Conversations with Tyler - Lunch with Fuchsia Dunlop at Mama Chang (Bonus)
Episode Date: November 13, 2019Three years after her first appearance, Chinese food expert Fuchsia Dunlop joins Tyler to celebrate the release of her latest cookbook and talk all things food and China. This time the conversation wa...s held over a special homestyle meal at Mama Chang, the newest restaurant from Chef Peter and Lisa Chang. Together with their daughter Lydia Chang, Fuchsia selected a menu to share with Tyler and a group of friends from the DC food scene. Each dish inspired new avenues for discussion, including the trendiness of 'Chinese' cauliflower, why hot pot is overrated, what Western food China has recently perfected, first experiences with Sichuan peppercorns, whether ma la will take over the world, why Michelin inspectors underrate Chinese cuisine, what to serve a Westerner for a Chinese dessert, and much more. Joining Tyler, Fuchsia, and Lydia around the table were Chef Pichet Ong, Chef Seng Luangrath, David Hagedorn, Stefanie Gans, Rivka Friedman, Natasha Cowen, and Yana Chernyak. Special thanks to Peter, Lisa, Lydia and all the staff at Mama Chang for the wonderful meal. Read a full transcript enhanced with helpful links. Recorded October 27th, 2019 Other ways to connect Follow us on Twitter and Instagram Follow Tyler on Twitter Follow Fuchsia on Twitter Email us: cowenconvos@mercatus.gmu.edu Subscribe at our newsletter page to have the latest Conversations with Tyler news sent straight to your inbox.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
Hi, everyone. This is Jeff, producer of Conversations with Tyler.
Today, we're bringing you a bonus episode featuring Chinese food expert, Fuchsia Dunlap,
who has a new cookbook out called The Food of Sichuan.
Now, longtime listeners might remember we had on Fuchsia way back on episode 15 to talk all
things food in China. I encourage you all to check out that episode if you missed it.
But for this episode, we open things up a bit.
Instead of a mostly one-on-one conversation between Tyler and Fuchsia,
we invited several other guests from the D.C. food scene to chat over a home-style Chinese meal.
The perfect place to host that meal is Mama Chang. It's the newest restaurant from chefs Peter and Lisa Chang,
and one of the best places to eat in D.C. Lydia Chang, their daughter, whoever sees the business,
hosted us at the table with a menu she and fuchsia developed together. So here's everyone who is at the table.
Tyler Cowan, Mercatus Center, host of Conversations with Tyler.
David Haggardorne, Washington, D.C., and I'm a former chef and restaurateur-turned writer.
Stephanie Gantz, program director at Cookology, which is a cooking school in Arlington.
I'm saying I'm a chef and owner at Deep Kau, Honamon, St. Kau, and Padag.
I'm Natasha Cowan. I'm married to Tyler Cowan, and I love Chinese food.
I'm Rifka Friedman, and I am an avid homecook and a follower of Tyler's blog.
I'm Yanna. I'm Tyler's daughter.
I visited Chengdu for the first time this summer.
I'm Piché-Hong. I'm between pastry chef and chef.
I live between New York and D.C.
I'm Lydia Chan, the daughter of Chef Lisa and Peter Chan.
And I love that we're here at Mama Chan today.
And I'm Fuchsia Dunlop, writer of several books about Chinese food, including now the food of Sichuan.
For pictures of the meal, click to the transcript in the show notes.
For what is worth, I didn't.
get to eat anything during the conversation either, and I still enjoyed hearing all the comments,
so I think you will too. Special thanks, of course, to Lydia, chefs, Peter and Lisa, and all the
staff at Mama Chang for the fantastic meal. Enjoy. Conversations with Tyler is produced by the Mercatus Center
at George Mason University, bridging the gap between academic ideas and real-world problems.
Learn more at Mercadis.org. And for more conversations, including videos, transcripts, and
upcoming dates, visit
Conversations with Tyler.com.
We are here today to commemorate
the publication of a revised
and extended edition of Fuchsia's
The Food of Fiswan. Fuchsia's
books on Chinese food are, in my
opinion, actually among the very
best greatest books of the entire
millennium. They are storehouses
of learning about food, culture,
history, education, training,
everything possible. They are beautifully written.
The food in them is delicious.
They are fun to read, the pictures and images,
are amazing. So we thought we would create a special bonus episode of the podcast, Conversations
with Tyler. But unlike most episodes of Conversations with Tyler, this one I mainly will be eating,
not leading the discussion. So the discussion will be led by Fuchsia and also Lydia Chang.
Lydia is connected to the restaurant Mama Chang, where we are eating, one of my very favorite restaurants
in the entire world, I eat here at least once a week. It is fantastic cauliflower. It is
my favorite dish. But for now, enough for me, I will interject a bit later.
Fuchsia, Lydia will do back and forth and the food will come and it will be explained
and clarified and the rest of us, we will all eat and later ask questions.
Actually, I would like to tell you a little bit about Mama Chan and the concept behind
it. Everybody knows that is professionally trained and everybody kind of has this idea
of Peter Chan restaurants. But when we started working on this concept, we want to focus
really on the home style cooking. So a lot of people think Mama Qian has this real
life figure like who is Mama Chan. It's his way of paying the tribute to the home
cooks which a lot of the time are women chefs. So that's why you know we are doing
the home style very gai-chang-tete at the city of Fairfax. A lot of people
find eating here is like having a meal at friends home or at their own household.
So it's mainly based on Sichuanese food, is it, or inspirations from all over China?
Over China, our hometown is actually in the Hubei province.
And some of the dishes has the inspiration from Hunan as well.
So Hulan, Hubei and Sichuan.
And are your customers, there are a lot of them Chinese or are those to the not Chinese?
60% Chinese.
That's a good advertisement that it makes people taste to phone.
So Fuchsia, maybe you could just introduce how you
think about Chinese food and going out to a restaurant with a group of 10 people, as we have here.
How do you approach that? Well, with great appetite. And I think one of the things about Chinese food
is because often you eat family style. So with a big group, it enables you to taste a good variety
of dishes. And that's one of the reasons, actually, that I think Chinese food is very poorly
represented by the international arbiters of taste, for example, the Mishlan guide. Their system is
based on one inspector going out on their own and sampling what a restaurant has to offer.
And for most Chinese restaurants, that's very, very difficult because, you know, the way you
should eat is with a group and having a good variety of dishes. So Lydia and I have been discussing
the menu and we were trying to have, you know, a selection of different flavors, different
ingredients, some lighter dishes to balance the strongly flavored ones, which is something
I always look for in ordering a Chinese meal. First dish is right.
Polyflower is here. Lydia and Fuchsia, if you could speak to it and also pass it around,
and we can all start eating.
So what we're starting today is with the dry fried curly flower.
Taylor is most favorite. Your family is most favorite.
So can bian.
Gan bian, kambien, is particularly Sichuanese cooking method,
where you toss an ingredient in a dry walk without much oil, and then you add oil and seasonings later.
And make sure you have the greeneries, too.
cilantro, green onion, with just a lot of seasonings, the flavors.
And cauliflower has become so trendy in China in the last few years.
For some reason, every...
In the US as well.
Really? Every Chinese restaurant.
Are they doing, are they mashing it and grinding it and make it into like mashed potatoes and rice there too?
And it's like a cauliflower crust as dough or just as the vegetable?
Like this, there's one dish that appears on practically every menu,
Yoji Hua Tai, which means.
organic cauliflower. I very much doubt that it's all organic, but it's always tossed with
these spicy seasonings and sometimes served in a in a gangu, like a black clay pot or an iron pot.
