6 күн бұрын
Hey man, long time fan for half a decade and a Henan native here: A key aspect of Henan's food that deserve some love is the local's love for nuts- the locals have a lot of love for peanut sauce as well as sesame oil and places them on everything. Honestly the sesame oil quality is world class in itself. One of my reliable favorites- and a noted global brand is Kadoya from japan, happy to say almost all local Henan sesame oils even from local small shops are that quality. So we are really spoiled in that respect. They also have some good fried savory desserts as well also involving either peanut or sesame, like sesame twists and sesame string bundles. If you are a Westerner reading this a close reference would be those golden fried crispy wonton strips they serve with hot and sour soup (very similar to hot pepper soup from Henan) so imagine those crispy golden strips of goodness but much larger/ alternatively thinner and coiled up.
@fish39778 күн бұрын
Finland really only has two cuisines which isn't that surprising given the size and small population. they split is between eastern and western influence as well as the fact that the west has coast meaning the available fish would be different. the biggest difference, in my opinion, is on the bread as in the east the house was heated with a large oven where as in the west it was common to have a heating fire and a cooking fire as separate. Hence, in the west "hole bread", that is a thin (rye) bread which were baked in large patches before storing and drying hanged from a pole, where as in the east bread was baked if not daily, way more often. that also leads to different kinds of oven stews being more popular in the east compared to stove top cooking being the way to go in west. there are then some local dishes due to either tradition or good marketing. Tampere and black sausage (blood and rye sausage) is a great example of the first where as "hydrogen", a meat pie (more of a savory donut filled with minced "trash meat" from bad cuts to lungs) with egg and ham of the later
@adambarker31307 күн бұрын
I spent a summer near Savonlinna teaching English. My best food memory was the rye bread stuffed with whole little lake fish. The slow cooking dissolved all the bones. So it fits with your classification.
@topilinkala15946 күн бұрын
As a Finn I disageree. For bread there's soured rye bread which is trad. Finnish. But there are lots of other cuisines traditionally Finnish. Karelia stew, raindeer dishes, fish baked into rye bread (kalakukko), Karelian pies. Then Finnish split pea soup traditinally is very diffrent from Swedish version, so I call that one. There are lot's of salmon dishes. For example a Finnish-Swedish fishmonger had never heard of whole baked salmon which is traditional way to bake it in Finland. So there are much more in Finland than just traditional rye bread. Talking about this with my sister I got few more: liver caserole with raisins, broiled or smoked lampreys and anything with Baltic herring.
@jgbailar8 күн бұрын
You have no idea how appreciated your content is. I've been looking so long for something that would give a good overview of China's diverse food culture, and bam. There you come with the big nerdy guns. Love you guys.
@kaboulscabal48168 күн бұрын
This video? This is one of the best videos I have ever, Ever, EVER watched on KZbin. I kept switching between learning I was completely ignorant of things and then being captivated by learning enough to peel back the ignorance, just a little. I felt both bewildered and honored. Thank you SO much 🙏 💘
@time2go4659 күн бұрын
Hakka and Cantonese represent! Fantastic video, absolutely love that this guide exists now!
@andyzhang78903 күн бұрын
As a Chinese-Canadian that loves food, especially Chinese food, your seemingly encyclopedic knowledge of Chinese cuisines across the map is absolutely mindblowing... I need to do a food tour of China so bad...
@misubi8 күн бұрын
Wow this is really finely researched. As a Chinese person this is seriously impressive.
@okwatever35828 күн бұрын
This is like by far the best compilation of Chinese cuisines I’ve seen. It’s like crazy amount of info in such a “short” compressed video. Really nice insight to the diversity of Chinese cuisines.
@n.l.8758 күн бұрын
Incredible incredible! I think the weight of the subject discourages even the attempt. This is the attempt and it is excellent, truly unique actually. Greek Cuisine probably can be grouped into 4 cuisines, according to the great rules: 1. 'The Northern Mountains' - Pindos mountains to the Rhodope mountains, heavily influenced on gradients from Albania, Northern Macedonia, Bulgaria 3 highlight dishes: Saffron Chicken Prune rice Kozani, Sweet Florina Peppers with Bukovo, Bougatsa (Custard Filo Dessert) 2. 'Fertile Islands' - Crete, Chios, Naxos, the Seven Islands, the Sporades, much of the Dodecanese, Lesbos and a few others fit in this geographic grouping. Islands that have a fertile hinterland with good fisheries. Anyone reading would probably have my head, but Chongqing has 3x the population of greece and didn't even get a region of its own, so chill everyone. 3 highlight dishes: a variety of cheeses (Naxos ash, Cretan Graviera (stronger manchego), Tinos kefalotyri), Cretan Dakos (carob rusk) salads, some of the best olive varieties and derived dishes 3. 'Coastal mainland greece and infertile islands' - A nebulous category as there is no point in Greece further than 35km from the sea, thus the whole place is 'coastal', but this is from Igoumenitsa all the way down to the Peloponnese up past Euboia to Thermaic gulf all the way to Alexandroupolis. Characteristics of this cuisine are also a gradient zone with group 2 - namely wheat bakes (pastitsio - a rather unappetising bechemel topped hollow noodle lasagna with ground meat and my favourite - a huge variety of kritharaki (orzo), and the dizzying varieties of filo-pies like in group 1). Other characteristics are proximity to the coast and manpower for fishing and a large enough fish market. 3 highlight dishes: Avgotaraho (bottarga, cured mullet roe in beaswax - I recently found out it is also made in Taiwan 乌鱼子!), Cured fish meat like skoubri (atlantic mackeral) and lakerda (bonito), stuffed vegetables - dolmades, gemista (stuffed peppers or zuchinnis). 4. 'Politiki Kouzina' - Cuisine from the 'City' AKA Istanbul. After the population exchanges between Greece and Turkey in the 20s, many ethnic Greeks who were living in the last vestiges of the Ottoman Empire moved to Greece. They brought with them a larder quite alien to their new compatriots. This included cinnamon, cloves and mace in savoury dishes, nuts and dried fruits in both savoury and sweet dishes, and curing meats - the list goes on and I could go on about this influence Greece's population increased by around 1/3 in a five year period. Though the initial wave was concentrated in cities, subsequent movement would find generations throughout Greece. 3 highlight dishes: Imam Baldi (means 'the imam has fainted' ) and Moussaka - eggplant, ground spiced meat, kataifi and baklava, many of the mezedakia dips (tzatziki, tyrokafteri - chilli pepper with whipped feta, melitzanosalata - eggplant)
@ceridwen8888 күн бұрын
This was a beautiful breakdown of Greek food too. Thanks so much for the effort!
