Sichuan
Cuisine or Szechuan Cuisine (in pinyin: chuan cài),
originating in the Sichuan province of western China,
has an international reputation for being spicy and flavorful.
Some
well-known Szechuan dishes include Kung pao chicken and
Twice Cooked Pork. Although many Szechuan dishes live
up to their spicy reputation, often ignored are the large
percentage of recipes that use little or no spice at all,
including recipes such as Tea Smoked Duck.
What
many do not realize is that the chili pepper, a common
ingredient in Szechuan cuisine (often used unseeded),
was only introduced to China following Columbus's discovery
of the New World. Chili peppers were perhaps introduced
to the remote Sichuan province by Western missionaries.
Previous Szechuan cuisine was not completely without spice,
however. Szechuan pepper, or "numbing pepper"
is an indigenous plant (fruit) that produces a milder
spice, and is still a key ingredient in Sichuan food to
this day. The reason for this emphasis on spice may derive
from the region's warm, humid climate. This climate also
necessitates sophisticated food-preservation techniques
which include pickling, salting, drying and smoking.
Common
preparation techniques in Szechuan cuisine include stir
frying, steaming and basting. Beef is more common in Szechuan
cuisine than it is in other Chinese cuisines, perhaps
due to the widespread use of oxen in the region. Stir-fried
beef is often cooked until chewy, while steamed beef is
sometimes coated with rice flour to produce a rich gravy.
Some
common Sichuan dishes include:
Chengdu
Chicken
Kung pao chicken
Tea Smoked Duck
Twice Cooked Pork
Mapo dofu
Szechuan hotpot
Fuqi Feipian
Xue Zhou Yu
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