The cooking is a little bit different. I think what they do in China is to do a stir fry
or with maybe some source of protein like a ham or bacon, but our way of doing it,
it's lightly battered, deep fried first. And then we fry
in the walk again to add the seasonings.
And what's amazing now is that you actually shop in an Asian grocery store in the US,
you're going to see something that's called Chinese cauliflower,
which actually has less florette and more stem,
the way Chinese like it.
Yes, it's looser, isn't it?
It's a different vegetable.
It is, but ironically, it's not really a Chinese cauliflower,
but it just so happened that is what we like.
Marketing, marketing.
And I work in restaurants with a very hip Asian accent,
and so we embrace it fully,
fully and purchased those cauliflower.
We have to drive out all the way, right?
To get this cauliflower at like
good fortune or the Chinese supermarket.
Yeah, I always ran into that
and I was like, why is it a Chinese? I never
heard of Chinese cauliflower. So I
get someone just marketing term using that, yeah.
Nefusha, you and I, we did our last podcast about three years ago,
I think almost to the day.
And since then, you've been back to China plenty.
How was food in Chengdu change? And in China, more
generally. Because three years is a long time in China. A lot happens, right? What are the
differences? Well, I would say the craze for hot pot carries unabated hot pot and spicy skewers.
This is a negative to me. Am I wrong to think that? I like them, but they're all a bit
the same, unless you go to a very, very good one. For me, it's a negative. I think hot pot is
really fun once in a while, but it's sort of cook your own dinner stuff. And it doesn't really
showcase the myriad of different cooking techniques. And in a way, it's just one narrow aspect
of Chinese cuisine. And I think, you know, if one looks at it cynically, the spread of hot pot
is partly because it's very cheap and easy for consumers, but also it's very cheap and easy
for restaurateurs, because you don't need skilled chefs. You need one master broth and you need
people to slice up a whole load of ingredients, and then you can make a lot of money. So, and also some
new ingredients. So Okra and ice plant have popped up on menus everywhere. And also, I mean,
this dish actually, the cauliflower dish is something that's become ubiquitous. Well, we're coming
up next is some Wuhan street snacks. Raghangmen, the Wuhan sesame noodles, and we have
Sanchin dopie, the triple layer dopie. This is really exciting. For your request. Yeah, because I went to
In 2019, on my first trip to China, and I haven't been back since, and I remember tasting,
particularly the doughpie.
So the skin is, tell me, talk me through the dish.
It's mambing.
So that's the dough, the bean, it's bean skin, literally.
With eggs.
And it's stuffed with fried rice, right?
With little nuggets of...
Sticky rice.
Oh!
The triple layer indicates one layer of the skin, one layer of the rice, and then
Also, there's a mince pork, sychiorgi Garner.
And that, I mean, I haven't seen that dish anywhere since, so in more than 20 years.
And the Rheganmean, hot dry noodles, is a very famous, probably the most famous with doopi of Wuhan snacks, right?
And this is, is it made with gentry mien?
We make our noodles here in-house.
We couldn't find the right consistency for the noodle.
Again, this is not going to be as clear.
We'll be getting Wuhan, but because of the quality we have on noodles, we're able to make
them in-house.
And this is with pickled beans or fresh beans.
Jiangdo, yianjiang dough.
Yeah.
So this is with salted yard-long beans.
Very good, isn't it?
And Lydia, what would you say characterizes the food of Wuhan?
If someone has never been to Wuhan, and you had to tell them on a postcard, what it's about?
It's a lot of fresh river fish.
We are by the Yangtze River.
So a lot of really fresh produce, riverfish, and also the flavor, it's, we don't use
Sichuan peppercorn.
Sichuan peppercorn is from Sichuan, typically.
But now I want to say the cuisine in China is so fluid and translucent.
You can almost eat dumplings anywhere in the south, and you can eat Sichuan.
anywhere like the further north you go you can use the Shetuan too.
So if we are really talking about the regional difference,
it's we use a lot of local vegetable like Hongshan Thai,
Tai Tai, is something we haven't had,
or there's no chance to eat outside of Ho-Han.
Is that Hong Tai Tai, the winter vegetable?
Yes.
That is one of my favorite vegetables in the whole world.
That's red or purple rap shoots, right?
And just in the winter, and they are stirred,
fried and they have a hint of bitterness and they are juicy and they are just
marvelously delicious this um this d'opi to an English person is reminding me a
little bit of shepherd's pie so there's a layer of sort of sourced pork and then
sticky rice instead of potato and the the golden bean skin instead of like maybe
you might have a layer of grated cheese and grill it on top now you learned
Chinese food in China of course much of it in Sichuan province who in
as Chinese teach food, how is the method of education and training different from, say, Great Britain or the United States?
Well, I haven't been to culinary school in Great Britain and the United States, so I'm not sure.
But you've been to school in these countries.
Yeah, well, I mean, I suppose that, I mean, the first thing is that when you go to cooking school, you are learning the building blocks of a cuisine, which is like the grammar of a language.
so the basic components, the basic processes and flavours,
which you then put together to make a multitude of dishes.
So whereas, I guess, if you were studying French cuisine,
you will learn some classic sauces, a bit of knife work,
techniques of pastry making.
And in China, in Sichuan, absolutely fundamental was Daugong, the knife skills.
I actually have a story to share about Dad's cutting nose.
He said when he first started learning, there was, in school, there's only limited time, but he wants to really excel at it.
So he returned back to the dorm, started cutting, using cliver to cut newspaper to practice.
Really?
Yeah.
So there, like, they would spend a lot of time outside of school to be able to cut better.
And it's not, doesn't matter what you cut as long as you are cutting.
Well, I remember actually my classmates at the cooking school.
school. A lot of them were actually living in. And sometimes they would invite me up to the dormitories
in our lunch break and they would be practicing vegetable carving and dumpling shaping and so on. But
yeah, when I enrolled at the school, I was given a cleaver and my chef's whites. And that was the
tools of the trade, really. And so we had to, almost all the cutting, very sophisticated cutting,
was done with this one knife, which is not a heavy butcher's chopper, but they're very
light and versatile cutting cleaver.
I would love to know how you got into and fell in love with Chinese cuisine generally.
Well, I was already a very enthusiastic eater and quite a serious cook from childhood.
So in my teens, I was reading cookbooks and cooking, particularly French, patisserie.
I love pastry making in my teens.
And then I got into China through a job I had, went there on holiday, loved it, started learning Mandarin.
It wasn't a plan. It looks like a plan in retrospect, but it really wasn't.
And ended up in the Sichuanese capital, Chengdu, as a British Council scholar.
And I was supposed to be doing academic work, but ended up spending all my time in kitchens,
and then did some private classes at the cooking school, and finally was invited to enroll
as the first foreign student they'd had in a chef's training course.
But it wasn't, it was, what it really was was,
I had since I was a teenager been in the habit of keeping a diary,
and the diary always ended up being recipes and menus and descriptions of food.
So that just carried on when I was in Sichuan.
And I was a scholarship student at the university,
so didn't have huge amounts of money to spend.
But there were all these little noodle shops and street stalls
and little restaurants around the university,
serving spectacular food.
And it was all freshly made, dazzling flavors, healthy, delicious.
And so I was just curious about it.
So I started not with some master plan to write books about Chinese food
because, of course, it would have sounded insane
for an English woman to want to make a career out of writing about Chinese food in the 90s.
You know, insane.
But it was just out of interest.
And I got more and more interested as time went on.