@plesiothhitbox8732 күн бұрын
On the subject of Tibetan yak milk tea- it is salty, it is gamey, and it is incredibly warming to the body. I won't say it's especially tasty, but I think I would lunge for a cup on the coldest winter days, because I know it would be exactly what I need to keep me going. It's salt, fat, warmth, and energy. It's a survival drink.
@youness93028 күн бұрын
Well done. For foreign friends who want to learn about Chinese culture, this is a very good entry point. After all, food is something accessible to people all over the world. This map is a great guide to tourist destinations. If you are interested in Chinese food first, then go to the local area. You will not be disappointed during this journey. Food is produced by human gathering and migration, which can provide a good sense of the historical context. this map can be further subdivided and integrated. For example, the western part of Hunan and the eastern part of Guizhou (Zunyi, Tongren) are similar to Dishes of Salt gang in Sichuan. Also, due to the low salt content in the southeastern ethnic minority areas of Guizhou, they like to eat sour food. So I can infer whether Sichuan salt transportation is taking this route? Then each region, county, and town will have different specialty dishes. Finally, thank you for your content creation.
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
> Also, due to the low salt content in the southeastern ethnic minority areas of Guizhou, they like to eat sour food. So I can infer whether Sichuan salt transportation is taking this route? This is a really intriguing thought, and could maybe form a nice model of Southwest at large. I'll have to take some time to mull it over :) As to the map itself, we have a decent bit of confidence in Guangdong (though an argument could be made for Dong Hakka --> Hakka and Lianzhou --> Guibei) and to a lesser extent Guangxi. I definitely do think people with different areas of expertise would likely be able to do a cleaner job with their respective corner of the country. Subdivisions could definitely be found in Hubei and Henan. Our treatment of Dongbei was a bit of a clusterfuck
@hecatylin8 күн бұрын
@@ChineseCookingDemystifiedI’m from Guizhou, the southern part (qian nan) to be exact. I think the hypothesis is true (or at least that’s what we think among ourselves). Due to the lack of salt, people of the southern and southeastern mountainous part of Guizhou (main consists of ethnic minorities) consume a lot of sour food. There is a saying in these parts of Guizhou: if you don’t eat something sour for 3 days your legs get weak😂 There are two types of sour soup (suan tang). The white suan tang of the southeastern Guizhou that’s made of fermented rice and the red suan tang of the southern Guizhou that’s made of a local variety of tomatoes. Another interesting fact is that Guizhou is the first province in China to adopt chilli pepper in cuisine. After chilli pepper was introduced to China, they were mainly for horticultural purposes. People of Guizhou, perhaps also out of the need to season their food other than salt(?), decided to use chilli pepper as an ingredient for cooking. If there is a simplified way to describe southern-southeastern Guizhou cuisine, it should be sour-spicy (suan la).
@youness93027 күн бұрын
@@ChineseCookingDemystified Northeast China is a bit complicated. Northeast China is home to Shandong people who ventured through Shanhaiguan, as well as Korean and Manchu ethnic groups and Russian and Japanese colonizers. The history of large-scale settlementof Han people in Northeast China is not long. But you should believe that the Northeast people are the first Chinese to start industrialization, and their historical status is beyond doubt.More like the feeling of the Great Lakes and Chicago in the United States.
@陈一亨6 күн бұрын
@@youness9302没事儿,哈尔滨的冰雪节快开始了,到时候去玩一圈也能了解个大概😂
@williamaitken75338 күн бұрын
Another Chinese Cooking Demystified banger video. Y'all have my absolute respect and appreciation
@talonjansen89268 күн бұрын
I really appreciate the respect you give Tibet in this video. I'm not ethnically Tibetan but I love the uniqueness of the culture, which is extremely complex and has deep historical roots. I even learnt how to read and speak the language as I was studying linguistics; did you know that it is one of the hardest languages to read? 😊
@Changdao16447 күн бұрын
Once again, outstanding work. This deep overview of Chinese culinary diversity is truly invaluable. Regarding Spain, I would distinguish the following cuisines, in a very simplified manner. Note that there are lots of gradient zones. For example, the region of El Bierzo is in Castille but they are very Galician in character. There are also things that are eaten all over Spain but with regional styles, like morcilla (blood sausage). For example, morcilla from Burgos is made with rice, while Galician morcilla is sweet and has raisins: 1) Galician: heavy on the seafood, potatoes and pork, particularly salted pork. They tend to keep seasonings at a minimum and rely on garlic, on the salted pork, on unto (pork fat from the intestines) and on pimentón (paprika) for flavor. Boiled octopus with potatoes is the most famous dish, but they have their own cocido type (caldo gallego, made by boiling salted pork ribs, tongue, chorizo, rapini, white beans and other stuff. You eat a soup with the beans and then the other stuff on the side. All cocidos work like this). Their cheeses are soft and not very aged. 2) Asturian: gigantic portion sizes. Their most famous stuff is fabada (a fava bean stew), cachopos (two thin but very wide veal cutlets that are breaded and fried with ham and cheese inside) and chorizo a la sidra (chorizo cooked in cider) 3) Basque-Navarrese: they spawned dishes dishes "a la vizcaína" (a stew cooked in a thick pepper sauce) and "a la riojana" (thin stews of paprika and chorizo as flavor base). Their fish dishes are awesome, and they have a distinct tapa tradition with the "pintxos". Beef steaks are also beloved here, but it is the case in all the Atlantic coast. 4) Aragonese-Mountain Catalan: this is a tradition heavily influenced by sheperd food, but also by the fertile Ebro. Lots of hearty stews of mutton and chicken, potatoes and porridges, but also lots of vegetables like cardoon, artichokes, green beans... There are also lots of mushrooms in season. 5) Catalan: very Mediterranean vibe. They have lots of preserved meat preparations just like Italian salumi. They also have cannelloni and their own type of cocido, the escudella, which features macaroni for the soup and a complex meat stock. They also add alioli to their patatas bravas, making them bravioli, although they call it just bravas. 