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Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper: A Sweet-Sour Memoir of Eating in China by Fuchsia Dunlop
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Sharks Fin And Sichuan Pepper

by Fuchsia Dunlop (otherwise under Fuchsia Dunlop)

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99461,719 (4.1)7
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WW Norton (2008), Hardcover, 320 pages

Member:tsangal
Collections:Your libraryRating:****1/2
Tags:chinese, china, food, memoir, nonfiction
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Showing 4 of 4
Initially very engaging, then progressively more and more...stomach-turning? Certainly I am not as gastronomically bold as the author. Descriptions of eating fish eyes, clawed turtle's feet, and pig's kidneys, have put me off reading this book before bed. But when I'm feeling a bit bolder, I think I will continue - Dunlop does tell a rollicking good story. Best travelogue of China I've read so far; often eye-opening, with a good balance between action and reflection. Thought-provoking and exciting to read, and possibly one of the few food memoirs that will not (always) stimulate your appetite. ( )
  lindseynichols | Feb 12, 2009 |
When Fuchsia Dunlop moved to China in the early 1990s, it was still a rarely visited backwater overflowing with traditional culture and lacking in technology. She quickly abandoned her plan to study Chinese minority cultures in favor of studying Chinese cooking. A few months later, she was enrolled as the first and only foreign student in Sichuan's prestigious cooking school.

This is a truly excellent food and travel memoir. Rather than gawking at the strange (to Western taste) things the Chinese eat, Fuchsia learns to appreciate the textures of goose intestines and sauteed caterpillar. This makes for some occasionally disgusting reading, but for the most part, I admired the author's unusual ability to fully join another culture. The food is vividly, beautifully described in away that inspires me to open my own culinary horizons. And, although food is the focus, Fuchsia doesn't neglect the cultural, historical and ethical situations that come along with it. I particularly appreciated the last chapters, in which she wrestles with a Communist banquet thrown at the expense of struggling peasants and the environmental impact of the appetites of China's newly wealthy. This is a satisfying book on many levels, and I think almost every reader would enjoy it. ( )
  cestovatela | Nov 30, 2008 |
An informed east meets west food memoir, which avoids the mawkish rubbernecking (e.g. WOW! THEY EAT SNAKES HERE!!) which normally blights the genre. ( )
1 vote jontseng | Apr 12, 2008 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0393066576, Hardcover)

A new memoir by the most talented and respected British food writer of her generation.

Award-winning food writer Fuchsia Dunlop went to live in China as a student in 1994, and from the very beginning she vowed to eat everything she was offered, no matter how alien and bizarre it seemed. In this extraordinary memoir, Fuchsia recalls her evolving relationship with China and its food, from her first rapturous encounter with the delicious cuisine of Sichuan Province to brushes with corruption, environmental degradation, and greed. In the course of her fascinating journey, Fuchsia undergoes an apprenticeship at China's premier Sichuan cooking school, where she is the only foreign student in a class of nearly fifty young Chinese men; attempts, hilariously, to persuade Chinese people that "Western food" is neither "simple" nor "bland"; and samples a multitude of exotic ingredients, including sea cucumber, civet cat, scorpion, rabbit-heads, and the ovarian fat of the snow frog. But is it possible for a Westerner to become a true convert to the Chinese way of eating? In an encounter with a caterpillar in an Oxford kitchen, Fuchsia is forced to put this to the test.

From the vibrant markets of Sichuan to the bleached landscape of northern Gansu Province, from the desert oases of Xinjiang to the enchanting old city of Yangzhou, this unique and evocative account of Chinese culinary culture is set to become the most talked-about travel narrative of the year.

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)

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