When you visited street stalls and all these small food shops,
how willing were people to kind of open their kitchens to you
and show you behind the curtain?
Surprisingly willing.
Just to put that in context.
So in the 90s, China was really just beginning to open up.
And so in this Chengdu, this provincial capital city,
there were only, I think, a couple of hundred foreigners.
And so we were very novel and hugely interesting.
to local people, just as China was very interesting glass.
And so I would go to a restaurant owner and say, may I study in your kitchen?
And people were just stunned that an foreigner and a woman and a university graduate student
would actually like to be mingling with chefs and getting mucky in a kitchen.
And so I think people just found it rather intriguing and hilarious.
So, and I always say this, I mean, all the work I've ever done is completely dependent on the generosity of people in China,
and it's very much a collaboration.
You know, people who have all this knowledge, but they don't have the means to communicate in English,
and they have always been very supportive and generous.
So coming up next, we have the salt and pepper lotus root sandwich, which again is a very typical Wuhan cuisine.
We generally have this over Chinese New Year or a big celebration.
Something deep fried, it's a luxury.
We, at a day-duty, like households don't really do a large batch of oil and deep fry.
So that's something really considered as precious back then.
There's like sandwiches, thin slices of lotus root with minced pork, is it in the middle?
Yes.
And then coated in batter and deep fried.
I don't know how well you know American Chinese food, like what you can find in America.
I assume you do know it well.
And I wanted to find out how is it different from what you can find in England.
Is it basically the same scene or is it a different scene?
I think, so you have the old school American Chinese food, chop suey, egg fuyong.
I would say we're not as big in Britain.
They were in the early days, but you don't see them anymore.
But I actually had my first American Chinese chop suey last year in Los Angeles.
And I went to this cafe in the Grand Central Market with Yu Bo, a famous Sichuanese chef.
And I made him eat chop suey because I wanted to see his reaction.
And, well, he was very diplomatic and said that he thought it was, you know, quite a healthy and cheap meal,
A mixture of meat and vegetables and rice and so on, but definitely light years away from his own style of cooking.
So there are certain dishes that are really popular in America, in particular on the East Coast, General So's chicken,
which doesn't really exist in England at all.
So our traditional Chinese dishes were when I was growing up, we had sweet and sour pork balls.
So a nugget of pork meat dipped in a very thick batter, deep fried, and so.
served with a bright, lurid, red sauce.
And this is what I adored as a child.
And then more recently, every Chinese restaurant, really, certainly in London, but I think
nationwide, has crispy duck.
So it's the easy way to do a peaking duck.
Peaking duck is very complicated.
You need to wind dry, you need a special oven.
But crispy duck, the duck is marinated and steamed and then deep-fried in pieces, so you can
just order a quarter of a duck.
but it served Peking Dut style
with the very thin pancakes and the sweet
fermented sauce and scallion cucumber.
It all sounded like a variety of fish and chips.
So it's just different,
and it's different communities
and different markets and different evolution.
And now we have what,
quarry under fish rolls?
That's a Peter Chang specialty.
Created by him, am I wrong?
Created by him.
Tell us, is there a story?
There is a lot of stories and for the season right now we incorporated blue Maryland crab.
So today we're taking it to a new version.
You're enjoying the crab row.
Hmm.
A cilantro crab row.
I actually have a question for future.
You know, when you see the rise of Chinese cuisine, I think now the Chinese cuisine itself doesn't have a brownie.
doesn't have a boundary between like the way they cook it in China and the way they cook it in the US.
You know, American Chinese cuisine versus the authentic Chinese cuisine.
I think we are actually for my trips to China almost once every year, I noticed that food in China is slowly to evolve to change as well.
When I was at a Shanghaiese restaurant to have this drunken shrimp, I noticed that they used szechone peppercorn in the marineries.
So it comes to a wonderful surprise with the Shao Xing wine, the Sichuan peppercorn.
There's really no fine line between Cantonese cuisine, Shanghai cuisine, or Sichuan cuisine.
And where do you think the future modern Chinese cuisine is going?
It doesn't have to be in China.
I think it's a global trend.
I mean, I think that a cuisine is always a living form of culture that's recreated on a daily basis.
It's just not something static, and that's where you sort of trip up when you start getting hung up about notions of authenticity.
And particularly in China again.
And Sichuan is a good example of a place with feverish competition in the restaurant business,
and so many different restaurants all chasing new ideas and new concepts.
So there's a period at the moment of extraordinary mixing, so people traveling all over the world, all over China.
As you said, you find Sichuanese dishes on everyone's restaurant menu.
news. Even the old Cantonese restaurants in London have to have some spicy dumplings or some spicy
fish because that's what customers want. And also just in Sichuan itself, like the fish
dish we've just had, that you find the Diorgio, the steamed fish head with chopped salted
chilis, which is very Hunanese, is popular in Sichuan. There are other dishes from Jujang,
but I don't think this is actually something entirely new. And when I was researching the new edition
of the book, one thing that was really interesting was going to.
back to a guide to Chengdu written in 1908 called the Chengdu Tonglan.
And this has a list of restaurants and dishes and snacks.
And you can see from that period that it was already quite cosmopolitan
and there were quite a few dishes that were clearly from the Jiangnan region.
There were western dishes like sort of certain pork chops and dishes with curry,
which would have come, I think, from the...
There were missionaries, foreign missionaries, living in change to early 20th century.
So in the 20th century, there was a period when China closed in on itself.
But we're now just having another period of flowering, but with increased transport links,
of course, it's faster and crazier and more international.
But I think you're right that the big difference with Chinese food in the West
is that you no longer have a community of mainly Cantonese, American Chinese people,
who are catering for Western tastes and who don't have access to many local ingredients
apart from dried and, you know, preserved food, which they could import very early on.
But you now have a fluid interaction between food in China and food in Chinese communities abroad.
And many of the customers, as you've said here, are actually Chinese,
and their recent arrivals or temporary residents in the stage.
and they don't want to eat Americanized Chinese food.
They want to eat the same food they have at home.
And then also, I think in California,
there are people growing Chinese vegetables,
there's fresh produce, air-fraided in.
So it's not just soy sauce and dried shrimp
and things that you can get to make Chinese food.
You can get so many ingredients.
Lydia, the new dish?
Yes, we have grandma's sticky rice bowl with crab again.
Typically, the filling it varies, traditionally with mince pork.
Pork is heavily used in Central East China,
But again, because of crabs in season right now, that's why we, you know, it's about where you are, the foot changes.
So is it just crab or is it crab mixed with pork?
Crap mixed with tofu.
Oh, really?
Yes.
Oh, interesting.
And they look very pretty, all speckled with rice grains, certainly on the outside.
Lydia's father is of a generation who, in China, lived through the Great Famine.
And indeed, it wasn't until he went to cooking school as a young man that he was exposed to to food in abundance.
I mean, there were many things he had never tasted before because the farm they came from in the country.
It was such deprivation.
How has that experience for so many chefs of this generation informed the cooking of China?
Well, I suppose everyone of that generation had experience of acute hardship of different degrees, depending on where you were living.
And so one of the great joys of the reform period has been the easy availability of food, particularly of meat, because people who lived through those years told me that they used to dream and fantasise about pork because they never had it.
And some people used to, for example, have a small piece of fatty pork and use it to wipe around the wall.
walk for stir-frying vegetables and then keep it for the next dish because they really didn't
have enough meat to eat. So I think that sometimes the excess of Chinese dining out with just
tables laden with dishes, which is something the Chinese government is actually trying to curb now.