6) Mediterranean: this covers Valencia and the Balearic islands. This is were paella belongs, and a myriad of other delicious rice and noodle (fideuás) dishes. In the city of Valencia they also eat horse meat (in sandwiches), which is uncommon in the rest of Spain these days. 7) Northern Castillian: hearty stews of meat and legumes, roasted meats like suckling pigs and mutton and lamb. They also have one of the best soups anywhere in my opinion (sopas de ajo), which is classic peasant food. They also make excellent preserved meats like chorizo, cecina, lomo, etc, and an empanada made out of them called hornazo. Excellent cheeses, especially in Zamora. In addition, lots of classic desserts like mazapán, various cookies, etc. 8) Southern Castillian: somewhat oversimplified, but this includes Castilla La Mancha and Extremadura. It is very rustic food, and it boldly displays its humble origins. Vegetable dishes like pisto (the Spanish version of the nowadays popular shakshuka/menemen), migas (hearty meals based on broken old bread), porridges, meat based dishes including the really interesting morteruelo (a pounded mixture of liver and meat bits) and salted cod dishes like atascaburras (this one is also pounded in a mortar) or bacalao al ajoarriero. In Extremadura is where the best jamón ibérico is made, though there is also excellent production into the bordering region of Andalucía (this is a gradient zone). They make the famous manchego cheese, and cheeses from Cuenca are my personal favourite. 9) Andalusian: very big region, with differences between the coast and interior. They have fried small fish, seafood, hunted meats, cold soups and salads, and a varied repertoire of pastries. Gazpacho, salmorejo and ajoblanco are typically andalusian dishes, but the former two are popular in all of Spain. 10) Madrid: the capital has a very Castillian gastronomy, but it is also a melting pot with influences from all over Spain and particularities from being the biggest city by far in the Central Mesa. Offal is very typical, with callos a la madrileña (a tripe stew) and grilled pork ear. They feature more seafood than the rest of interior Spain with calamari, prawns and fish, although in the old times it was mainly salted cod. They have a version of cocido, cocido madrileño. Technically very similar versions are cooked in Castille and Andalucía. It features beef shank meat, chicken and/or hen, chorizo, panceta (salted pork belly), pork ear, pork snout, cabbage, chickpeas, potatoes... 11) Canary Islands: they are there own thing in various ways. They have a particular type of flour called gofio, awesome pepper sauces called mojo and hearty stews. Excellent and very underrated cheeses, which they use to make the extremely delicious almogrote, which is a dip of finely ground goat cheese mixed with olive oil and paprika.
@ksg_74 күн бұрын
As a Spaniard, this was such a pleasure to read. Bravo!
@TheGenius793799 күн бұрын
Fantastic video! Yours and OTR are my favourite youtube channels
@aitheignis8 күн бұрын
And both released new video today. I am eating good tonight.
@宋教仁-b4i7 күн бұрын
What's OTR if I may ask?
@humanbeing27967 күн бұрын
@@宋教仁-b4i Use the search function, type OTR and food. The channel will come up and you will be mesmerized, plus it's fun to play "where's Steph and Chris" in OTR videos as they are all very good friends.
@ChineseCookingDemystified5 күн бұрын
@@宋教仁-b4iOur buddy Adam’s channel. Does food travel/history videos with an emphasis on Thailand
@StCrimson6678 күн бұрын
Canadian cuisine actually has some pretty firmly established regions that are overall relatively well-agreed upon as they're mostly divided up by the ingredients that are produced and grown in each region and the unique blends of immigrants which defined the region. Of course, you could also up-divide by province or even city in some cases, but, overall, the regions are as follows: The Maritimes, composed of New Brunswich, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward Island, & Newfoundland & Labrador - known for simple foods, the cuisine is primarily defined by the heavy use of seafood and especially white, Atlantic fish as well as foods that derive from Scottish and Irish cuisine such as a Jiggs Dinner which is a spin on corned beef and cabbage, ham boiled with cabbage, potatoes, and root vegetables, though newer immigrants to the region created dishes like donair, a spin on the German doner which is a spin on Turkish doner Quebecois, found in Quebec - HEAVILY French influenced, specifically very old-fashioned and even long forgotten peasant French cuisine, it's known for being very heavy, rich, and savory with a large focus on protein and liberal use of things like gravy. This is of course the region that gave us poutine, french fries and cheese curd smothered in beef gravy, and tourtiere, a spiced meat pie often eaten with ketchup Ontario - could probably be subdivided further as its the most populous province BY FAR, but largely defined by its focus on fruits and vegetables grown in the farms in the St Laurence Lowlands and for its love of diary, though this is one of the two regions which are most heavily influenced by immigration. Peameal bacon, the true Canadian bacon, comes from here as well as the famous buttertarts The Prairies, composed of Manitoba, Saskatchewan, & Alberta - known as Canada's breadbasket because it produces most of Canada's grain, beef is also produced there, particularly in Alberta, and there's a distinct influence of Polish & Ukrainian cuisine such as perogies, though they're pretty much readily found across Canada. It's from the Prairies and particularly Saskatchewan that the world has been introduced to Saskatoon berries, so beloved they literally named the town after them. British Columbia - the other region most heavily influenced by immigration, it's known for sea food as well, but a distinctly different spread than the Maritimes and especially on things like Pacific salmon, it's also been influenced by Japanese and Chinese cuisines since pretty much it's founding due to the work on the railways with both the BC and California rolls being invented in BC as well as famous dished like the Japadog, a hot dog with mayonnaise and seaweed on top, though this is probably most well-known for Nanaimo bars
@Zastrava2 күн бұрын
I would probably break out Northern Prairies / Northern Ontario / Northwest Territories + Yukon into a shared culinary tradition with a lot of influence from First Nations cuisine and a separate category for Inuit Nunangat (Nunavut, Nunatsiavut, Nunavik, and the Inuvialuit Region). Otherwise I agree with your comment!
