Shanghai cuisine (上海菜), also known as Hu cai (沪菜, pinyin: hù cài)

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Shanghai cuisine (上海菜), also
known as Hu cai (沪菜, pinyin: hù cài) is a popular style of Chinese
cuisine. The city of Shanghai itself does not have a separate and
unique cuisine of its own, but modifies those of the surrounding
provinces, ie Jiangsu and Zhejiang coastal provinces. What can be
called Shanghai cuisine is epitomized by the use of alcohol. Fish,
crab, chicken are "drunken" with spirits and are briskly
cooked/steamed or served raw. Salted meats and preserved vegetables
are also commonly used to adjuntify the dish.
The use of sugar is common in Shanghainese cuisine, especially
when used in combination with soy sauce. Non-natives tend to have
difficulty identifying this usage of sugar and are often surprised
when told of the "secret ingredient". The most notable dish of this
type of cooking is "sweet and sour spare ribs" ("tangcu xiaopai" in
Shanghainese). "Red cooking" is a popular style of stewing meats
and vegetables associated with Shanghai.
"Beggar's Chicken" is a legendary dish of a southern origin, called
"jiaohua ji" in Mandarin, wrapped in lotus leaves and covered in
clay. Though usually prepared in ovens, the original and historic
preparation involved cooking in the ground. The lion's head
meatball and Shanghai-style nian gao are also uniquely
Shanghainese, as are Shanghai fried noodles, a regional variant of
chow mein that is made with Shanghai-style thick noodle.
Lime-and-ginger-flavoured thousand-year eggs and stinky tofu are
other popular Shanghainese food items.
Facing the East China Sea, seafood in Shanghai is very popular.
However, due to its location among the rivers, lakes, and canals of
the Yangtze Delta, locals favor freshwater produce just as much as
saltwater products like crabs, oysters, and seaweed. The most
notable local delicacy is Shanghai hairy crab.
Shanghainese people are known to eat in delicate portions (which makes them a target of mockery from other Chinese), and hence the servings are usually quite small. For example, notable buns from Shanghai such as the xiaolong mantou (known as xiaolongbao in Mandarin) and the shengjian mantou are usually about four centimetres in diameter, much smaller than the typical baozi or mantou elsewhere.
Breakfast
Shanghainese people do not usually spend too much time on having
breakfast, so breakfast in Shanghai is pretty simple. Shanghainese
people are used to grabbing some food in small snack stores or
having a bowl of pao fan (泡饭 | rice in soup or water) with pickled
cucumbers, pickled vegetables or a salty duck egg at home.
Sheng Jian Bao ("Sangjibo" - in Shanghainese)
Breakfast is commonly bought from corner stalls which sells pork
buns, for the best xiaolongbao (small steamer bun). These stalls
also sell other types of buns, such as Shengjian mantou (生煎饅頭,
literally "fried bun") and Guo Tie (fried jiaozi),all eaten dipped
in black vinegar. And "luo bo si bing" (萝卜丝饼,radish-strips-stuffing
pancake) is also delicious. A typical breakfast combination is
youtiao, a dough-like food that is deep fried in oil until crisp
and is eaten in all parts of China, wrapped in thick pancake,
accompanied by soy milk.And you can also tear a loaf of youtiao
into pieces and put them into soy milk to eat.
Xiao Long Bao
A notable Shanghai delicacy is the Xiao Long Bao, sometimes known as Shanghai Dumplings in English-speaking countries [1] Xiao Long Bao, or "small steamer bun" (literally translated) as mentioned above, is a type of steamed bun that is filled with pork (most commonly found) or minced crab, and soup. Although it appears delicate, a good xiao long bao is able to hold in the soup until the xiao long bao is bitten. They are steamed in bamboo baskets and served with black vinegar and in some places, shredded ginger. A common way of eating the Xiao Long Bao is to bite the top off, suck all the soup, then dipping it in vinegar before eating.
"Four Heavenly Kings"
The most well-known foods for breakfast are the “Four Heavenly
Kings” (四大金刚), which include da bing (大饼) (Chinese pancake),
youtiao (deep-fried dough stick), ci fan tuan (steamed sticky rice
ball) and soy milk.
Among “Four Heavenly Kings”, ci fan tuan belongs to typical
Shanghai food.[citation needed] Ci fan tuan is made of warm steamed
sticky rice. Shanghainese people like putting sugar and youtiao
inside steamed sticky rice. People also put salty duck egg yolk,
rousong (crushed dried pork) or other stuffings in ci fan tuan.
Main courses
Da Zha Xie
Chinese mitten crab (Da Zha Xie (大闸蟹) is
a hairy crab found in the Yangcheng Lake. It is normally consumed
during Winter (September to November every year). The crabs are
tied with ropes/strings, placed in bamboo containers, steamed and
served.
Crispy chicken
Crispy chicken is made by first
boiling the body of a chicken until its flesh is tender, then
roasting it for long periods of time or until the skin goes dry and
crispy.
Congshao crucian carp
This is rather involved
and complex preparation for the common crucian carp. The dish,
congshao jiyu (蔥燒鯽魚, lit. scallion stewed crucian carp), requires
long hours for preparation since the fish needs to be soaked in
vinegar, and then deep-fried, stewed for a long prolonged period,
and cooled to make the fish tender enough to consume together with
all its bones. Due to the complexity of its preparation and the
difficulty in perfecting it, the dish was sometimes used by
families as a test when recruiting a cook.[2]
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