There's a campaign to make people waste less food and eat what's on the table. But that's
a reaction to the period of deprivation. But one thing that really amazes me is how despite these
very tough years and not only the famine but also the cultural revolution which was an assault on
bourgeois and elite culture when fancy food and elegant restaurants were attacked and forced to
change their ways and become more proletarian that it's extraordinary that the cuisine has recovered
and that you can once again get exquisite and refined Chinese food and I was talking to
one elderly chef recently about the cultural revolution period,
and I was asking him about the effect of the movement
on the dishes they were allowed to cook.
And he said, well, actually, that was the least of our problems.
The main problem was that just wasn't enough of everything.
So given that China is a particularly food-focused culture,
and it's always been so important, I think, yeah,
the memory of deprivation is very strong for the elder generation.
but of course not for the younger generation, right?
So you don't have any direct experience of this.
Lucky me.
Yeah.
What's your most popular dish with Chinese guests and with non-Chinese guests here?
Now it's all infused.
We get a lot of reviews, luckily from the Washington Post, the Washingtonian.
And people have the urge to try something different.
They want to know more about why the country.
food is cooked this way. Of course they're going to get their favorite
kongkau chicken, the mappu tofu, but also when you see this fish dish with piles of
chopped fresh chilies, how can you resist? So this is the dish that's very
popular on the menu, the fresh chili flounder fish with marmite chili. That's a bit
like the Hunanese doja yuot. In Hunan, a very important.
popular dish is the head of the giant carp, big head carp, split in two on a huge platter
and covered in pickled chilies and steamed. And this is a more small version of that with flounder.
Well, I remember the first time I actually experienced Sichuan peppercorn was in the 90s.
I have a very different background of, you know, being Chinese because my parents left China
during the war in the late 30s and early 40s.
and I was born in Thailand and grew up in Singapore.
I don't have any, you know, Sichuanese in my blood,
but it's really strange that the first time I actually encountered the taste
was through Japanese cooking with sancho pepper.
And in Japanese cuisine, sancho pepper is actually like Chinese peppers.
And because perhaps the Japanese palate
likes more subtle flavor. It's always brined or soaked in water or sugar water. Is that correct?
And then it's a very different effect because it has a very gentle numbing effect,
which is the main characteristics of Sichuan peppercorn. And so in the 90s, it was a big chop
from me, and it actually took me a whole decade to kind of become accustomed to that, you know,
heavy, spicy sensation that lasts for a long time, actually beyond chilies.
Yes. But you're right, there are many different varieties of the plant.
Yes.
So the classic red Sichuan pepper, there are actually different varieties from different parts of China,
and it's thought to express its terroir like wine grapes.
So some boutique, Sichuan pepper producers now are starting to label the exact place of origin of their pepper,
and you can really taste the difference.
But there's also green Sichuan pepper.
Yes.
Which has appeared on the market only since the late 90s.
that was a previously wild variety
that was then licensed as a food in the late 90s
and is everywhere now.
And it has a very zesty, refreshing lime flavor
and it's particularly good with fish, with frog
in sort of light, vibrant, soupy dishes.
And this will also take over the world, in my opinion.
It will take over the world.
Yeah, and sancho is another variety.
And there are also, in the countryside in China,
I've stayed in farmhouses where people use wild varieties of Sichuan pepper and they add them to their green tea, for example.
How is Chinese or Sichuan farmhouse cooking different from, say, the urban styles a tourist would more likely encounter?
Is it more fermentation or what else?
Well, I think city people would often say that country cooking tastes the best because you get often people growing their own vegetables.
Right. Is it otherwise different other than just freshness?
You have, I would say, less meat generally because people traditionally would rear their own pigs for meat.
And fabulous cured pork, so bacon and sausages, which will be used and salt pork,
used in small amounts and cooked with country vegetables and sometimes more sort of coarse vegetables
like potatoes and sweet corn and so on.
And also wild vegetables.
So set them out of foraged.
greens, for example. And pickles, yes, traditionally everyone would have a pickle jar, and they would
use pickles to add umami flavors and refreshing sourness to their dishes. I have the most naive
question possible. As an economist, I'm interested in the geographic spread of innovation.
And Mala, I find, to be one of the glories of cooking anywhere, the whole world. But why has
Ma Laa not spread to more locales, either within China or elsewhere? What hinders the spread of
Mala, and if you look at the border condition, well, there's Mala here but not there.
What accounts for that?
Do you have any sense of that, Fuchsia?
Well, firstly, it's just concerned with patterns of immigration.
So the ma taste, the tingly taste, and that's the word in Chinese, which also means
pins and needles and anesthesia, the tingly taste of Sichuan pepper.
So that ma'a flavor is very particular to Sichuan.
Sichuan is an Inman province and did not send people out into the world en masse until,
comparatively recently.
But I cook with it, why don't the people say in Wuhan
or some other part of China?
I think now they do.
Now they do.
Since the reform and opening up in the 90s,
there are citadel restaurants all over the country
and people are crazy for Malar.
But I think one of the reasons is that
it's so stimulating.
So Malar is a flavor that holds its own
in a very crowded marketplace.
And also that
some more delicate cuisines,
they speak more quietly.
and they don't attract your attention in the same way.
And I think they get drowned out,
like the delicate cooking of the Jiangnan region around Shanghai,
which we were talking about last time,
that that's more subtle, more difficult to do well,
relies more on particular ingredients.
Sichuanese, the Malal flavor is this flavor bomb.
You can apply to anything.
So you're right, it travels very well.
But I think your question about why it's not more pervasive,
it's just because it's early days.
It's going to be everywhere.
So we will take over the world.
It will.
Lydia's mother has a good story about Cichwone pepper corn.
So when she first encountered Cichron peppercorn, she's like, she's very adventurous.
Where she's from in China?
Wuhan.
Okay, Wuhan, yeah.
Like Frisia said, we didn't know what the ingredient is until in the 90s,
and that's when Mom started to discover this new sensation.
She's the first one in her family to step out of the comfort zone,
be like, oh, this is really interesting.
Let me see what I can do with it.
So nowadays, she even used Sishon Papercorn in her cookies.
That's how crazy she is.
The soup we're drinking right now, it's black bone chicken soup,
wu-gitong.
Typically, you would see the spice that we use
to make the soup, da-lil.
But the version that we make it now, it's very clear.
It's like how my mom likes to drink.
Is that d'angui?
Yeah.
Chinese Angelica.
Yes.
That slightly astringent taste is that?
It's a medicinal herb.
Chinese angelica, dangui.
There's also Chinese states.
You see the red goji berry and then the Chinese yam.
The Chinese yam, which has a lovely consistency,
a bit like potato, but a bit slippery as well.
but I particularly asked Lydia for this soup
because for one thing
I thought it would be nice to have a very
refreshing palate cleansing contrast to some
of the spicier dishes
and also because soup is so important in Chinese meals
and almost every Chinese meal
will have some sort of soup even if it's really rudimentary
just Miang in the countryside
which is the leftover water used for parboiling rice
or you might just have some pumpkin boiled in water
and it's a palate cleanser
and that's one real difference
I think between Western and Chinese cuisines
that soup is more necessary for Chinese people
as part of the diet.
I agree.
If I'm cooking for friends at home,
if they're not Chinese, I might make a soup or not.
But if I'm cooking for Chinese friends,
I will put a lot of effort into making a beautiful broth
because they'll really appreciate it,
and it'll make them enjoy the whole meal more as well.
What does China do best in Western food?
Pastry.