@angelad.89448 күн бұрын
🤯 That was fantastic. God, I wish I could speak at least Mandarin. I would love to just travel all of China for a decade or two. I think we should be immortal with an internal universal translator, lol. There are so many great things on this planet and so little time to enjoy them. Channels like this are a window into the world. Know the cuisine, know the people, is what I say. Thank you for your interpretation. Even if there is debate, it should be all good because we can learn so much. ☺❤
@BenjiSun8 күн бұрын
finally! someone recognizing steamed double stinky as a known dish! and yeah, our traditions in Jiangnan region is a huge mess of delineations, but most people classify it all as "Shanghainese" from outside of our area since Shanghai (which didn't have many dishes to begin with) absorbed all the immigrants when Shanghai became the 8 nation army port and for better or worse, prospered under foreign dictatorship until the Japanese invasion where Shanghai became the port to escape from mainland China, and all along bringing all the Jiangnan regional cuisine with all the migration. So Shanghainese/Hu cuisine, outside of western influences, is mainly a few local Shanghainese dishes(aka Benbangcai, the useless wiki lies again as Shanghai crab is not a shanghai dish but like "squirrel fish" both hail from Suzhou, beggar's chicken is from Hangzhou, lion's head is Huaiyang, ...), but mainly Huaiyang, Su-xi, Hangzhou, and Shaoxing dishes, with some Sichuan and Beijing imports that are highly unauthentic, and occasionally Cantonese dimsum, but mainly limited to various baozi. post-war modern Shanghainese cuisine and the addition of other cuisines into it comes from Jiangnanese immigrants in Hong Kong where the rich brought their house chefs, since back then no one went to restaurants. they all wined&dined guests at home, with barrels of steamed hairy crabs. it wasn't until the mid 50's or so when going to restaurants became more of a thing. and modern Shanghai's restaurant scene boomed in the late 70's when people started going back and bringing all the new traditions. some modern day Shanghainese may disagree but seriously, Shanghai food wasn't allowed to be anything prior to modern China opening up to capitalism. one thing about Toisan/Sze Yap, would Xinhui's mandarin peel production and regional specialty foods made with chenpi in mind (like chenpi duck that's local to Xinhui) be a distinction of it from Guangfu/Cantonese cuisine or would you consider it as "absorbed".
@Jumpoable7 күн бұрын
Guangfu cuisine is indeed different from the rest of Guangdong, even from Shunde & Panyu, & especially compared to Toisan/ Sze Yap's rustic fare.
@helpingkind9 күн бұрын
Louisiana by itself needs to be split into cajun and creole cuisine.
@ChineseCookingDemystified9 күн бұрын
A surefire application of rule of thumb number two if I ever saw one :)
@tylerhernandez59788 күн бұрын
Tomatoes in my gumbo, proud to be creole! ⚜🍅
@totot998 күн бұрын
How different are they?
@jaspervanheycop97227 күн бұрын
@@totot99 Creole is heavy on tomato, seafood and spices, while cajun has a more earthy flavour profile. Creole jambalaya f.e. is brick red (from the tomatoes) and spicy, studded with seafood, while the cajun one is oily and brownish (because it uses a roux like dark sauce) with a mild flavour and only sausage and chicken (sometimes ground beef).
@BloopBlop90007 күн бұрын
And again for everything north of I-10
@MarvinStichling-sj4iw8 күн бұрын
Oh my god. You are crazy for doing this, but damn youre doing a good job at doing it and im here to watch the full video. By the way im currently studying in Guizhou, a large part of the reason why im here is actually because you introduced me to Guizhou food when i was still home... So thanks, i dont regret it for a second, the food here really probably is the best in China :D
@chewtherag3 күн бұрын
This work is epic. It's the unifying theory of Chinese cuisines, like the General Theory of Relativity for physic. I love it!
@Mike-rf5tz8 күн бұрын
As a life-long lover of food, cook, chef, culinary educator, world traveler, and Chinese food fanatic, I believe this is the greatest video ever made. I bow to your greatness and envy your life experience.
@everysinglenight7 күн бұрын
Ok I kind of can't believe that I can access this level of incredible, in-depth research on culinary history ... for free on KZbin. A place that suffers from clickbait-y content that stands on the weakest of information. I've been supporting you all for a while on Patreon, just because I'm genuinely so happy to be able to make sure more of this kind of stuff is made. Thanks so much to you both!
@jacoblee13282 күн бұрын
100%
@shanwong69438 күн бұрын
for terminology alignment with Sinitic linguistics, it would be preferable to call the Fuzhou-centered northeastern part of Fujian as Mindong 閩東 / Eastern Fujianese, as Minbei is used in linguistics for the Jian'ou etc. area in northwest Fujian.
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
Right, we thought about this categorization as well but since we're not 100% sure where Mindong, Minzhong, and Minbei split (didn't know much about the liguistic diferences as it's very complicated in Fujian), so we decided to go with our personal experience, i.e. the food is very different in these regions, obviously. Thanks for pointing this out.
@dyong8368 күн бұрын
This is an forking awesome video!!! Well done, Chris (and Steph). Love how much care and respect you place on the diversity of foods in China. As an ethnic Hakka, the diversity is evident as Meizhou Hakka food is quite different from Huizhou Hakka food (and just being honest, my experience is based on Hakka food from the overseas diaspora). What's really interesting is that globalisation and the diaspora has created so much additional diversity to Chinese food. So there's really no way we can even say what is truly authentic. I broadly agree with your closing comments - let's be lovers of food whereever we are globally ... the competitiveness of the food industry always means that there will be folks who (1) try to achieve as much "authenticity" based on their upbringing and heritage; and (2) there will also be those who push the boundaries to explore how to adapt their food to their environment. At the end of the day ... good food is good food!
@MadHatter31128 күн бұрын
Without a doubt my nr. 1 favorite channel. This video is exactly what I had been hoping for since your last one, kudos for all your hard work all these years. This channel was a huge inspiration for me to travel to China and explore all the wonderful cuisines for myself. Keep up the good work, we love you guys! Lots of love from Holland
@BobP9397Күн бұрын
Awesome video! As an Italian I'll try to answer your question with a very coarse breakdown of our cuisine, which will also double as an exercise on how many Italians I can piss off in a single comment. Do keep in mind I'm being VERY vague here. The very roughest breakdown would be north (french influence, butter based), center (heavy on meat, mushrooms), south (olive oil based, plenty of fish and produce) and the two main islands, Sicily and Sardinia (both complex melting pots which I won't try to subdivide further), should be counted separately. Now going a tad deeper I think one can distinguish a north-eastern, a north-western and a mountain cuisine in the north, west coast, east coast and appennini (the central mountain range, whose cuisine closely resembles what is generally thought of as "central italian" cuisine) cuisine in the center, and the southern cuisine could be split into the "rich" cuisine of more affluent areas like Naples and Bari and the "poor" cuisine (not worse guys, don't flame me) of more agricultural areas, which also split along the east/west axis. So at this very very coarse level I'm counting eleven different cuisines, though one could easily argue for, I guess, upwards of twenty.
@Ratoskr8 күн бұрын
Great video. Thanks for that! The question about the cuisines is also quite complicated for me to answer here in Germany. I would say... a dozen? At least. Bayrisch & Fränkisch, Pfälzer, Badisch & Schwäbisch, Westfälisch, Pommersche, Ostfriesische, Rheinisch & Bergisches Land, etc.pp. Even if that's difficult to say now. Many regions that are only less than 50-100km apart have completely different traditional dishes and food cultures. On the other hand, these have already merged a lot in modern times and some of what used to be regional cuisine has now become national cuisine.
