Souped-up supper Cantonese style (Shanghai Star) Updated: 2006-04-14 10:48
Chanice, a friend of mine from South China's Guangdong Province, could
immediately give at least five reasons for the well-known Cantonese enthusiasm
for soup.
"First of all, cooking soup is a tradition of Cantonese cuisine and this
tradition might have a close relationship with the regional climate, which is
warm and humid," she explained.
She said many different Chinese herbs are used as ingredients in the soup,
combined with meat or vegetables, in order to dispel excessive moisture or heat
from the body.
Cantonese cuisine is particularly proud of its various slow-cooked soups, in
addition to its excellent presentation and diversity of ingredients and methods
of preparation.
Chanice is proud of these special soups, which she said usually take
considerable time and effort to make.
"Nearly everything that can be eaten can be put into a Cantonese soup," she
said.
This statement seems to be exactly in line with one famous characteristic of
Cantonese cuisine, that "anything that walks, swims, crawls, or flies is
edible."
The last reason she gave, however, sounded somewhat horrible: "As the number
of rectal cancer cases grows at a terrible rate in Guangdong, clear broth
--especially -- is considered to be good for people's digestion and health," she
said.
She taught me quite a lot about Cantonese soup cuisine during our recent
visit to a newly opened local restaurant, Cantonese style, which considers soups
to be its signature dishes.
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