Right.
You were quite right.
Yes.
And it's actually the greatest love affair for a Chinese person.
And, you know, as you were mentioning, the cosmopol cities with the people of expats and the locals,
the idea of pastry from all over the world have really penetrated China with a very full kind of synergy.
Yeah, you've absolutely nailed it.
The combination bread, steamed, baked.
And it's really taking on to a next level where,
You know, in Taiwan in particular, like bread is just infused with local ingredients like Longan or local wine, tea.
So I think that that's kind of the greatest, you know, marriage of technique and ideas.
And it's funny because you get in China one thing that's quite trendy is toast.
So you get toast cafes.
But this is not toast as English people like it, sort of crusty toast.
Well, anywhere really?
Yeah.
And they have these very soft square loaves which are served.
with all kinds of different toppings, sometimes ham and cheese and ketchup or, yeah, sometimes
the bread is mixed up with red beans.
So it's a totally fusion food.
And you also get pizzas that would outrage any Italian, like durian pizza, lychi pizza,
strawberry and chocolate pizza.
But also in Chengdu, and this is one thing, French patisserie, I had some of the best croissant
that I've had anywhere.
in Chengdu recently, made by a young Sichuanese pastry chef
who's married to a Frenchman and lived in Paris and trained in Paris.
And there are several patisseries in Chengdu.
And these are not fusion creations that would horrify Italians like the pizzas.
They are doing patisserie, but with Chinese ingredients,
sometimes a bit less sweet, because Chinese tend not
to like the sweetness of, say, Americans or even French.
but done with stunningly beautiful technique.
Absolutely ravishing displays of patisri, you just want to eat everything.
I agree, and I was surprised because I've been traveling to China since the 90s as well,
and I see the change, and cities or towns that weren't very popular back then, like Sian,
like I managed to find really top-notch croissant.
Yes, and the thing that's really remarkable about that is the speed,
because it's happened in five years, ten years, not more than that.
It's just like lightning.
Suddenly they've cracked patisserie in the way that the Japanese have.
And one thing also that's really, really shocking to me is for a great tea-drinking nation
is the popularity of coffee.
So not only Starbucks, which has spread like a rash over the whole country,
and now has a local imitator called Luckin Coffee, which emerged from nowhere.
But also, there are so many little cafes doing freshly ground coffee.
beans. And I went to a little town near Lershan, where the giant Buddha is, in pursuit of a particular
fermented tofu, which I adore. And I was dying for an espresso, and I thought, no hope in this
little county town. But I found a little cafe, and I had a superb espresso made with freshly
ground beans. Absolutely amazing. But the only thing was, they served it with a little dish of
malar pickled radish, which is a really unpleasant flavor combination.
in my opinion.
Where would you go in China if you were somebody restricted meat?
And I'm also curious from a home cooking perspective
how you make a good meal without meat.
Yeah.
Well, if you want to make a good meal without meat,
then Chinese cuisine offers plenty of fabulous solutions
because the Chinese are brilliant at using fermented foods
like soy sauce, black beans,
Sichuan chili bean paste,
and fermented tofu,
all of which have almost meaty or cheesy or creamy,
umami flavors to cook with vegetables.
So you can make the kind of dishes that are actually very appealing and satisfying
to meat eaters as well as vegetarians because of these very bold and satisfying flavors
and mouthfeels.
But vegetarians in China do have a bit of a problem.
And that is because the Chinese approach to vegetarian eating is very different from the
Western approach.
So in China, people often make a distinction between Chinese su shu-she vegetarian eating,
vegetarian food and su-shu-jou-yi vegetarianism.
So Chinese people are, many Chinese people believe in Buddhism and will have vegetarian
food when they go to visit a temple or on certain holy days.
But they don't abstain from meat all the time.
And I've even met an elderly monk who was a lifelong vegetarian who said that when he was
sick or weak, he would eat little meat to boost his strength.
So vegetarians travelling around China have this problem that sometimes they ask for vegetarian food
and it has little bits of meat in it or it's cooked with lard or stalk or dried shrimps.
So it's quite hard.
You have to really insist to restaurants that I am a total vegetarian.
You have to list the things you don't want to explain.
And the only place that traditionally you would get pure vegetarian and even vegan food
is in Buddhist monasteries and sometimes Taoist monasteries,
which have, the larger ones have their own restaurants
which cater for pilgrims and patrons
and do extraordinary vegetarian cuisine.
So partly it's simple vegetarian cooking
and partly it's fang huntai imitation meat dishes.
You know, impossible burger they got there centuries before you.
And so you can go in Sichuan to a monastery
and you can feast on spare ribs and sharks, fin and sausages and gongbao chicken.
and they're all totally vegetarian.
So one change in the last few years
is that there are a small number of Chinese people,
maybe cosmopolitan intellectual types in cities,
who are becoming vegetarians in that Western way.
It is actually often connected with Buddhism,
but they are abstaining totally from meat,
and not only from meat, but also from the Wu Hun,
the pungent aromatics like garlic
and all kinds of onion-e vegetables,
which is also part of the Buddhist diet.
Lydia, the next dish.
Yes.
So what we have here, it's a Jingzhou-style fish cake with the yellow eggy skin with grandmother's
fishball.
So again, this is, you know, the dish that's beloved by our Western and Chinese clients.
That's pretty.
Yeah.
Everything in here is mating house.
You know, that's years of culinary experience.
And that's very sort of classical presentation.
Precisely.
With all these carefully cut rectangles of egg skin.
And you don't actually often see that now even in China.
Right.
And this fishball dish, this reminds me of a lot of New Year dishes in many regions of China,
which are quite laborious to make because separately you've made a fish cake and fish balls
and then cut them up and reheated them in a big festive pot.
So people would often do that sort of thing for the Chinese New Year.
So is Lagamon spicy chili crisp?
Oh, Lao Gamma.
Yes.
Yes.
So that delicious.
Is that a here thing or it's everywhere?
Oh, it's very trendy.
And it's from Guajos province, another spicy eating province in southwest China.
And it was invented by a woman, Lao Gamma.
And it's now a mass production.
And it has been popular in China for a long time, and now Westerners getting addicted to it.
It's quite funny.
When you take a flight on Sichuanamah,
airlines. They have pretty good food and Sichuanese dishes maybe with rice. And the steward
will go around with a jar of Laogadma sauce and offer to put a spoonful on your food. What
airlines are? Suchuan Airlines. Lydia, the next dish. Yes, the red pepper chicken with
sesame. Again, that's our version of the Chongqing chicken. We want to make something a little
lighter, not so heavily battered, and the sesame flavor just creates a balance of the red peppers.
I have a question. What are some of the kind of most interesting economic historic
determinants of food? So for example, in Italy, in the north of Italy, it was typically a wealthier
region, so the pasta dishes come from a lot of zero zero flour, whereas in the south, Somalina's
more popular, and that's really shaped the food scene. What are some of the same? What are some of the
of your favorite stories from China of kind of the ways in which those economic realities or
just technological realities have shaped the direction of food development?
Well, I suppose the first thing is that patterns of trade historically, and one thing that
I always find very fascinating is that many Chinese ingredients bear the names of the era and the
place from which they were imported.
So, for example, pepper in Chinese is called Hu Jia, barbarian pepper,
because it was an imported pepper from the northwest where the Khu Barbarians lived,
from the Han Dynasty onwards into China.
Zhao pepper was the original Sichuan pepper.
So lots of imports from that, you can tell from their names that they came from the northwest in that period.