@SingingSealRiana8 күн бұрын
Yeah, germany though tiny is pretty diverse when it comes to traditional dishes, probably has to do with it being young and a lot of terratory changes, but its hard to say cause of how prominent foreign cuisine are in every day cooking and how easely you can move from one end of the country to the other nowerdays. Aditionally to the usual regions there is also a difference in West vs east cause of the occupation not so long ago . . . .
@abydosianchulac28 күн бұрын
Fascinating. Do these distinctions follow the old borders of the various German principalities and nations, or are they aligned some other way?
@ExitusGSZ8 күн бұрын
I don't know, man. Southern German cuisine is really similar across the board. The names may differ but at most there are side dishes that are distinct with maybe one or two unique main dishes.
@SingingSealRiana7 күн бұрын
@@abydosianchulac2either that, plain geographical borders or especially in berlin, a devide between the former occupation zones is quite noticable
@SingingSealRiana7 күн бұрын
@@ExitusGSZyou dont see a difference between elsas and bayrisch?!
@santiagoburgos391119 сағат бұрын
Amazing work! The diversity of cuisines is huge, but you managed to name and explain the entire country. I cannot belive I just watched a 40 minutes video, it is like a documentary that I did not know I needed . Again, amazing work!
@Ulcerbloom8 күн бұрын
Ok, having now watched thia back to back: regardless of how well this video does, I think this is the channel's masterpiece. The raw amount of information, while never being overwhelming. The subtle and not so subtle jokes all throughout. And the conclusion: you guys have to keep doing this until you are like a hundred. There is SO MUCH MORE to cover. So many dishes just flashing by and leaving me wanting to know more!
@therealsocialgadfly7 сағат бұрын
This has to be the most in depth, reduction of Chinese cuisine on KZbin that I’ve understood, and enjoyed. It makes me want to eat my way through China. 😊
@_oaktree_9 күн бұрын
That "old linguistics debate" that you quoted ("a language is a dialect...") comes from Yiddish linguist Max Weinreich, who was talking about the power relation between languages. The original saying was "a shprakh iz a dialekt mit un armey un a flot". Weinreich was talking about which languages get to be "real" languages and which are demoted to mere dialects - to this day, some people refer to Yiddish as a dialect of German and insist it can't be a language in its own right. (Interestingly, an argument many people make about Jewish cuisines, that we have no cuisines of our own and our foodways are mostly just subpar versions of other people's food - subpar because they "lack" certain elements that are not kosher. However, this idea is repudiated by pretty much every actual food historian. Gil Marks and Hasia Diner, among many others, have written on this idea, if you're interested!)
@LC_JSE8 күн бұрын
This is my biggest pet peeve when it comes to “Chinese” and the westerns world of understanding of Chinese. Even the fact that Cantonese is a “dialect” is a crazy statement. Every chance I get, I go on a rant about the language families of Chinese and the fact that only within these families are they mutually intelligible.
@abydosianchulac28 күн бұрын
@@_oaktree_ The idea Jewish foods are just kosher versions of other people's cuisines, yet "American food" is a subpar version of everyone's cuisines yet it gets it's own label. (I'm not including cuisines like creole and cajun in that label when they're treated as other/special within the US itself.)
@garbagewitch6665 күн бұрын
Big fan of both Weinreich and his son, Uriel, who wrote the textbook I'm learning Yiddish from.
@letXeqX4 күн бұрын
@@garbagewitch666 Mazel tov on learning Yiddish. My father z'l taught Yiddish at Vassar, I was always surprised at how many students he had. May I ask what your inspiration for learning Yiddish is? I learned Hebrew from my dad, but wasn't very interested in learning Yiddish, which I now regret.
@garbagewitch6664 күн бұрын
@@letXeqX Well I'm Jewish, for one, so it's a way to feel connected to my culture. I'm also a musician, and also very interested in history and culture, and there's so much Yiddish music and literature that never got translated into English, so it's a way to learn more. If my grandparents were alive I would have loved to talk to them in Yiddish but sadly all 4 of them have passed.
@botch39368 күн бұрын
Whew, this could be a 3-credit semester course, and I about wore out the Pause on my keyboard. Thanks! I've sworn off buying any more cookbooks, but one delineating each of the 63 regions, with recipes for just the three/four dishes mentioned, I'd have to pick up (don't have enough years left to get thru them all, but…).
@jayolovitt59698 күн бұрын
The closest book I can think of for one that delineates a lot of Chinese cuisines is Carolyn Philips ‘All Under Heaven’. It doesn’t get quite as granular but for a useable, English language, single volume book it’s good and has a somewhat similar approach.
@ayeco8 күн бұрын
Bravo. Everyone should watch this. This is more than a culinary adventure. This is so well done. The bits of history are great and every single image of the locations showed how beatify and diverse China, and the rest of the world is. Lovely.
@Anesthesia0698 күн бұрын
I've always been fascinated by the apparent sparsity of recipes online from dongbei cuisine, so I would absolutely support a new more on the channel. And whatever that is at 35:53!
@kattebelletje8 күн бұрын
my guess would be beef noodles
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
Oh, that! That's awesome! A Xinjiang dish that I have no idea how to categorize. It's called 馕包肉. Braised lamb smothered over Uighur Naan Bread - super delicious. Can't seem to find a recipe from my favorite Xinjiang creators, but this recipe jives with my general understanding: kzbin.info/www/bejne/rmLGkmtnpriErrs
@Anesthesia0698 күн бұрын
@@ChineseCookingDemystified amazing, thank you. I love making central Asian bread, so this dish sounds perfect.
@xuedalong9 күн бұрын
This is one of my favorite episodes you've ever done. I'm STARVING now!
@guadaatenea7 күн бұрын
This channel deserves way more subscribers than it has. Incredible work.
@raeko918 күн бұрын
amazing. i really love your recipe stuff, but this kind of content absolutely slaps. please, please, please, for the love of god, more of this!
@Mangelemerde16 сағат бұрын
Oh I’m so excited to see this! I forgive any lack of posts for quality content like this. Worth the wait (I don’t pay close attention to who posts when unless it’s been more than maybe a year? KZbinrs have lives outside of it, well the good ones do anyway!) ❤ The more I learn about Chinese cuisine the better imo.
@Tausami8 күн бұрын
This is all I've ever wanted and i am going to watch this video until ive memorized it, thank you
@Ryan_gogaku8 күн бұрын
It happened! I remember being one of the people requesting this video many moons ago, and I'm very happy to say that it exceeded my already high expectations.
