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  1. #1
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    How different is American-Chinese food from real Chinese food ?

    Has anyone eaten so called "chinese food" in the US? Like at Panda Express?

    Are there really egg rolls in china? And orange chicken? Is this really how chinese food is in china? Or is it much different?

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    Hullu RockLee's Avatar
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    Much different They Westernise the food abroad.
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    Koyaniskatsi yukio_michael's Avatar
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    If you want to find good Chinese food in the United States, go to a NON chain restaraunt ---first, then go there on a Sunday--- if there are Asian people eating there, you've probably found a fairly authentic restaraunt.

    Think Dim Sum, forget fortune cookies & General Chiang's Chicken... that stuff is strictly for the round-eyes.
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    The Original Seven Nana007's Avatar
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    I've eaten at a REAL chinese restuarant, there is alot of them in Houston, along the Bellair strip

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    Regular Member Akakubisan's Avatar
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    Go to restaurants that chinese nationals frequent. I had a chinese roommate for a year and the restaurants he took me to were very different from the normal chain restaurants.

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    Regular Member uloocn's Avatar
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    I am in China, I don't know how does the Chinese food like abroad?
    My wife is good at cooking and we seldom eat in restaurants.

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    Koyaniskatsi yukio_michael's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by uloocn
    I am in China, I don't know how does the Chinese food like abroad? My wife is good at cooking and we seldom eat in restaurants.
    Chinese food in Japan seemed fairly authentic to me, or, at least as authentic as I've had at restraraunts in the United States that were popular with Chinese.

    Chinese food in the United States, Westernized-Chienese food, is typified by stir-frying, Wok-cooking, quickly prepared dishes that are less centered on vegetables & seafood.

    Fried rice is eaten much moreso than plain white rice, and, what I've experienced is that many dishes are served cooked with a rather oily sauce that makes many of the different tastes indestinguishable.

    There are a great number of chicken and pork dishes that use a rather sweet sauce, sometimes almost orange in colour---- I've not had anything like this outside of the United States...

    And of course the fortune cookie--- it goes without saying that at the end of a Chinese meal there is the ever-present slightly sweet cookie folded not unlike a dumpling you would find in soup.

    The funny thing about fortune cookies is the fortune themselves... depending on where you go, even pan-Asian restaraunts in my city have fortune cookies oddly enough, the fortune can be anything from light hearted obvious statements like "Try and you will succede!", to downright depressing, "Man was born to live, but not prepared to live."

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    Hullu RockLee's Avatar
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    I've had Chinese food in Beijing,Shanghai,Guangzhou,Shenzhen and Zhuhai, and it tasted NOTHING like the food in Belgium. You can't compare it with the Chinese restaurants abroad to be honest.

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    Quote Originally Posted by GoldCoinLover

    Are there really egg rolls in china? And orange chicken ?

    Is this really how chinese food is in china ?
    There are regional variety of egg rolls in China,and orange or lemon chicken is an Americanized Chinese dish not available in China/HK/Taiwan.

    Only authentic Chinese restaurants where Chinese frequent have original tastes as those in China/Taiwan/HK.

    The best Chinese gourmet dishes are serve at restaurant Chinese wedding banquet.

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    Koyaniskatsi yukio_michael's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ricecake
    There are regional variety of egg rolls in China,and orange or lemon chicken is an Americanized Chinese dish not available in China/HK/Taiwan.
    Aren't egg rolls and the like, though different, refered to simply as "spring rolls", in Chinese and other Asian cooking?

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    Banned ricecake's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by yukio_michael

    Aren't egg rolls and the like, though different, refered to simply as "spring rolls", in Chinese and other Asian cooking ?
    I don't know how the term " egg rolls " came about in America,the 2 Chinese characters for this appetizer literally means " spring rolls ".

    Vietnamese have their native version of non-oil-fried spring rolls in rice wrapper stuff with vermicilli,lettuce,pork slices and halfed-shrimp.

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    Regular Member uloocn's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ricecake
    I don't know how the term " egg rolls " came about in America,the 2 Chinese characters for this appetizer literally means " spring rolls ".
    Vietnamese have their native version of non-oil-fried spring rolls in rice wrapper stuff with vermicilli,lettuce,pork slices and halfed-shrimp.
    I think " egg rolls " =`, " spring rolls "=t, little different and I don't like either.

