介绍: 【朗读文本】
BEIJING-STYLE VEGGIE MEATBALLS
Occasionally, new visitors make the mistake of thinking Chinese aren’t devout carnivores; after all, China has a pretty long history of Buddhism. But no, most Chinese love their meat. Even the sage himself, Confucius, was a meat-loving foodie and stated his meat pr...
介绍: 【朗读文本】
BEIJING-STYLE VEGGIE MEATBALLS
Occasionally, new visitors make the mistake of thinking Chinese aren’t devout carnivores; after all, China has a pretty long history of Buddhism. But no, most Chinese love their meat. Even the sage himself, Confucius, was a meat-loving foodie and stated his meat preferences in the book The Analects (《论语》). Frequently quoted as a unique perspective on culinary culture, Confucius said, “Rice can never be too refined and meat can never be minced too finely (食不厌精,脍不厌细).” According to this principle, the Chinese meatball, or wanzi (丸子), is the gold standard.
But, even if your morality or religion won’t let you enjoy the taste of meat, there’s no need to forego the delicacies of the wanzi. As always, tofu is the best substitute for the meat. Together with sliced carrots and starch noodles mixed with wheat flour and eggs, the tofu-made Beijing-style vegetarian wanzi has a fresh flavor, perhaps fresh enough to fool a few meat-lovers.
As a Beijing snack, the veggie wanzi has to be served and eaten hot. Crispy on the outside, tender and fresh on the inside, when your teeth bite into this golden ball, you could swear it was cooked with the finest dead animal, but you can rest easy and chew that tofu to your heart’s content.
Even with the veggie option, the Chinese meat ball is in a whole different ballpark when compared to, say, IKEA meatballs. Like just about every other Chinese dish, there is more than one recipe for wanzi. Frying, quick-boiling, stewing, red-braising—each method brings its own unique taste. Because of these different cooking methods, meatballs are divided into different categories.
Most folk might not know the difference between the “lion’s head”(狮子头)” and the “wanzi”, but the key is in the cooking: red-braised and stewed ones belong to the lion’s head category and the fried and quick-boiled are wanzi. A lion’s head meatball is as big as a human fist, but the wanzi is much smaller; some others even focus on geographical difference, saying that the southern meatballs are lion heads and the northern ones are wanzi. There is no conclusive answer.
The only thing that really matters is flavor. In true Beijing style, you’re gonna want cute little meatballs deep fried to a delicious golden finish.
----------
本期内容选自 China Dispatch,一份“用地道英语讲中国故事”的电子杂志,在扇贝读书 App 中搜索“China Dispatch”即可阅读。
服务条款| 隐私政策| 儿童隐私政策| 版权投诉| 投资者关系| 广告合作 | 联系我们
廉正举报 不良信息举报邮箱: 51jubao@service.netease.com
互联网宗教信息服务许可证:浙(2022)0000120 增值电信业务经营许可证:浙B2-20150198 粤B2-20090191-18 浙ICP备15006616号-4 工业和信息化部备案管理系统网站
网易公司版权所有©1997-2025杭州乐读科技有限公司运营:浙网文[2024] 0900-042号 浙公网安备 33010802013307号 算法服务公示信息