Fedizens who enjoy Sichuan food:
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Adrianna Tanreplied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
@dentangle oh they’re all so extremely different. Just like different types of Indian are also different (my fave Indian cuisine is Kongunadu from south India. Check out Kannamma Cooks blog)
I’m from a part of canton that is not Cantonese, and the food is completely different (flavorful origins documentary one Netflix features it, in season 1..)
Sichuan is functionally a whole other thing
And the ‘8 imperial cuisines of China’ (and the thousands of other)
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Adrianna Tan last edited by
@skinnylatte Thanks for the link - this looks super useful. I managed to get my hands on some doubanjiang but have never cooked with it before.
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@dentangle most Chinese restaurants abroad are Cantonese, they migrated first
In places with recent Chinese migration you can find more Sichuan and other foods
Depends on where you are! Where I am in SF, I barely get non-Cantonese food (a few here and there) but suburbs like Fremont, San Jose have tons more
If you have a location I can make some recs. New York’s flushing Chinatown is massive
So is Monterey park in Southern California. For regional non Cantonese Chinese foods
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Adrianna Tanreplied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
@dentangle chinese cooking demystified, made with lau and woks of life and red cook should set you up for a lot of Chinese cooking
It leans Cantonese but those are my faves
Spices N Pans on YouTube for Singaporean / Malaysian Chinese cooking (southern style)
Lucas Sin
Kenji’s The wok is a good cookbook that will give you a lot of info on techniques. Not exclusively Sichuan but he has a lot of the classics
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Adrianna Tan last edited by
@skinnylatte I haven't been to a restaurant since March 2020 and I'm not likely to get to one soon, which is why I started re-creating meals from home. We're in rural France.
Oddly enough, one of the last places I ate out was in SF just before lockdown (we were re-routed via there as flights were starting to cancelled) and ate at a Sichuan place in one of the asian parts of town. No idea what it was called.
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Adrianna Tan last edited by
@skinnylatte Of the Four Great Traditions, I'd never heard of two until a few weeks ago Looking forward to trying Lu and Huaiyang when I'm ready to move on from Sichuan.
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Adrianna Tan last edited by
@skinnylatte Thanks for all the tips. Bookmarked and will follow up!
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Kate Nyhanreplied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
@dentangle
I think you would like this book
http://www.fuchsiadunlop.com/books/the-food-of-sichuan/ -
Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Kate Nyhan last edited by
@kdnyhan Thanks! Have added it to my list.
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Adrianna Tanreplied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
@dentangle ah ok!
well paris has a bunch of interesting chinese places these days. it has homemade tofu (best tofu, you can buy takeout), many many sichuan restaurants as well you could buy back to a hotel if yo'ure ever there
dusseldorf has a HUGE sichuan restaurant scene
How China’s hottest social media app turned Düsseldorf into a foodie destination
Düsseldorf restaurants have seen a surge in Chinese tourists after “weekend trip to Düsseldorf” became a noticeable trend.
Rest of World (restofworld.org)
possibly the most exciting one in all of europe except london
paris also interestingly has incredible hotpot and ramen (kodawari)
all the best!
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This week, I refilled my pepper grinder with a mixture of 1/4 Sichuan pepper kernals, and 3/4 black pepper; two different plant species I believe. The Sichuan numb or tingle the mouth, so I find it a bit bothersome, but mixing a bit in seems good. I am not eating nightshades (like cayenne) any more, so am stepping up other sorts of spices.
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@Delib Aye. Sichuan "peppercorns" are apparently not from the pepper bush at all, whereas white, black and red pepper are all the same thing processed differently.
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
Above all, this *looks* like a sichuan dish. Bright red chillis and oils.
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
Frying the doubanjiang in oil until it changes colour. Thanks to @skinnylatte and @arichtman for explaining this step.
I've never cooked with doubanjiang before, but it became obvious what to do once it was in the pan. Very much like a tarka/tadka in Indian cuisine. The bean paste changes colour, becomes aromatic and the oil takes on that lovely sichuan red.
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NeonSnakereplied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
The dish doesn't take long to cook. Once done, we take it off the heat and top it with green onions, raw garlic and ginger and the rest of the chilli and peppercorns. Then we pour hot oil over these to finish it with Dao Kou La Jiao (knife edge chillis).
Apparently. I really have no idea what I'm doing But one thing working after school as a Questacon explainer taught me is just sound confident (and read the sign to the visitor that's right in front of them).
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to NeonSnake last edited by
@neonsnake @skinnylatte @arichtman It was amazing, although a little bit too salty so will adjust next time. I used stock instead of water which was a little bit too much salt on top of the bean paste.
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NeonSnakereplied to Brett Sheffield (he/him) last edited by
@dentangle
@skinnylatte @arichtmanNot urgent, but at some point: I wouldn't mind learning if there's any pre-prep tricks that could make things easier for Cantonese cooking?
I enjoy the cookery, and love the food, but haven't done it for ages, due to (in my *very limited* experience) having to do the whole dish from scratch on the night, which is often beyond me nowadays.
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Brett Sheffield (he/him)replied to NeonSnake last edited by
@neonsnake @skinnylatte
@arichtmanQuite a few dishes follow the basic pattern of:
1) velvet/marinate the meat/protein
2) make a sauce
3) stir-fry vegetables
4) stir-fry meat
- generally at this point I cook the rice -
5) then toss the sauce, vegetables and meat back in the wok to combine and re-heat for servingYou could in many cases make the sauce in advance (eg. black bean sauce). Can also buy this.
You can also pre-chop the vegetables (I often cut up enough for a day or two.