Chinese culinary arts are famous all over the world. Chinese dishes
appeal to the senses through color, shape, aroma and taste. Chinese
cuisine's entree normally strives for three to five colors, made up of
the main ingredient, with more secondary ingredients of contrasting
colors and textures; these are prepared and cooked to enhance their own
qualities, with the use of appropriate condiments and garnishing,
enabling to chef to present a delicious platter of fragrant delicious
art.

clams
In
prepared dishes, the stronger fragrant aroma stimulates one's appetite,
by using scallion, fresh ginger, root garlic or chili pepper; with the
use of wine, aniseed, cinnamon, peppercorn or sesame oil. Complementary
nuances are added. Soy sauce, sugar, vinegar and other seasonings may
used discreetly, adding to the complex play on the taste buds.
All
chefs of the Chinese kitchens, professional or in the home, strive for
harmony of sight, smell, taste, texture, so that each individual dish
has it's unique features highlighted; contrasted and balanced if it is
a dinner of many dishes, be it 3, 6, 9 or 12. The flavors must not
overpower, yet subtle enough to meet the tastes of those dining.
Complex or simple dishes may be prepared quickly or much longer, but
the ultimate goal is to share with the guests the play on the eaters'
real and imagined visions of the dishes and its ingredients.

Once
the meal is cooked, it is served all at once to the family, who eat
with chopsticks and drink soup with a wide spoon. The average dinner
includes a starch -- rice, noodles, bread, or pancakes -- a meat dish,
vegetable, and soup, which serves as a beverage. For formal meals and
banquets, there are many successive courses which are served in a
strict traditional order. A further point is that over festive periods,
with the play of word's phonetics, well meaning felicitous names of
dishes have many people trying to guess what they are about to eat,
thereby adding fun to eating.
Chinese food enjoys a high
reputation in the world also for its sheer abundance. It is due to the
diversity of the climate, products and customs that there are widely
different food styles and tastes in local regions.

