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Shanghai Cuisine – Be Tempted!

Shanghai Cuisine - As you follow the Yangtze River eastward out of the Szechuan region, you will arrive into eastern China, which lies on a great plain formed by the Yangtze River and ends with its riverdelta.

The river delta encompasses some of the most fertile land in China, and flows into the sea just north of the famous city of Shanghai. The Yangtze River region in eastern China experiences a temperate climate with warm springs, hot summers, cool autumns, and relatively cold winters.

It is the greatest rice-producing region in China, and you will find a plethora of creative ways that the regional cuisines use to incorporate rice into the dishes.

Shanghai Cuisine - Ben Bang Cai

Regardless, it does have its own distinctive local dishes called benbang cai.

Benbang cai is noted for its use of red-cooking, with dark soy sauce, and its abundant use of sugar. All of which produces rich, sweet dishes with exquisite flavors and appearance.

Rice Wine Shanghai

The Chekiang (Zhe Jiang) and Kiangsu (Jiang Su) are known as the land of rice and fish, and is one of the wealthiest and most heavily populated regions of China.

Their cuisines feature a broad variety of fish and aquatics, such as carp, clam, mullet, perch, and prawns.

Minced chicken and bean-curd slivers are also specialties of these provinces. Foods are often arranged in attractive floral patterns prior to serving.

Shanghai Cuisine - Red Wine as Seasoning

Rice wine is used extensively as seasoning and marinade. Rice is often used as a stuffing, or to make classic dishes such as Eight Treasure Rice Pudding - a deliciously sweet steamed pudding dessert.

Ben Bang Cai

Lotus leaves are frequently used as wrapping material for steaming fish, meat, and rice. Paper-wrapped and cellophane-wrapped dishes are very common in the region, as well.

The eastern Chinese cuisine is basically divided by the Yangtze River into Kiangsu to the north, Chekiang to the south, and Shanghai in the delta region.

Shanghai is the largest city in China. It has been the center of China's trade and industry for centuries.

Some argue that Shanghai does not have a cuisine of its own, being the “melting pot” of the region, while others argue that exact reason is why Shanghai cuisine should represent the eastern Chinese cuisine.

Shanghai Cuisine - Chekiang Cuisine

The Chekiang (Zhe Jiang) province is well-irrigated by the Yangtze River, criss-crossed with countless complex system of lakes, marshes, ponds, lakes, and multiple river channels, ideal for ducks, fish, frogs and eels.

Chekiang cuisine is known to be the least greasy of the three, and well-regarded for its light, fresh, tender, soft dishes, with smooth, but rich fragrance.

The dishes are also the least greasy of the three. Duck, freshwater fish, and shellfish dishes are the specialties.

Shanghai Cuisine - Kiangsu Cuisine

Kiangsu (Jiang Su) Cuisine, most likely has the longest history in the region. Numerous regional specialty dishes are know to be centuries old.

Fish and rice are the main ingredients, and the freshness of ingredients is extremely important, as many dishes require them to be cooked alive and quickly to retain the tenderness and its natural sweetness.

Vegetables are often cooked with the fish in the same pot to preserve its freshness. Cooking techniques consist of stewing, braising, and roasting.

The dishes in general are sweeter and greasier.

Enjoy this Video Clip!





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