More recently, and there are other ones like the ingredients that came.
came from the sea during the Ming Dynasty and the early Qing bear the name Fan, which is another
word for barbarian. So the tomato is called Fanchir, which means a barbarian eggplant.
And one of the early names for Chile was Fan Jia, barbarian pepper. In such one, they still
call it Ha'jiao, sea pepper. And in terms of connection with economics, it's very
conspicuous that the great Chinese cuisines have just always followed the money. So you had a
flourishing restaurant scene in Kaifung, the city now known as Kaifung, which was a northern Song
dynasty capital from about the 10th century. And there were restaurants, including Sichuanese
restaurants at that time in Kaifeng. And when the Song dynasty was overrun by nomadic barbarians in
about, I think, the 13th century, the capital fled south to Hungzhou. And then you had the
court and so on in Hongzhou. And that became a flourishing cultural centre. And that's where
you also had an extraordinary cuisine, food writing, poetry about food, restaurants. And the
Jiangnan region that sort of Hongzhou and Yangzhou, all these cities, were the crocs of trade
patterns the salt trade
all went through Yangzhou. There were lots of rich
salt merchants and they were the people
who were having lavish dinner
parties entertaining the Chen Long
Emperor on his southern tours
and many of the grand old dishes come from
there. Then later
you have
Shanghai and Ningboor
in these areas becoming rich
treaty ports and having a different sort of cuisine
in Shanghai an early
fusion cuisine with
there are Western restaurants in
Shanghai dating back to about 1900, doing a Shanghai-nees version of Western food.
And then during the Cultural Revolution and so on, the sort of the place where you had all the
Chinese money and the elite, Taiwan and Hong Kong, and those places became the sort of custodians
of traditional gastronomy.
So for those who have been anticipating for the spices, the Mama Chin home style is not very
too focused on just the heat, the spicy,
but actually a lot of balanced flavors.
So so far, we didn't really have something that's too intense.
However, this one, we call it Guo Jiang Niu, Yangtze River beef.
Because of where we are from in the Wuhan city,
we are by the Yangtze River.
So the main spice we're using here is actually pickle chili with some bird's eye chili and pickle juice.
And those are the really deadly little green, Ye Shan Zhao.
They're called Wild Mountain Chili's.
So you look at that, and it's a delicate jade green.
It doesn't look really red and spicy, but they're the hottest sort of pickle chilies.
And also the birds' eye little rice chilies in Chinese Chiangze.
I think I have that version with fish, a flounder.
Yeah, I remember having that.
I was really surprised how Shishuan used a pickle chili.
That was my first time here, actually here.
And I just can't stop eating it.
That's kind of our way of incorporating what we can find here in the United States.
So we use a lot of Thai chili with the pickle juice.
Now, you're a famous Lausian cook.
When you encounter Sichuan food and also from Wuhan,
I mean, what connection strike you or what differences?
You must see this all through a different lens.
Yeah, I remember having encountered Shuan
was actually through Peter Chang.
Because I remember when I first moved here,
I actually went to my friend house who is from Northern Laos.
And she was making this chili paste.
It's a dry chili paste with Northern Laos.
It's very similar to Shihuan peppercorn.
But it's mider floor.
And I was encountered the first time.
I took the first bite.
like what is this? How come I never experienced it in my life before? And it's from Laos.
So I actually did a lot of research and I found Peter Chech actually was thinking about driving
all the way to Wilhelm's bird to try that. But I didn't make it out there until Peter Chang
was opening here. So ever since then, I just started to experiment with more richard chaper corn
infused with Laotian gluten. So I actually made a dish recently with steamed chicken, with a steamed chicken,
with a steamed chicken rich one.
Pepper corn is like a chili paste
with a little bit of oil
because I pretty much do a lot of
resources on Chishan pears in as well
so we don't use oil
when we make a chili paste
so I start to
infuse that with oil and use
that on the chicken.
In Lausian food
because I don't really know about Lausian food
but do you have that sweet, sour,
spicy, salty thing going on?
No, mostly
savory and
sour, spicy, and a little bit complex.
I would say complex because of a lot of different herbs that we use.
And some funky.
Definitely like funky.
I forgot that one.
Definitely funky.
We use a lot of fish paste.
So is this very different from your other restaurants?
Yes.
Explain that a bit.
Well, first of, we wanted to do more home-style cooking.
And the upbringing, my family, spent most time in Wuhan,
besides our time in the US right now.
So like for example, the fish cake,
it's originated from one of the
Gu chung Jingzhou.
So it's a very typical fish cake in that region.
I typically don't really see this kind of fish cake
like outside of Hubei province.
So again, you know, this is something that takes a lot of skill
and people outside of the region would have a different
variety of fish cake, but the way it
to make it an eggy skin.
Again, that's something very typical in Hubei.
So our main focus here is really to launch what we like to eat at home.
For example, the veggie dish, that's vegetarian.
For a vegetarian to eat eggs, a farmer is stir fry.
It's a stir fry of some green peppers, Chinese celery, tofu skin, and eggs.
And this is something my grandma can easily make out of the ingredients she can get from her garden.
Sometimes it's tofu skin, sometimes it's just homemade tofu.
I think it's so interesting because certainly when I started writing about Chinese food,
I was reviewing Chinese restaurants in London for Time Out magazine.
And a lot of the Chinese restaurants at that period,
they had the English language menu intended for English speakers,
and they would have secret Chinese menus with all the really good and interesting dishes
that the Chinese people wanted to eat.
I mean, not strictly segregated,
but a lot of the funnier dishes
or the more unusual ones.
And you don't find translation too.
Yes, and I think that a lot of Westerners
used to go to Chinese restaurants
with a very fixed idea about what Chinese food was,
and they would want those classic familiar dishes.
And that's totally changed.
So now you can put anything on a Chinese menu,
and the foodie people, the more adventurous people,
are keen to try new dishes.
Right.
So you don't have to cater for different audiences.
No, we don't. And sometimes we do find our non-Chinese customers are more open to having
trying new things because the Chinese normally come having this same menu over and over.
That's pretty funny. Yeah.
I have a writing question because I write cookbooks for other chefs and you've updated this cookbook and I like to explain to people that there's fashion
in cooking, just like there's fashion in anything else, and they change and they grow and
they reference the past, but also in writing styles, too, there's a fashion. How has the writing
world and the writing style change now compared to when you set out to the rainbows?
Well, I think there's a huge appetite for detailed cultural information about the
food. And when I sent a proposal for my first Sichuan cookbook in the late 90s, it was rejected by all
six publishers. And they all said that, well, British readers would not be interested in a regional
Chinese cookbook because it was too niche and too narrow. And I think, you know, you can see
how ridiculous that statement sounds now, because I think there's a real hunger for specific and
specialized cookbooks. So that's completely changed. So it's not outlying thing to want to do a
very local and regional cookbook.
And I think there's been an explosion in food writing as a genre.
I mean, not just in books, but on the internet and all kinds of new indie food magazines
and an appetite for more stories about food.
So that's just become very mainstream.
But I would say that the main difference, perhaps, well, one is that the greater availability
of ingredients and the hunger for authentic information, but also just in designation.
and people wanting lots of photographs and visual information as well.
And has the way you've written the rest of written, the way you approach writing recipes now, has that changed over the years?
No, I don't think so. I mean, I'm more experienced, so I think it's a bit more streamlined.
But I would say that it's possible to push the boat out a bit further in terms of more adventurous dishes and ingredients.
because I always want to have the majority of dishes in a cookbook doable for someone with that.
