Cooking Chinese Food

60

By trislum

Vegetable Tofu with Mixed Vegetables
Vegetable Tofu with Mixed Vegetables

Basic Chinese Wok Cooking

The tenderness of juicy meat and crunchy vegetables always attracts person to kitchen cooking. One of the most popular ways of preparing these ingredients is stir frying. In order, to stir fry, it is vital that you own a Chinese wok as its ability to catch the splattering of oil and to cook quickly places it miles ahead of an American wok. In addition, it is very easy to clean. Just follow these steps to learn how to become a stir frying master:

1. Before you begin, heat the wok up to remove the ferrite taste. Then, use a wet towel to wipe away the accumulated dust and grease off.

2. Then, heat the wok again. Usually, you will put about 1 - 1 1/2 tablespoons of cooking oil into it. Add the marinated meat to your wok and stir for about 45 seconds or until the outer gets cooked and darkens.

3. Add vegetables that take a long time to cook (for example, if peapods and bok choy are going to be cooked, add the bok choy and THEN pea pods).

4. Here is where any seasoning is usually added. If you have any seasoning, add it in while lightly stirring the meat. If you don't have any, add in any ingredients that you have left. Continue to stir until your meal is cooked.

Basic Preparation and Stir-fry Methods

Yin and Yang in Chinese Cooking

One of the most well known ideas about Chinese culture revolves around the idea of Yin and Yang. While most people understand how much this concept affects the lives of the Chinese, many aren't aware of its role in cooking. In fact, Chinese food has, and continues to have, a rich history of adhering to the principles of Yin and Yang.

The most basic understanding of Yin and Yang is the idea of opposing forces. Light and Dark, Hot and Cold, Positive and Negative, and other ideas like this, are good representations.

A better understanding of yin and yang, however, actually involves thinking of them as complementary forces. As such, it's not enough to say that Light and Dark are opposing forces - one has to think about their relationship to each other as well. It's also important to remember that everything has Yin and Yang properties. According to Yin and Yang principles, problems arise whenever there is an improper balance of Yin and Yang in one's life. In order to correct the problem, one needs to work on properly balancing the forces of yin and yang.

Yin and Yang principles can be heavily applied to Chinese dishes. At the most basic level, if a food is cold, it's a Yin food. If the food is hot, it's a Yang food. Yin foods are cool and clear away heat. Yang foods can help eliminate colds and help to warm you up. A simple example would be eating ice cream on a hot day - you have an excess of yang warmth, so you need something yin, like an ice cream, to help balance your body.

More specifically though, every Chinese dish strives to find the perfect balance of Yin and Yang. From the colors, ingredients used, to the actual taste, every dish establishes Yin and Yang principles. A good example of this concept is to think of Mongolian beef. Green and brown are set as opposing colors. Broccoli is considered a Yin food, Beef is a Yang food. And, broccoli and beef each have their own distinct flavor.

Yin and Yang principles apply to every aspect of Chinese cooking, it isn't just the look and taste of food. It's also the way of preparing the dish - certain ways of cooking are considered to have either Yin or Yang qualities.

Yin and Yang Umbrella

Wok Fusion Flavor LIVE Feed

  • Chinese Food’s Danny Bowien Eat His Way Through Sichuan

    - 3 weeks ago

  • Chinese fermented black beans

    Wrinkly Chinese fermented black beans look as though they have just emerged from an archaeological site. Indeed, the salty, pungent little bits are an ancient Chinese staple. Made of black or yellow... - 3 weeks ago

  • Tips to a successful stir-fry

    Award-winning cookbook author Grace Young was in Chapel Hill, N.C., promoting “Stir-Frying to the Sky’s Edge: The Ultimate Guide to Mastery, with Recipes and Stories,” in which she... - 4 weeks ago

  • What is Hand Shredded A$$ Meat?

    fter all, what Westerner has experience with foods like these? “Cowboy leg,” “Hand-shredded ass meat,” “Red-burned lion head,” “Strange flavor noodles,” “Blow-up flatfish with no... - 4 weeks ago

  • Learn Chinese Cooking in Beijing, China

    One of the best ways to experience Beijing’s cuisine is to wander through the hutongs. These old alleys are the scene of small family-run cooking schools, as well as tour operators offering... - 3 months ago

Comments

No comments yet.

Submit a Comment
Members and Guests

Sign in or sign up and post using a hubpages account.



    • No HTML is allowed in comments, but URLs will be hyperlinked
    • Comments are not for promoting your Hubs or other sites

    Please wait working