🔀 American Chinese Cuisine
Cantonese-American adaptation featuring General Tso's chicken, chop suey, and fortune cookies
Definition
American Chinese cuisine is a diaspora culinary tradition that emerged from the adaptation of Chinese — predominantly Cantonese — cooking practices to the ingredients, tastes, and social conditions of the United States. It constitutes a distinct culinary system rather than a subset of Chinese regional cooking, organized by the shared experience of immigrant communities negotiating cultural identity through food in a new cultural environment.\n\nThe cuisine is characterized by a flavor profile calibrated to broad American palates: dishes tend toward sweeter, more savory, and less spicy profiles than their mainland or Cantonese counterparts, with a pronounced emphasis on sauced, stir-fried proteins served over steamed white rice or lo mein noodles. Deep-frying is employed more extensively than in most Chinese regional traditions, and the use of cornstarch-thickened sauces is nearly universal. Signature preparations — including General Tso's chicken (左宗棠雞, zuǒ zōngtáng jī), chop suey (雜碎, zásuì), egg foo young, and crab rangoon — represent original innovations that have no direct analog in Chinese regional cooking. The meal structure typically centers on shared entrées with fried rice or noodles as a starch base, often served in American-style portions significantly larger than traditional Chinese serving conventions.\n\nAmerican Chinese cuisine also developed a distinctive takeout and restaurant infrastructure — the neighborhood Chinese-American restaurant — that became one of the most ubiquitous foodservice formats in twentieth-century American life. Fortune cookies, though of debated Japanese-American origin, became firmly associated with the tradition and serve as a marker of the cuisine's independent cultural identity.
Historical Context
The foundations of American Chinese cuisine were laid during the mid-nineteenth century, when Cantonese laborers arrived in California during the Gold Rush (1848–1855) and subsequently in large numbers to build the transcontinental railroad (completed 1869). Concentrated in urban Chinatowns — most importantly San Francisco's — these communities established restaurants that initially served fellow immigrants but gradually attracted non-Chinese clientele. The Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 severely restricted immigration and shaped the demographic profile of the community for decades, reinforcing the dominance of Cantonese regional conventions in the cuisine.\n\nThe late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries saw deliberate adaptation of dishes to suit non-Chinese customers, giving rise to iconic preparations such as chop suey, which achieved widespread American popularity by the 1890s and became the subject of the first major American food trend associated with an immigrant community. Post–World War II suburbanization, the relaxation of immigration restrictions under the Immigration and Nationality Act of 1965, and the arrival of immigrants from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and mainland China all introduced new regional influences, yet the Cantonese-American template remained the dominant popular idiom. By the late twentieth century, American Chinese cuisine had diffused far beyond immigrant communities to become a mainstream American culinary form.
Geographic Scope
American Chinese cuisine is practiced throughout the continental United States, Hawaii, and Canada, with particular density in major metropolitan areas historically associated with Chinatown districts (San Francisco, New York, Los Angeles, Chicago). The cuisine's conventions have also diffused internationally through American cultural export, with recognizable American Chinese dishes appearing in parts of the United Kingdom, Australia, and other countries with significant American cultural influence.
References
- Liu, H. (2015). From Canton Restaurant to Panda Express: A History of Chinese Food in the United States. Rutgers University Press.academic
- Coe, A. (2009). Chop Suey: A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States. Oxford University Press.academic
- Roberts, J. A. G. (2002). China to Chinatown: Chinese Food in the West. Reaktion Books.cultural
- Mendelson, A. (2016). Chow Chop Suey: Food and the Chinese American Journey. Columbia University Press.academic
Recipe Types (67)
Almond Crab Salad
Asparagus and Shrimp Oriental
Avocado and Dungeness Crab Tower
Avocado Egg Roll with Spicy Duck Sauce
Avocado Vegetable Egg Roll

Azuki Bean Soup
Brown Rice and Sesame Fried Vegetables
Candied Banana Fritters

Cashew Chicken

Chicken Broccoli
Chicken Chop Suey

Chicken Chop Suey I

Chicken Chow Mein
Chicken Pineapple Piquant
Chicken with Toasted Sesame Seed Glaze
Chilled Cucumber, Cilantro and Mint Salad

Chinese Almond Cookies
Chinese Asparagus Salad

Chinese Beef
Chinese Black Pepper Steak

Chinese chicken

Chinese Chicken Wings
Chinese Cola Pepper Steak

Chinese Dumplings

Chinese Fried Chicken
Chinese Ginger Chicken Salad
Chinese Noodles in Peanut Sauce
Chinese Oven-fried Pork Chops
Chinese Pepper Steak II
Chinese Pork Tenderloin
Chinese Ramen Noodle Salad
Chinese Sago Tarts

Chinese Shrimp Balls

Coconut Ice Cream

Crab and Sweet Corn Soup

Crispy Orange Chicken
Crockpot Sweet and Sour Meatballs
Egg Foo Yong with Cabbage
Eight Precious Pudding
Fried Rabbit with Garlic

General Tso's Chicken and Broccoli
Gow Gees
Grilled or Broiled Orange Chicken

Honey Garlic Chicken

Kung Pao Shrimp

Leong's Cashew Chicken
Lime Mango Mousse in Chocolate Cups
Minted Mocha Smoothie
