Chinese people can have an exaggerated view of how difficult it is for foreigners to adjust to the local food. A not uncommon question asked of the visitor is"Can you eat Chinese food?"and they don't just mean holding your chopsticks.
Generally, however, Chinese food is fairly straightforward, even familiar. Though there are some与当地的中国助教的巨大差别keout.
There arefew strong sauces, though some areas go a little heavy on the chilli peppers. Most of the ingredients are recognizable, thoughherbstend to be notable in their absence. However, that's not to say there aren't a few surprises that can pop up over lunch, so China Highlights hereby presents you with some things to watch out for... and some other things to avoid.
Dem Bones, Dem Bones...
We may be used to eating meat off larger bones and, indeed, in thenorth westof China they love it as much as we do, but for most people in China, bones are an essential ingredient for many a meal and can make eating it an ordeal.Chicken, duck, porkand other meats are often cut so the bones shatter, and it can be difficult for the tongue to navigate its way around the shrapnel that comes with that tasty mouthful of meat.
This can be frustrating until you realize why. First, the Chinese believe themeat nearest the boneto be the best, so the meagre meat those bones offer is deemed to be of the highest quality. Second, and perhaps more important, by cutting the bones in this way themarrowis released to mix in with the sauce. In China, nothing that is nutritious goes to waste. It's fine to leave the shrapnel on the table by your bowl or on your side plate; that is the Chinese way.
Unlikely Vegetables
It is unusual for Chinese people to eat vegetables raw, and even those we may associate with salads such as lettuce or cucumber are far more likely to come to youboiled or friedthan fresh and crisp. Alongside many familiar items, there are several local vegetables to look out for.
Bamboo shootsare common. You can see these growing in any stand of bamboo. Look towards the base of the plant for a thick outgrowth with a green, leafy covering. Cooked, these are crisp and succulent.Bamboo stalksmay also be eaten, but these make for somewhat drier fare.
Lotus rootmay also be new to you. White with a very firm texture unless cooked for a long period, lotus root can be identified, (if not too finely cut), but its shape; circular with a hole in the center, surrounded by eight to ten larger holes. As with bamboo shoots, the taste and texture are not remarkably different from thestalks of lettuce leavesand should present no problem for the culinary explorer.
The same may not be said ofbitter, (or winter), melon. Growing as a light-green cucumber-like gourd, when cooked it lives up to its name. It is so strongly bitter it will dominate any mouthful of food which includes it. This may be one to avoid unless you manage to develop a taste for it.
Unusual Meat
China is famous for some meats many foreign visitors find problematic. The best known isdog. However,catscan join them on the menu, though these are more rarely eaten. Rarer still, (perhaps thankfully so), israt meat. There is no need to worry you may eat such meat in error. These are consideredspeciality foods, and those restaurants that cook them are unusual these days. More troublesome to the tourist may be stumbling upon one of thefresh meat marketsin which the meat is sold. They tend to feature in the larger markets so, should you find yourself exploring one, be wary of what you may find.
Still more specialized creatures for eating include such exotic delights asdeep-fried scorpions, (to be eaten sting and all; the poison is destroyed in the frying process and the sting itself becomes crisp). If you like nuts – soft and squishy nuts, admittedly – then you may enjoy trying some species ofinsects, such ascicadas, which tend to have their taste. However,antshave a flavor very much their own. The acid in their bodies make them tangy, and the closest you may have come to their taste previously, unlikely as it may sound, islime juice.
And There's More...
Considerably more. In your travels you may find yourself at adonkey-meatrestaurant, samplingdurian, (a large, green fruit that to most smells utterly revolting and is banned from many hotels), eatingsnake, drinkingwater buffalo milk, findingheads or feeton your plate or perhaps chewing on apig's earfrom a street-side stall.
At188金宝搏官方下载we're dedicated to seeking out such specialties and can schedule them into a tailor-made itinerary suited to your most whimsical wishes. We can also arrange all transportation. Why notcontact usand find out for yourself what we can come up with?
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