@thelastwordreview8 күн бұрын
Thank you so much for this! I have always been frustrated (in a friendly way) talking with locals about the 8 main cooking styles. The exclusion of such rich cuisines like Xibei, yet the inclusion of styles like Lu (Shandong) which no one to this date has been able to define to me in words. (Your video was illuminating on this subject). Also, so interesting to learn that the 8 styles are where they are in the cultural zeitgeist mainly because they had established dining presentations. LOVE this video. 10 out of 10. I will likely reference this video for years to come.
@dic-pr9un7 күн бұрын
This is a very great video. As a Cantonese, I think what we usual called Cantonese Cuisine has 2 meanings. 1) Foods that origin from Guangzhou area, including regions nearby. Since Guangzhou was the economic and culture centre of Guangdong in ancient time, so people there led the fashion. Shunde, Taishan, Zhongshan etc. have influenced the style because many chef working in Guangzhou are from these area. 2) Geographically, Hakka and TeoChew are located in Canto (Guangdong). So, for people outside Guangdong, it is easier for them to identify these kind of cooking as Canton Cuisine. But the taste/ philosophy of cooking for Guangzhou, Hakka and TeoChew are so different. So, for me, Cantonese Cuisine should be Guangzhou, Hakka and TeoChew. For language-wise, if a person's family speak in Canton/Hakka/TeoChew dialog, they usually cook in the corresponding style at home. While TeoChew food are more closed to South Fujian and South Taiwan style, as well as the language. Hakka is another style. One fun fact, Canton person enjoy Japanese food very much and Japanese food's cooking philosophy has some similarity to Canton. Also, the Japanese language has certain similarity to Canton as well.
@oldhippy194717 күн бұрын
Once again Chris, an informative video. I really like this lecture style video you've been doing lately.
@z2ei6 күн бұрын
First, y'all did a ton of work on this. My hat's off to you and Steph. Second, I'm glad I'm eating lunch watching this, because there's some amazing looking food scattered throughout to show the regional differences.
@Jumpoable7 күн бұрын
You're forgetting all the marinated raw seafood (Chinese ceviches & sashimi) of Shantou (Swatow/ Teoswa/ Chaoshan region) in Guangdong as well as the drunken raw seafood tradition of Ningbo. Also the freshwater fish, molluscs & crustaceans from the lakes & rivers of Zhejiang (& I suppose Jiangsu). The Japanese & the Koreans aren't the only people eating raw fish & shellfish in East Asia! Consumption of raw seafood declined after the war (hygiene) but now with those cities being super rich & a modern infrastructure for food transportation, these age old culinary traditions are coming back in full force & enjoyed by many. Amazing work as usual. Add oil! & having taken advantage of the new Speed Rail connecting Hong Kong to China & exploring parts of Guangdong & Hunan this year, it's pretty obvious that Hong Kong Cantonese cuisine is its own subset now, quite different from even Guangfu Cantonese cuisine. Just went to Changsha for the 1st time last month & it was like a TOTALLY DIFFERENT UNIVERSE. Ate delicious Xiang cuisine for 2 days straight but by the 3rd day my Cantonese stomach just HAD to give up so I had dim sum at the Park Hyatt (chefs from Guangdong so it was authentic & surprisingly of excellent quality) & not touch any of the chilli sauces! Dying to visit Guizhou now for its tangy flavours but will have to be next year!
@doubledutchclutch6 күн бұрын
You think we need a proper recipe video after this? No way. I will chew on the information presented here for weeks. Thank you so much. It's perfect timing too. I have been wanting an overview of China's regional cuisines for some time, and this video went above and beyond. Great job!
@qiaonasen35599 күн бұрын
My favorite video yet! Much love from Sweden
@tjioeardiyanto15188 күн бұрын
My God, I can't imagine the amount of work you put in this. very well done.
@tillsito60228 күн бұрын
This is what I needed in my life. Thank You!
@LaLoutreDanoise2 күн бұрын
That was fantastic, seriously. The first part when you guys explain your choices is really interesting, thanks for taking the time to zoom in on this, it shows it's not an easy, rapid exercise. I'm amazed, learning about how to delimit cultures in a context where they mingle and overlap. China is so complex, I'm amazed you did this!
8 күн бұрын
Bro, you outdid yourself with this video. How the hell do you know so much about Chinese cuisine as a foreigner???
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
Marry Steph, mostly (the real brains of this channel) I think of us as... kind of a translation team haha. Chinese language content --> Steph's brain --> My brain --> English language content :) A little bit of a simplification (I also do some research, she also has a big hand in the videos/posts), but yeah that's basically why
@nsgchan8 күн бұрын
You are doing important work here. As someone who has lived in Canada for over 46 years of my 50, your videos make deep diving into the food culture of China so accessible ❤. Well researched and real. Kudos to you both and much gratitude 🙏
@TPAsses8 күн бұрын
Only someone who truly respects cuisine, of any type, would go through the effort of doing this, thank you.
@GhostyCowboy8 күн бұрын
You are a slay for putting this out. This is an amazing resource. 谢谢你,谢谢你🙏
@semhendrikx34987 күн бұрын
Very interesting video! The Netherlands is a very small country so the food differences aren’t as big as in china obviously. But if I would have to divide the country culinarily I would say there are traditionally 3 main cuisines allthough some small areas within those can be a bit distinct on their own. Cuisine 1: western cuisine. Cuisine of North Holland, South Holland, Zeeland, Utrecht. Western cuisine is the cuisine of the culturally dominant Holland region, this is why when you look of “Dutch food” online you’ll mainly see western food. Western food uses a lot of dairy, most famous Dutch cheeses are from here, they use a lot more butter in cooking and baking compared to other regions. The western provinces are next to the sea so here you find most seafood dishes. They traditionally make a lot of ‘Jenever’ which is the pre curser of gin. Cuisine 2: northeastern cuisine Cuisine of Friesland, Groningen, Drenthe, Overijssel, Gelderland. Characterized by smoked or dried meats and sausages. Along the coast and the IJselmeer they eat a lot of seafood as well. The provinces are also home to more heavy and solid varieties of Dutch pastries, cookies and (rye) breads. Northern rye bread is very dark and baked a long time which makes it sweet. This area is famous for it’s bitters. Friesland has overlap with western cuisine in the use of dairy and cheese production. Cuisine 3: southern cuisine. Cuisine of Brabant, Limburg. The Catholic provinces are stereotyped for their enjoyment of good food. The south is known for their beer, which they also use a lot in cooking, mainly in stews. Brabant has wordtenbroodjes (small long bread with meat filling) and the Bossche bologna (large cream puff with chocolate). I myself am from the Southern part of Limburg, which is often considered the most “non Dutch” including cuisine. If you look on a map it is kind of an enclave, it borders Germany, Flanders and also Wallonia and you see a lot of Belgian, German and French influences. Sweet and savoury dishes are very popular here.