So every now and then you sit back and you cackle, I'm going to put one in that none of them can make.
Yeah, yeah, being ahead of the curb.
And which recipe would that be in your new book?
Well, there's a very popular, very fiery Chongqing dish called Mao Shuehuan, which is spicy blood stew,
and it's made with pig's blood and offal.
And it can actually be made with duck's blood if you have it.
But that's something that is not available in every Chinese shop,
and you have to be more adventurous to make.
Yes.
So I think you can see the difference in the cauliflower more,
even more so in this steamed-stir-fired version,
that is a little bit different with more stem.
Yeah, so mildish with that beautiful purple Chinese eggplant.
We call it Garden Duo again from Grandmother's Garden.
Two vegetables.
You want to know what creates a consistency?
Yes, oil.
Sorry to tell you, but...
Globally, eggplant, always a lot of oil.
From eggplant parmesan to Chinese cooking, is pretty much soaked up in that.
That creates the meaty texture, you know, that's very tender.
It's like eating pork belly.
So recently, I just came back from Shanghai and I went to a restaurant that you had written about,
Yu Jilan. So how did you come about meeting chef Lan?
Well, so I've known him for 15 or 20 years, and he's actually one of the chefs that I brought
to the CIA Culinary Institute of America in, I think 2004. And I came with him and two other
leading Sichuanese chefs to do a demonstration there. So he's always been an extremely
creative and talented chefs, like one of the most outstanding chefs of his generation. So I followed
his career with interest. And when I first met him, he had a restaurant serving more farmhouse
food called Xiang Chuza, the village chef. And this was all the hearty, spicy, jacangzai, home style
flavors, really. But he had this dream to open a very fine restaurant doing his own style of
high-level cuisine. So Yudelan, I can't remember which year it opened. But there, and so that's,
What he's trying to do is to recreate the ambiance of an old Mandarin's house.
A lot of the finest food in China was in the private dining rooms of Chinese officials who would have private chefs.
So I think there's a maximum of about 18 seats in that restaurant.
It's tiny and it's run by chef Lan and his wife and his sister-in-law and a few other staff.
And it's typical of Sichuanese banquet cuisine in that.
you have some of the spicy flavours of folk cooking,
but you also have very delicate flavours based on exquisite stocks
made from chicken and ham and fish depending on the dish.
And so I think you can also see that he has some very traditional dishes,
like you might get some malah mureole, numbing and hot beef as a starter,
or a spicy rabbit dish, very traditional.
But then he becomes extremely inventive.
He also designs all his own tablewares, which are handmade in Jingdehya and the Porcelain capital.
So it's quite an experience and very different from the kind of restaurants, Tyler, that you write about.
It's sort of holes in the wall and popular places.
It was high-end, but I was most impressed when I had a little tour of the kitchen,
and there was only one walk, like a portable walk.
And, you know, this is, if I'm okay, Chinese cook, and I always tell people, like my weakness,
especially Lydia's dad, that I can't walk.
If you want me to cook with you, you're doing everything on the walk.
I'm just going to fry and do the salads, do the steaming, the dimsum.
I can do any of that, but not the walk.
And so when I saw the kitchen of Yiristan, I was very impressed
because I always have been thinking about, is it possible to do a Chinese restaurant
that's not walk focused?
And if you see the walk here, I mean, he's got, what, 10, 12?
Around.
Yeah.
I won't be able to handle a kitchen like that, but I think that this new,
no walk or less walk Chinese restaurant
I never figured out how they do that
like in New York there's a very popular one
called How Noodles by Madame Zhuge.
Oh yes beautiful place
And you know this is all over China
And there's no walk
It's very interesting
Really?
Yes
So I think you can't tell from the menu
But you definitely can go through
You know quite an exquisite meal
without realizing that nothing comes from the walk.
I mean, I would say that when people think about Chinese cuisine,
they often think about stir-frying as the Chinese method,
Paris excellence, but it's one of many different cooking methods,
and certainly steaming has been done in China since the Neolithic age,
and you can say that is the classic Chinese cooking method, really.
But often a good meal will have steamed dishes and boiled dishes,
as well as stir-fries,
and also, particularly in such a wonderful cold,
dishes. So cold dressed meat, cooked salads. So yes, it's not all about what cookery.
Given your background in Singapore, how do you assess Chinese food in Singapore? What's it good at?
What's it not good at? In the last century, if you speak to a lot of Chinese who migrated to,
let's say, Thailand, Vietnam, Malaysia, Singapore, the cream of the crop went to Singapore,
and they mostly went before the war broke out during famine times.
of the rest of China.
And I find Singapore Chinese food
at the core to be
Cantonese-based,
I would say, for the longest time.
And over time, it's been infused
with Malaysian influence,
some Western,
some Thai, and Indian.
And so you find a lot of spices.
You find a lot of fermented flavors,
curries,
and, you know, cinnamon,
a heavier use of cinnamon, clothes,
Star Anis, which is used in Cantonese cooking, but not quite bold.
And grew up with a lot of that, and it's different.
It's in its own category altogether, would you say?
Yeah.
What I found I can't get very good Sichuan food in Singapore,
or at least I don't know how to find it.
That southern Chinese, Hokkien Fujian, it's weird, but it's pretty good.
Singaporean food is amazing, Malay food is amazing.
but a lot of the harder core Chinese regions,
somehow Singapore has too many other good things
for Singaporeans to be interested in them.
Or do you have a different impression?
Well, to clarify a little bit more,
there's restaurant Chinese food and there's home Chinese food.
The home Chinese food might even be more simple,
probably a lot of Hokkien or therchu kind of flavors,
which has a lot of soups and clear broths
and almost like no stir-fry
and very little oil used in the cooking
and lean meats, lean cuts of meat.
And restaurant tends to be spicier.
But I would say that Sichuan is, for some strange reason,
for me in Asia, it has taken a slower growth,
especially in Thailand,
where you almost never see Sichuan restaurant.
It's ironic because you mentioned the complexity
of the flavor profile and I agree with you.
But in Thailand, for some reason,
you just don't find a whole lot of Sichuan restaurants.
And the same thing in Singapore.
I would say that you probably find more in Hong Kong
and the rest of China, which is a huge...
Well, I think it is the story of immigrants.
Yes.
You know, the immigrants in Thailand,
a lot of them were Chowjo or Teochotan people.
And, you know, Cantonese immigrants in southeast,
Yan Haka and Fujian.
And that's a completely different flavor profile.
And then in Thailand, they have their own spicy food.
So maybe they don't need Cichonese in the same way.
There's something also about the mentality too of culture
because I think spices for a lot of Southeast Asians
are seen as almost not as high so as Cantonese
because you do have to consume it with some kind of starch or rice.
And a lot of Singaporean Chinese or Thai Chinese
that prefer to eat more things like that
or the vegetable for sure where you don't eat rice
and it becomes more of a lighter meal.
and something that maybe so you know on a society level is considered more of the way to eat
and this one we this is doofu yeah uh pressed tofu
la roo really la roo chao oh this is lovely significance of that so we use cured uh pork
pork belly with smoking house with some leagues uh smoked tofu
And again, when we see the greens, we know this is the last dish of the meal.
Snow pea tips, simple stir fry.
And this is real, this is like also in Hunan, farmhouse cooking.
So a little bit of cured pork with tofu, also with that smoky flavor and the Chinese garlic or milk.
Delicious.
That's something else about Chinese food.
It needs to be consumed at the hardest point, temperature-wise.
So going back to the Yuzalan story, yes, a lot of, there are cold dishes, there are courses,
it's okay to have room temperature.