For
local styles, Beijing cuisine combines the best features of different
regional styles. Shangdong cuisine leads the Northern dishes. Shangdong
cooks are good at cooking seafood. Sichuan cooks specialize in chilies
and hot peppers and Sichuan dish is famous for aromatic and spicy
sauces. Guangdong cooking makes use of many ingredients. They look for
fresh, tender, crisp textures. Huai Yang cuisine stresses the natural
flavors. Dishes are strong but not greasy, and light but delicate. Tan
cuisine is both sweet and salty. There is a saying that "southerners
have a sweet tooth, and northerners crave salt", but Tan dishes manage
to satisfy both. Because China's local dishes have their own typical
characteristics, Chinese food can be divided into eight regional
cuisines, the distinction of which is now widely accepted.
sichuan food
Shandong Cuisine
Consisting
of Jinan cuisine and Jiaodong cuisine, Shandong cuisine, clean, pure
and not greasy, is characterized by its emphasis on aroma, freshness,
crispness and tenderness. Shallots and garlic are frequently used as
seasonings so Shandong dishes taste pungent. Soups are given much
emphasis in Shandong cuisine. Thin soups are clear and fresh while
creamy soups are thick and taste strong. Jinan chefs are adept at
deep-frying, grilling, pan-frying and stir-frying while Jiaodong chefs
are famous for cooking seafood with a fresh and light taste.
Typical menu items: Bird's Nest Soup; Yellow River Carp in Sweet and Sour sauce
Sichuan Cuisine
Sichuan
Cuisine, known more commonly in the West as Szechuan Cuisine, is one of
the most famous Chinese cuisines in the world. Characterized by its
spicy and pungent flavors, Sichuan cuisine, with a myriad of tastes,
emphasizes the use of chili. Pepper and prickly ash are always in
accompaniment, producing the typical exciting tastes. Garlic, ginger
and fermented soybean are also used in the cooking process. Wild
vegetables and meats such as are often chosen as ingredients, while
frying, frying without oil, pickling and braising are used as basic
cooking techniques.
It can be said that one who doesn't experience Sichuan food has never reached China.
Typical menu items: Hot Pot; Smoked Duck; Kung Pao Chicken; Twice Cooked Pork; Mapo Dofu
seefood
Guangdong Cuisine (Cantonese Cuisine)
Tasting
clean, light, crisp and fresh, Guangdong cuisine, familiar to
Westerners, usually has fowl and other meats that produce its unique
dishes. The basic cooking techniques include roasting, stir-frying,
sauteing, deep-frying, braising, stewing and steaming. Steaming and
stir-frying are most frequently used to preserve the ingredients'
natural flavors. Guangdong chefs also pay much attention to the
artistic presentation of their dishes.
Typical menu items: Shark Fin Soup; Steamed Sea Bass; Roasted Piglet
Fujian Cuisine
Combining
Fuzhou Cuisine, Quanzhou Cuisine and Xiamen Cuisine, Fujian Cuisine is
renowned for its choice seafood, beautiful color and magical tastes of
sweet, sour, salt and savory. The most distinct feature is their
"pickled taste".
Typical menu items: Buddha Jumping Over the Wall; Snow Chicken; Prawn with Dragon's Body and Phoenix's tail
Jiangsu Cuisine
vegetarian food
Jiangsu
Cuisine, also called Huaiyang Cuisine, is popular in the lower reaches
of the Yangtze River. Using fish and crustaceans as the main
ingredients, it stresses their freshness. Its carving techniques are
delicate, of which the melon carving technique is especially well
known. Cooking techniques consist of stewing, braising, roasting, and
simmering. The flavor of Huaiyang Cuisine is light, fresh and sweet and
its presentation is delicately elegant.
Typical menu items:
Stewed Crab with Clear Soup, Long-boiled and Dry-shredded Meat, Duck
Triplet, Crystal Meat, Squirrel with Mandarin Fish, and Liangxi Crisp
Eel
Zhejiang Cuisine
Comprising local cuisines of
Hanzhou, Ningbo, and Shaoxing, Zhejiang Cuisine is not greasy. It wins
its reputation for freshness, tenderness, softness, and smoothness of
its dishes with their mellow fragrance. Hangzhou Cuisine is the most
famous one of the three.
Typical menu items: Sour West Lake Fish, Longjing Shelled Shrimp, Beggar's Chicken
Hunan Cuisine
Hunan
cuisine consists of local cuisines of Xiangjiang Region, Dongting Lake
and Xiangxi coteau areas. It is characterized by thick and pungent
flavors. Chili, pepper and shallot are usually necessities in this
variation.
Typical menu items: Dongan Chicken; Peppery and Hot Chicken
Anhui Cuisine
Anhui
Cuisine chefs focus much more attention on the temperature in cooking
and are good at braising and stewing. Often ham will be added to
improve taste and candied sugar added to gain freshness.
Typical menu items: Stewed Snapper; Huangshan Braised Pigeon
medicated diet

Chinese
medicinal cuisine is unique in China and has a long history. Sun
Simiao, a leading Tang Dynasty doctor, once said, "Food has the
function of eliminating evil influences and soothing the vital organs,
cultivating one's mind and building up one's strength." In China,
people contend that food tonic is much better than medicine tonic in
fortifying one's health. Based on traditional Chinese herbal medicine
practice, it combines strictly processed traditional Chinese medicine
with traditional culinary materials to produce delicious food with
health restoring qualities. To cook medicinal food, one has a large
variety of fine materials to choose from and each material has its own
unique flavor. Generally, processed herbal materials are more commonly
used in order to avoid strong odors. However, individuals of different
physical status need to select different herbs. The selection of herbs
will depend on each individual's condition of health. Due to its herbal
nature, it is better to take medicinal food according to the doctor's
prescription.
In the cooking of medicinal food, slow cooking
methods such as stewing, braising and simmering are usually used in
order to extract more of the herbs' healing properties.
Typical medicine cuisine:
Baby Pigeon Stewed with Gouqi (Medlar) and Huangqi (Membranous Milk Vetch);
Pork Simmered with Lotus Seed and lily;
Pig's Kidney Stewed with Eucommia Bark.