@kristinnelson-patel4423 күн бұрын
This was so impressive. I really appreciate the detail and diversity alongside the geographic tour. Thanks for helping the rest of the world understand so much more about Chinese cuisine!
@janhundling46476 күн бұрын
Im autistic and I love Chinese cooking; this channel is such a blessing with all the systematizing and all the deep dives into the food. Thanks so much you guys are amazing
@HaoyangLU-s3w4 күн бұрын
As a Chinese myself, I find this video super interesting and educational too! Fantastically researched and produced contents!
@siddesig48918 күн бұрын
Love the pregnant pause before the England comparison, allowed me to jump in first with it 😅 Fascinating 40 minutes, need to watch your back catalogue now!
@hazalyuksel18756 күн бұрын
Can I say how much of a blessing this video is? I'm so impressed, grateful, excited... Thank you, thank you, thank you!
@Carloshache2 күн бұрын
I’m actually sitting with a cookbook with recipes from each and every of the 25 traditional provinces of Sweden. which all used to have their own regional style. This is NOT a big country, with only ten million people (which used to be much lower). Nowadays Swedish cuisine has been modernized and centralized. Many of the traditional foods have been replaced with foreign or national Swedish food. Daily most people will eat such things such as pasta with ketchup and salty licorice. However there are still some general regional differences. And some of these are is stell - even the fast food can vary alot throughout Sweden. There's northern Swedish cuisine which is rustic and filling: huge dumplings, porridges, barley flour, different kinds of flat breads, the traditional foods of the Sami people with alot of reindeer meat which is fried, smoked or in boiled. Fermented herring (surströmming) is only eaten here as a late summer festivity. Melted butter can sometimes be the only sauce. Alot of Northern delicious things exists such as cloudberries, västerbotten cheese, arctic char fish, vendace caviar and much more. My favourite is the very rare berries "Arctic bramble" which are amazing. Because of migration you can find quite good Thai food in some middle of nowhere places in the north and the whole Swedish countryside. The huge forested region of Central Sweden has a lot of delicacies - crisp bread, game meat such as moose, an overabundance of mushrooms, blueberries and lingonberries in the forests, also alot of traditional dairy and pork products. Traditional cafés with many pastries also abound in smaller cities and villages. As well as lakes abound with alot of fish and crayfish. Stockholm was traditionally the genesis for many of the classic bourgeoise foods of Sweden such as the national dish Meatballs with lingonberry jam, potatoes, cream sauce and quick-pickled cucumber. As well as being the epi-centre for beloved fast food dishes such as Swedish style pizza (including kebab and banana-curry pizza), Swedish hot dog (including the one with flat bread and shrimp mayo) etc. Today Stockholm's food is often very international, hipster and touristy. But many of the classics remain. The Swedish West coast basically have one thing: an overabundance of sea food: lobster, shrimp, crab, langoustines, oysters or the humble mackerell. Gothenburg food has historically had many British influences such as the dark Carnegie porter beer. Different ways of pickling, smoking and frying herring is found all along the whole coast of Sweden. If you like herring, Sweden is like paradise. Southern Sweden beyond the forests has a huge agricultural area and alot more culinary influences from Denmark and Germany and beyond. Traditionally this was an area with a much better growing season and because of this a more abundance of food than the rest of Sweden. Skåneland used to be Danish so many of the traditions are Danish in origin. Malmö is also just about 30 minutes away from Copenhagen so the Danish influx is constant. Rye bread, pork, goose, eel, beans, pumpkins, salmon, schnapps, apples, pears, different pancakes and egg dishes,, several types of cabbage and other vegetables, the use of more spices such as caraway, saffron and mustard. Migrants from Arabic, Balkan and Eastern european countries have left their mark. Middle eastern Falafel is a Malmö iconic cheap staple.
@JoeWDye17 күн бұрын
WOOOT so hyped. I love this channel so much. is anyone doing similar videos for Indian food? What does Indian food look like in China?
@gaobili9 күн бұрын
Very few, mostly curry, and either Japanese or Hong Kong style
@ChineseCookingDemystified8 күн бұрын
Yeah it's mostly a handful of Indian expat haunches, unfortunately. The good news is that China hasn't reciprocated the visa apocalypse happening in India currently - there something like four Chinese students left in the country, and it's practically impossible for Chinese people to get a visa to India (like, me and Steph would love to travel there, especially to Assam, but they literally just plain aren't giving out tourist visas). But India-China relations are not on a good track :/
@brianwang85468 күн бұрын
@@ChineseCookingDemystified I thought China and India made peace wrt the border, and that China was going to start letting in Indians like we did in Canada.
@beatroot_red3 күн бұрын
This has to be the most profound breakdown of Chinese cuisine(s) thus far. Great job.
@Nogu37 күн бұрын
Japanese-Korean here, raised in Hong Kong for a while growing up. Something that my family in China really enjoys being from Yanbian is lamb cumin skewers, very popular in Korea too!
@DashBranaghan6 күн бұрын
This reminds me of the chua'r we'd have in Beijing! I could eat those skewers 50 at a time!
@spektrograf2 күн бұрын
Really really really awesome work at attempting to present such a diverse and deep set of cuisines that have blurry gradient boundaries all over the place! Love what you've done here. You've outdone yourself as usual! 😃
@agrayday78168 күн бұрын
just want to comment merging New Mexico cuisine with Texas is a crime! The long practiced ancient pueblo food and Spanish/Hispano food traditions, make New Mexico food its own. The upper Midwest is full of old time Danish and German food traditions that separate it from the others. I would also state that Maine, Alaska, and Hawaii food traditions are different and distinct than most others.
@snapwilson3165 күн бұрын
This was amazing, thank you! On my bucket list is a food tour of China sampling all the regional dishes I can.
@李天颖3 күн бұрын
there was an American with the same idea before still hasn't left Szechuan after years
@JustinHilltheAuthor8 күн бұрын
Great stuff! Hunan also has a load of smoked tofu. And a tofu black pudding as well.
