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🇨🇳 Chinese Cuisine

One of the world's most diverse culinary systems, organized into regional traditions unified by wok technique, soy, and rice

Geographic
235 Recipe Types
14 Sub-cuisines

Definition

Chinese cuisine encompasses the culinary traditions of China, one of the world's oldest and most internally diverse food cultures, practiced across a vast geographic and ethnic landscape spanning temperate plains, subtropical coasts, arid highlands, and tropical river deltas. As a national cuisine within the East Asian culinary sphere, it is distinguished from its regional siblings — Korean and Japanese cuisines — by its extraordinary internal heterogeneity, its historically dominant role as a source tradition, and its unmatched range of ingredients, techniques, and regional flavor profiles.\n\nAt its structural core, Chinese cuisine is organized around the conceptual dyad of fàn (饭, grain or starch) and cài (菜, accompanying dishes of vegetables, meat, or fish), a pairing that governs meal composition across virtually all regional traditions. The wok (锅, guō) and its associated high-heat stir-frying technique (chǎo, 炒) are near-universal, though the cuisine also encompasses steaming, red-braising (hóngshāo, 红烧), smoking, pickling, and elaborate cold preparations. Soy sauce, tofu, rice wine, ginger, garlic, scallion, and sesame form a widely shared flavor foundation, while chili heat, fermented black beans, Sichuan peppercorn, oyster sauce, and preserved vegetables mark regional divergence.\n\nScholars conventionally organize Chinese regional cooking into "Eight Great Cuisines" (bā dà cài xì, 八大菜系) — Cantonese, Sichuan, Shandong, Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, Hunan, and Anhui — though this taxonomy, while pedagogically useful, understates the contributions of Xinjiang, Yunnan, Hakka, and numerous minority-nationality (少数民族) food traditions. Chinese cuisine is also among the world's most consequential systems of culinary diffusion, having shaped the food cultures of Southeast Asia, Korea, Japan, and global diaspora communities.

Historical Context

Chinese culinary tradition has a documented history of at least 3,500 years, with oracle bone inscriptions from the Shang dynasty (c. 1600–1046 BCE) recording the use of fermented grain and animal offerings that foreshadow later flavor principles. The foundational texts of Chinese food thought — including the Lǐjì (礼记, Book of Rites) and the dietary writings attributed to Yi Yin — establish an early connection between food, cosmology, and statecraft. The Han dynasty (206 BCE–220 CE) consolidated a recognizable culinary culture through the expansion of trade networks that introduced sesame, grapes, and Silk Road spices. The Tang and Song dynasties (618–1279 CE) witnessed the flourishing of urban restaurant culture, the codification of regional distinctions, and the refinement of fermentation and preservation technologies.\n\nThe most transformative inflection point in Chinese culinary history is arguably the Columbian Exchange (16th–17th centuries), through which chili peppers, sweet potatoes, maize, and peanuts entered via Portuguese and Spanish maritime trade, permanently reshaping the cuisines of Sichuan, Hunan, and Yunnan. Later, Qing dynasty imperial gastronomy synthesized northern and southern traditions, while 20th-century mass migration — both internal rural-to-urban and international diaspora — produced new hybrid expressions of Chinese cooking across six continents.

Geographic Scope

Chinese cuisine is practiced across all 34 provincial-level administrative units of the People's Republic of China and Taiwan, and maintains a vigorous living presence in diaspora communities throughout Southeast Asia, North America, Australasia, Western Europe, and sub-Saharan Africa, making it one of the most geographically dispersed food traditions on earth.

References

  1. Anderson, E.N. (1988). The Food of China. Yale University Press.academic
  2. Chang, K.C. (Ed.). (1977). Food in Chinese Culture: Anthropological and Historical Perspectives. Yale University Press.academic
  3. Hsing, Y., & Simoons, F.J. (1991). Food in China: A Cultural and Historical Inquiry. CRC Press.academic
  4. Davidson, A. (2014). The Oxford Companion to Food (3rd ed.). Oxford University Press.culinary

Sub-cuisines

Recipe Types (235)

RCI-VG.004.0299

Chinese Vegetable Miso Soup

RCI-VG.004.0300

Chinese Vegetables a la Florida

RCI-SF.001.0088

Chinese White Fish with Ginger and Spring onion

Chow Mein
RCI-ND.006.0020

Chow Mein

RCI-EG.004.0018

Classic Cooked Eggnog

Coconut Ice Cream
RCI-DS.002.0047

Coconut Ice Cream

Cold Sesame Noodles
RCI-ND.001.0029

Cold Sesame Noodles

RCI-VG.004.0330

Confetti Rice and Beans

Crab Fried Rice
RCI-RC.004.0094

Crab Fried Rice

RCI-BV.003.0030

Cranberry Mist

RCI-SP.002.0079

Creamy Chinese Celery Soup

RCI-VG.004.0360

Crisp Black Sesame Tofu

Crock Pot Chinese Pork Ribs
RCI-DS.005.0010

Crock Pot Chinese Pork Ribs

RCI-VG.001.0177

Crunchy Chinese Slaw

RCI-VG.004.0415

Di San Xian (Stir Fried Potato, Aubergine and Pepper)

RCI-SN.005.0012

Dragon Well Crispy Bean Curd

RCI-SF.002.0113

Drunken Shrimp

Duck fried rice
RCI-RC.004.0107

Duck fried rice

RCI-SF.002.0114

Dynamite Shrimp

RCI-EG.001.0011

Egg Foo Yong with Cabbage

Egg Roll
RCI-SN.002.0135

Egg Roll

Egg Sour
RCI-EG.003.0062

Egg Sour

RCI-DS.001.0228

Eight Precious Pudding

Elocina's Bloody Mary
RCI-BV.003.0036

Elocina's Bloody Mary

RCI-BV.003.0037

Emerald Dream

RCI-MT.004.0376

Escallion Chicken

RCI-RC.004.0110

Far-East Fruited Rice

Festive Cream Cake
RCI-BR.004.0219

Festive Cream Cake

RCI-VG.004.0489

Fettucini alfonso

RCI-SN.004.0063

Five-spices Peanuts

RCI-RC.004.0112

Fortune's Fried Rice

RCI-BR.004.0226

French Guianese Chinese Cake

RCI-VG.001.0236

Fresh Spinach and Rice Salad Bowl

Fried noodle
RCI-ND.006.0037

Fried noodle

RCI-MT.003.0034

Fried Rabbit with Garlic

Fried Rice
RCI-RC.004.0114

Fried Rice

RCI-SN.002.0156

Fried Stuffed Chinese Eggplant

RCI-RC.004.0122

Garlic-Chive-Shrimp-fried Rice with Garlic Chips

Garlic Eggplant
RCI-VG.004.0545

Garlic Eggplant

RCI-VG.004.0546

Garlic Ginger Vegetable Stir-fry

RCI-VG.004.0549

Garlic String Beans

Ginger Chicken Rice
RCI-RC.004.0127

Ginger Chicken Rice

Gingered Beef Stir-fry
RCI-MT.001.0117

Gingered Beef Stir-fry

RCI-SF.001.0168

Glazed Catfish Stir-fry

RCI-SN.005.0029

Gow Gees

RCI-SW.001.0030

Grilled Tofu Sandwiches

Gyoza
RCI-SN.002.0173

Gyoza

RCI-MT.003.0044

Hoisin-Braised Tempeh and Chinese Vegetables

RCI-SC.001.0028

Hoisin-Green Onion Relish

Hot Mustard Dipping Sauce
RCI-SC.007.0166

Hot Mustard Dipping Sauce