But generally, Chinese food is not the best for tasting menu.
It's because everything needs to be consumed super, super hot.
I haven't really, have you seen anything that really worked out in terms of Chinese tasting
menu or for Sishuan?
Oh, well, I mean, I think that the food at Yudelan and also Yubors restaurant are fantastic.
But as you said, there's actually less of an emphasis on stir fries.
So you don't get a big piping hot stir fry dish and more soupy dishes and brazes and so on.
So, yeah.
But I think one of the reasons that some Chinese chefs are now going for tasting menus,
is partly with an eye to international recognition, actually.
And wanting each dish to be presented beautifully
and not on a shared dish that gets must-up as it's passed around the table.
Is it sort of similar to, like, the Michelin guy,
but coming into China and maybe a lot of roast restaurants,
follows the format, basically, I think.
Yeah, and I think that's unfortunate.
It is.
That Michelin, as I mentioned before, is not very well equipped to judge Chinese.
food and the first Chinese restaurant to win three Michelin stars was one in a fancy hotel in Hong Kong
that did a tasting menu of courses which one person could enjoy but I think chefs in China as they
become more internationally minded they do feel a bit hard done by you know they have this great cuisine
and why is it not recognized why is it not put on a par with Japanese for example that people are
willing to spend money on and so some chefs are definitely
I wouldn't say at all changing the cooking technique or style,
but just a bit the presentation and aiming at that market of elite international cooking.
Well, I appreciate that kind of restaurant too because I do travel to often travel by myself
and I can actually go to Yulilan and eat at the bar by myself
and enjoy like a myriad of dishes with so much technique solo.
and not have to eat 10 c cucumbers at one time, but rather just one perfect one.
Yeah, so you could be a missionary inspector.
I made me, I'm kidding.
You talked about how you think about preparing food if you're having people over for a Chinese meal.
Can you just walk us through kind of, if you were creating the balanced meal, what are the pieces that you want to hit?
You mentioned soup already.
Well, the first thing is that if I'm cooking at home, I don't want to be like a banshee over the stove,
for the whole evening.
So I would not choose a menu that's all last minute stir-fried dishes,
particularly important cooking at home.
So I would always do a spread of cold dishes
and how many depends on my energy levels and how many people,
but maybe at least three or four cold dishes
and they're easy to prepare in advance and really delicious.
People can start eating them while you prepare the other dishes.
I would also do a slow-cooked stew,
like some bread-braised pork or beef, really delicious.
and then some, I normally do mar poldauful
just because it's one of the greatest dishes in the world
and everyone loves it and it's very easy to make
and that's a strong dish
so I would also always have a lightly stir-fried vegetable
and then another dish that I often do is a steamed fish Cantonese style
and it's so easy to make
and I almost feel embarrassed that it wins so much praise
there's something about that method, a really fresh fish,
and you just marinated a bit of shushing wine, ginger and scallion,
steam it, strew over some slivered ginger and scallion,
sizzle over some hot oil, and then baste it in a little soy sauce.
And that's it, and it's so easy, and it's sublime.
And that's a nice contrast to the hottest citroneous dishes.
So, yeah, and I would try and get a balance between dry dishes and soupy ones.
so you have different mouth fields, different shapes.
So if the meat is in big thick cubes,
I might have a stir fry that's slivered.
So it's not very scientific, but it's impressionistic.
And I just try and think about how all these things will taste in sequence
and in relation to one another and how they will look on the table.
And then in China, you don't normally have a separate dessert course.
You normally have fruit.
So either cut fruit.
I try and get some Chinese fruit, seasonal, maybe tangerines in winter,
maybe Dragon's Eyes or Lichies in another season.
And then because my guess may be Western and need a sugar hit,
then I sometimes buy in some little bucklivers or chocolates to serve with the fruit.
That's a nice Chinese tea.
Or sometimes it's a rice cake.
For example, we're going to have in a minute, in a minute it's Mi Liang Gao,
Weipo Mi Liang Gao.
It's fermented rice cake with just this white, a little translucent.
And how do you think more generally about serving Chinese final course, or I may call it dessert, in America, where Americans expect big heaps of pie and sweetness and sugar?
How do you approach that? What do you pick? What do you recommend?
We actually do have a sesame flourless chocolate cake on the menu right now, being made by piche, and also macha, cream cheese.
Sufflate cheesecake.
Those are things that's not so...
After a big meal like this today,
there's just hardly any room left for...
Yes, you always have a separate stomach for dessert,
but...
Yeah, I'm very much in favor if you want to have a sweet hit.
It doesn't have to be Chinese, right?
If you want to have a chocolate cake.
Right, that's right.
For a long time,
the, you know, fine dining Chinese restaurants in the U.S.,
You just get a chocolate smoothcake or a croissant.
Or creme brambulet.
But with my Shanghaiese mother and heritage, I do have a very, very, very sweet palate.
Like, you know, I grew up eating chocolates for breakfast.
What other cuisines do you really like to cook?
Do you have a secondary?
Like this is your major?
What's your minor?
Who on?
Basically other Chinese cuisines.
I mainly cook Chinese food.
all the time.
You can have home.
Yeah, that's what I instinctively do.
And that's my comfort food now,
and that's the easy thing to rustle up.
So I do do a bit of Italian.
I really love Marcella Hazan's books.
And, yeah, and a bit of Turkish.
I spent some time in Turkey when I was much younger.
But the thing is, when I have guests,
they want me to cook Chinese food.
And then that's what I like eating as well, too.
I certainly hope they don't want you to make Yorker pudding.
No, I don't.
And bangers.
I don't know how to make you.
How do you experience the oppression of being famous at cooking?
What's the major disadvantage of that?
Is it that you always feel obliged to be pleasing other people if there's a meal?
Or can you just set that out of your mind and make other people cook?
When I published my first book, suddenly my friends started saying,
we're scared to cook for you.
And that's a shame because it's lovely being cooked for and you don't have to be a professional cook.
But the funny thing was that after my first book was published,
I had a total cooking paralysis at home for ages.
I was too scared to cook for people,
because I thought everyone was going to be thinking,
oh, she's a professional cookbook writer.
It's got to be really good, and I would only disappoint them.
And now I don't care anymore.
But the great advantage about writing about food,
particularly Chinese food,
is that I do get invited out for the most wonderful meals in China,
and I feel so privileged about that.
On that note, why don't we end the podcast formally?
I'd just like to thank Fuchsia,
and again, recommend heartily
her new book, The Food of Sichuan,
what I find most remarkable in her books,
someone who writes books and reviews many books.
Most books, there are just pages, pages,
where the author is coasting.
Like, what's there, it might be fine, it might be true.
But there's parts that are really good,
and then parts, like, yeah, yeah, yeah.
And in Fuchsia's books, there's no page,
there's no paragraph,
there's no word that's coasting.
Like, it's all as great as the best parts.
And to me, that's a phenomenal achievement
just in terms of the production function
of Fuchsia Dunlop.
whether or not Chinese food is your thing.
They're just marvels of books to read to understand books.
And to thank Lydia and her family and all of the people in the kitchen,
all of those serving us.
Lydia, this was a remarkable meal.
I'll repeat again.
Mama Chang is one of my favorite restaurants on planet Earth.
I come here many, many times.
I'll, of course, see you and all the others again.
And this was just phenomenal.
And to all of our distinguished guests,
thank you for coming, your remarks, and so on.
And let's just have a round of applause
for Fuchsia and Lydia.
Thanks for listening to Conversations with Tyler.
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