@donimarmer25562 күн бұрын
Can I start this comment with a massive appreciation of your work explaining the most complex food history ever exist on earth, and busting the western view of Chinese cuisine that is beyond a monolithic POV? Honestly, this video is seem confusing but absorb my time nerding about the entire civilization through food. I understand that whatever you are explaining also traverse through different timeline (not just geographical & cultural & linguistic differentiation) due to dynastical and empire-centric leadership that influence how people eat as well. Looking forward to learn more with you!! THANK YOU FOR THIS EDUCATIVE CONTENT (I express my excitement with caps)
@kenlim42048 күн бұрын
According to my grandmother, the teochew and hokkien eat porridge because they don't have so much rice as compared to the Cantonese.
@Jumpoable7 күн бұрын
Back in the day, definitely. But nowadays they can clearly afford the rice but their culinary culture still values their type of congee. Fancy high end Teochew & Hokkien restaurants in China now use the BEST rice from the Northeast (glossy Wuchang rice from Heilongjiang) & purified alkaline water to make mui/ mue (their word for rice gruel).
@durand1015 күн бұрын
This video is the reason I am a patreon subscriber! So interesting and so much knowledge in one video. I've been planning to make a map of all the restaurants in London serving different Chinese cuisines and I couldn't find a proper breakdown of all the cuisines as described on this channel. Everyone keeps talking about 8 cuisines on the internet, even though that's obviously not true. So happy that you made this one!
@cek7928 күн бұрын
Korea's already kinda known for regional cuisine, and narrowing down into just South Korea, and just Gyeongsang province there's like over 8 at least.You've got north/south historical divide, then city divides: Busan, Daegu, Andong, city vs rural country, etc. Modern day these cities are fairly close to each other, but historically the types of food available were really different. Like Busan is known for seafood, but Andong is known for salted fish cause that was kinda the most inland that fish could travel into.
@haruzanfuucha7 күн бұрын
I don't agree about Korean regional cuisine being "really different", they are overall similar to each other. They wouldn't pass the "at least 50% of the dishes are different" test.
@challalla2 күн бұрын
@@haruzanfuuchaIt's obviously going to be subjective how different one thinks the regional cuisines are from each other, but it's easy to forget that before the twentieth century each region would have its assortment of grains, greens, fruits, meats, and spices (or lack thereof) as well as preferred preparation methods. I think nowadays, there may be a decrease in the awareness of the various regional cuisines because it is easier to find dishes from all over Korea, especially for outsiders who just think of them as generically Korean. Even Koreans may be hazy on the differences between regional cuisines; they might know where particular dishes come from, but are probably less familiar with the cuisine in general or particularly home cooking from other regions. You don't really see restaurants billed as serving particular regional cuisines, only certain dishes. From time to time you hear people finding out to their surprise about these differences when they travel or marry into families from other regions.
@haruzanfuucha2 күн бұрын
@challalla Korea is quite literally one of the most culturally homogenous regions on Earth. If the Korean peninsula has eight cuisines, then we're going to have to say that China has 700 now or something.
@challalla2 күн бұрын
@@haruzanfuucha Again, I think there may be a recency bias to this impression of cultural homogeneity. Korea is a mountainous peninsula, and before modern communications and transport (as well as standardized education) the regional differences were quite strong. But if you think the cuisine of Jeolla (Southwest) with its emphasis on chili powder and salted seafood is not that different from that of Pyongan (Northwest) which doesn't use much of those but instead has lots of meat and noodles dishes, I don't know what to tell you.
@haruzanfuucha2 күн бұрын
@@challalla The Korean peninsula not being well connected before the modern era doesn't mean much when the Korean people have no population substructure due to intensive linguistic, cultural, and genetic homogenization after the Three Kingdoms period. There were some divergences afterwards, but it was not anything major. I'm not saying Korean regional cuisine isn't a thing, I just think the claims that there are over eight highly differentiated cuisines is an overstatement. For comparison, Chinese Cooking Demystified grouped all of Xinjiang as one cuisine when the province is the size of three Frances, has dozens of ethnic groups, and 44 officially recognized languages.
@blueberrypieology30888 күн бұрын
Blown away by this. What a great overview you and Steph have produced here. So many details, I need to rewatch this. Thank you!
@davidfuller5818 күн бұрын
Thinking about the US... I think there are probably 7 or 8 distinct ones. PNW (north of San Francisco up through Seattle) and New England/Northeast are actually largely similar, lots of seafood prepared in similar ways and tends to be milder flavor-wise. Mid-Atlantic states have a totally different take on it. Then you start getting to the Southeast, which is different from the Gulf Coast (I'm differentiating based on protein choice and spices, BBQ is very different from Gulf Coast seafood), which is heavily different from the Southwest (think west Texas through Arizona), which is different from Southern California despite both of them having quite a bit of influence from Mexico. The midwest and plains are also different with more Northern European influence.
@marihagemeyer81668 күн бұрын
The indigenous food influence shouldn't be overlooked. Just the emphasis on salmon in PNW cuisine, for example, is very much coming from the existing peoples of the region. In the upper Midwest (I'd say the Dakotas, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Iowa) wild rice is a common staple, which is directly from Ojibwe influence. Obviously all of the Southwest has indigenous influence (since Mexican food is heavily indigenous-influenced) -- so Baja California, Arizona, New Mexican, and Tex-Mex food. And of course Cajun and Creole food have indigenous influence as well (file powder is an obvious example). Regarding the Mid-Atlantic, I'd honestly put us into Southern food, just a sub-variety - other than the regional classics like crab cakes, the food culture is heavily influenced by soul food, especially in significantly Black cultural regions like the Baltimore area.
@davidfuller5818 күн бұрын
@@marihagemeyer8166 Absolutely, I'm not discounting that at all. You are correct that there is a huge amount of influence in those cuisines from indigenous peoples.
@LegionaryAssassin22776 күн бұрын
There’s a lot of food in America that’s a fusion with some immigrant population’s cuisine. I def think American Chinese is its own thing. But I guess it doesn’t really belong to a ‘region’
@mik06117 күн бұрын
hitting like & commenting before i even started watching bc I already know this is gonna be great. This must have been ages in the making, thanks for the amazing effort you two!
@aoukoa6079 күн бұрын
Babe wake up chinese cooking demystified: the movie, just dropped
@Mars_architects_baliКүн бұрын
The series On the tip of China’s tongue 舌尖上的中国 had a great taxonomy of classifying cuisines, by looking at distinct flavour profiles, usually revolving around one or two core ingredients, such as soy sauce or sea food, or chilli.. seemed really effective and convincing