Cantonese Cuisine - Background

Background

This article is part of the series
Chinese cuisine
Regional cuisines
Four Great Traditions
  • Cantonese
  • Huaiyang
  • Shandong
  • Sichuan
Eight Great Traditions
  • Anhui
  • Cantonese
  • Fujian
  • Hunan
  • Jiangsu
  • Shandong
  • Sichuan
  • Zhejiang
Beijing and the vicinity
  • Beijing
  • Imperial
  • Aristocrat
  • Tianjin
Other regional styles
  • Chaozhou
  • Guizhou
  • Hainan
  • Hakka
  • Henan
  • Hong Kong
  • Hubei
  • Jiangxi
  • Macanese
  • Manchu
  • Northeastern
  • Shaanxi
  • Shanghai
  • Shanxi
  • Taiwanese
  • Xinjiang
  • Tibetan (Xizang)
  • Yunnan
Overseas cuisine
  • Burma
  • Canada
  • Caribbean
  • Philippines
  • India
  • Indonesia
  • Japan
  • Korea
  • Malaysia
  • Pakistan
  • Peranakan
  • PerĂº
  • Puerto Rico
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Religious cuisines
  • Buddhist
  • Islamic
Ingredients and types of food
  • Main dishes
  • Desserts
  • Noodles
Preparation and cooking
  • Stir frying
  • Double steaming
  • Red cooking
See also Customs and etiquette
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Guangdong has long been a trading port and many imported foods and ingredients are used in Cantonese cuisine. Besides pork, beef and chicken, Cantonese cuisine incorporates almost all edible meats, including offal, chicken feet, duck's tongue, snakes, and snails. However, lamb and goat are rarely eaten, unlike in the cuisines of northern or western China. Many cooking methods are used, with steaming and stir frying being the most favoured due to their convenience and rapidity. Other techniques include shallow frying, double steaming, braising, and deep frying.

For many traditional Cantonese cooks, the flavours of a finished dish should be well balanced and not greasy. Apart from that, spices should be used in modest amounts to avoid overwhelming the flavours of the primary ingredients, and these ingredients in turn should be at the peak of their freshness and quality. There is no widespread use of fresh herbs in Cantonese cooking, in contrast with their liberal use in other cuisines such as Sichuan, European, Thai or Vietnamese. Garlic chives and coriander leaves are notable exceptions, although the latter are usually used as mere garnish in most dishes.

Read more about this topic:  Cantonese Cuisine

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