Cantonese cuisine Perhaps second only to Guangzhou in Guangdong Province, Shenzhen is an ideal place for first timers to try dim sum and classic Cantonese cooking. You can rely on Shenzhen’s dim sum restaurants (many of them established chains originating in Guangzhou) to be spotless, well-run, affordable and have English menus, or failing that picture menus with a tick-box ordering system. Shenzhen is spoiled for choice when it comes to Cantonese eats. China’s most traveled cuisine Cantonese cooking is the most influential of China’s eight major regional cuisines. The southern Chinese — particularly the Cantonese — historically spearheaded successive waves of emigration overseas, leaving aromatic constellations of Chinatowns around the world. Consequently, Westerners most often associate this school of cooking with China. Naturally, eating at the source in Guangdong Province and Hong Kong is infinitely better than overseas Chinatowns, where dishes have often been tailored and tempered to local palates. Complex cooking methods, an obsession with freshness and the use of a wide range of ingredients typify Cantonese food. The Cantonese astutely believe that good cooking does not require an overabundance of flavoring — it is the natural freshness of the ingredients that marks a truly high-grade dish. Hence the near-obsessive attention paid to the freshness of ingredients in southern cuisine. For haute cuisine, chefs from China’s other illustrious food regions acknowledge the superiority of their Cantonese colleagues in making the best of expensive items such as abalone. The joy of dim sum The hallmark Cantonese dish is dim sum. In Shenzhen, yum cha (literally “drink tea”) — another name for the dim sum dining experience — can be enjoyed on any day of the week. Dishes are often served in steamers and are always accompanied by tea. Well-known dim sum dishes include shāomài (open pork dumplings), chāshāobāo (pork-filled buns), guōtiē (fried dumplings), and chūnjuǎn (spring rolls). The extravagantly named fèngzhuǎ (“phoenix claw”) is an everpopular dish of steamed chicken’s feet. |