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    Quote Originally Posted by uloocn View Post

    (1) " egg rolls " = `

    (2) " spring rolls " = t

    little different and I don't like either.
    (1) These 2 Chinese characters commonly use for pastry sweets or egg tarts or puffy Swiss rolls

    (2) These are oil-fried spring rolls ( aka egg rolls )

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    Koyaniskatsi yukio_michael's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by ricecake
    Vietnamese have their native version of non-oil-fried spring rolls in rice wrapper stuff with vermicilli,lettuce,pork slices and halfed-shrimp.
    They've always called that "summer roll".... at Viet Namese restaraunts I've been to.

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    Banned ricecake's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by yukio_michael

    They've always called that " summer roll " .... at Viet Namese restaraunts I've been to.
    That's " Goi Cuon " in Vietnamese for native version of non-deep-fried rice wrapper rolls aka summer rolls,I see now they differentiate it with this English label for there wasn't one in the past.

    Vietnamese also have " Cha Gio ",a Chinese imitation oil-fried egg rolls aka spring rolls with slightly different stuffings.

    I don't think there are Japanese and Korean spring rolls,they've only localized Chinese " fried rice ".

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    C[Ђ Dena81's Avatar
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    I've had Chinese food in chinatown, a restaurant in which I think only us and another family there were the only non-asian...or maybe even non-Chinese in the restaurant. It was very, very, very different from chinese I've had that has been westernized.

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    tsuyaku o tsukete kudasai nurizeko's Avatar
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    I'll have to admit, I dont ussually go to a themed resturaunt with cultural authenticity in mind.

    When I go to an Istalian or Chinese resturaunt I expect good tasting slop hehe.

    Theres a new Japanese resturaunt opening up soon here in my town so, since the S/O is over from Japan we'll prolly mozey on over and try out their authenticity, nothing like a Japanese national pick apart a westernised resturaunt.

    I wonder if they'll do real Japanese food or just be a glorified westernised sushi bar.

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    the crazy one sadie_sue's Avatar
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    Most of the Chinese food I've had has been iffy. Of course, before I moved to Arizona I lived in a town where the people running the only Chinese restaurant were Japanese, but the places here are good if a bit expensive, not a chain.
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    I have a favuorite chinese restaurant in munich, and i like the food there more than in other chinese restaurants here. By reading this thread I remembered that it's the only one where I can meet chinese people.... Sometimes there are 50 chninese people and just me is non-chinese


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    Mm.. The general rule of thumb when looking for a 'good chinese restaurant' is looking into the restaurant and seeing if there are any foreigners in there. If it's all/mostly Asian, then most likely it's authentic. XD

    But about eggrolls and orange chicken... they're incredibly westernized to suit the Western tastes. That's why most foreigners think of those two when it comes to Chinese food.

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    Well, i'm a Chinese in England and the Chinese buffet in a number of Chinese restaurants here can only show the way of cooking and seldom the good taste based on my limited experience. The real Chinese food is far more than a non-Chinese can expect.

  22. #22
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    I am all for spicy savory Sichuan cuisine,the worldly known hot and sour soup is mouthful.

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    Sister Earth Goldiegirl's Avatar
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    mmm...I like Chinese food. Westernized is ok with me. I had some really great Chinese food in Yokohama. Also, they had dessert there, not a fortune cookie or almond cookie like here in the US. It was kind of like a white coconut pudding with fresh fruit and lychees (spelling ?) it was so refreshing and not too sweet or heavy. I wish we had that here.
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    Pink haired duelist Utena Tenjou's Avatar
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    I love chinese food. We have a China Wok and a New China Restaurant... that's the name of the place.

  25. #25
    Regular Member CBT1979's Avatar
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    If you live in Europe, the best Chinese (especially HKnese) cuisine is in Chinatown London!
    In most other European countries, Chinese restaurants are usually offering westernized Chinese food.
    If you want eat Chinese food with good quality I can recomment you trying them (too many choices) in Hong Kong and Taiwan. In (mainland) China, there are also great and even elite cuisines but many are still not at high standards yet, especially the cheaper ones.
    Chinese food has a very big inventory to display, since it contains so many provinces with their own local food. Some of the most famous are Beijing Duck, MaPoTofu from Sichuan, TsaSao and DimSum from Guangdong etc.

    The bandwith of the Chinese cuisine is so huge, that you definetly will find things you love and things you hate

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