Deh-Ta Hsiung is an acknowledged expert on Chinese food and cookery - besides being the author of several best-selling books and a food and wine consultant for Chinese restaurants and food manufacturers, he is also a tutor of renown. You can find him online at http://chinese-at-table.com.
Cucumbers have been widely cultivated in China for more than two thousand years since their introduction from India where they originated. This vegetable, although very watery, is eaten cooked as well as raw in China. [...]
Most so-called 'salads'in Chinese cooking are in effect ingredients lightly cooked (usually by blanching) then served cold with a special dressing. Vegetables grown in the West and by modern methods can be served raw quite safely. [...]
The tomato is native of South America and was not introduced into China until the end of the last century. Ideally you should use green, hard tomatoes for this recipe. [...]
This is a simplified variation of the 'Eight Precious Jewels' dish, rather like the mixed vegetables you get in a frozen packet, but with a difference. [...]
In order to make their diet a little more exciting, Chinese vegetarians invented a special cuisine, including vegetarian dishes that simulate meat not only in texture and appearance but in flavour as well. This is one of their best-known dishes called 'eight precious jewels'. [...]
This is another recipe from Sichuan, where it is sometimes called yu-xiang (meaning 'fish-fragrant' or 'fish-flavoured'). But the interesting point is that no fish is used in the recipe - the sauce is normally used for cooking a fish dish, and hence the name. [...]