Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper

Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper

by Fuchsia Dunlop (Author)

Synopsis

Award-winning food writer Fuchsia Dunlop went to live in China in 1994, and from the very beginning vowed to eat everything she was offered, no matter how alien and bizarre it seemed to her as a Westerner. In this extraordinary memoir, Fuchsia recalls her evolving relationship with China and its food, from her first rapturous encounter with the delicious cuisine of Sichuan Province, to brushes with corruption, environmental degradation and greed. In the course of this fascinating journey, Fuchsia undergoes an apprenticeship at the Sichuan cooking school, where she is the only foreign student in a class of nearly fifty young Chinese men; she attempts, hilariously, to persuade Chinese people that 'Western food' is neither 'simple' nor 'bland'; and samples a multitude of exotic ingredients, including dogmeat, civet cats, scorpions, rabbit heads and the ovarian fat of the snow frog.But is it possible for a Westerner to become a true convert to the Chinese way of eating? In an encounter with a caterpillar in an Oxfordshire kitchen, Fuchsia is forced to put this to the test. From the vibrant markets of Sichuan to the bleached landscape of northern Gansu Province, from the desert oases of Xinjiang to the enchanting old city of Yangzhou, this is a unique and evocative account of a culture and cuisine that is a world away from most Westerners' experiences.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Publisher: Ebury Press
Published: 06 Mar 2008

ISBN 10: 0091918308
ISBN 13: 9780091918309
Book Overview: This is the story of an English girl who went to China to learn the language, but whose love of food led her down a very different path...

Media Reviews
An insightful, entertaining, scrupulously reported exploration of China s foodways and a swashbuckling memoir. . . . What makes it a distinguished contribution to the literature of gastronomy is its demonstration . . . that food is not a mere reflection of culture but a potent shaper of cultural identity.--Dawn Drzal
Author Bio
Fuchsia Dunlop was the first Westerner to train as a chef at China's leading cooking school, the Sichuan Institute of Higher Cuisine. A fluent Mandarin speaker, she has been researching Chinese culinary culture for more than a decade. She is the author of two acclaimed cookery books, Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province and Sichuan Cookery, which won the Jeremy Round Award for Best First Book in 2002. Fuchsia writes for numerous publications including Gourmet, Saveur, The Financial Times and Time Out Magazine, and appears as a guest chef and Chinese food expert on radio and television. In 2006 she was named 'Food Journalist of the Year' by the British Guild of Food Writers. She currently lives in London, where she is a consultant for the popular Bar Shu Sichuanese restaurant.