Read Chop Suey : A Cultural History of Chinese Food in the United States Online
Authors: Andrew Coe
cattle,
80
See also
beef
Central Pacific Railroad,
137
cha
(tea),
92
See also
tea
champagne,
5
Chan, Charlie,
205
Chang, Cecilia,
221
Chao, Buwei Yang,
217
–19
Chaozhou dishes,
244
Chapin, Dwight,
230
–34
char siu bau
(steamed bread),
130
cheeses:
See also
dairy products
chefs, Chinese:
after Communist takeover,
227
immigration laws affecting,
214
,
216
,
223
rulebooks for imperial,
92
–93
for Yuan Mei,
65
–66
Chen Zuguan,
13
–14
cherry bounce,
46
Chicago,
171
,
172
,
173
,
198
,
216
,
221
Chicago Inter-Ocean,
185
Chicago Tribune:
food stories,
105
,
106
,
172
,
185
,
241
chicken dishes:
beggar’s,
221
“General Tso’s Chicken,”
241
–43,
251
Kung Pao,
251
chickens:
domestication of,
81
on sailing vessels,
2
The China (restaurant),
175
China:
antiquity of,
16
climate,
70
geography,
67
–70
lexical origins of name,
57
–58
as “Middle Kingdom,”
16
–19,
29
,
58
See also
Chinese cuisine; Chinese history
China Clipper (restaurant),
209
–10
The China Mission
(Dean),
61
–62
China root,
134
China Sea,
69
Chinatowns:
during anti-Chinese movement,
142
during 1930s and 1940s,
208
revitalization of,
243
–44
See also
New York City Chinatown; San Francisco Chinatown
Chinese-American
(newspaper),
153
Chinese Americans:
in American West,
112
–14,
117
,
134
–43
as cooks and chefs,
133
–34,
135
,
139
,
149
culinary traditions maintained by,
117
–19,
129
,
134
–35,
137
–38,
139
,
151
on East coast,
169
–71
farming by,
121
–23,
135
,
137
,
138
,
151
,
170
,
171
,
207
in Hawaii,
206
–7
as laundrymen,
107
,
126
,
135
,
138
,
159
,
169
,
171
,
207
marginalization of,
205
–6
as merchants,
104
,
112
,
113
,
118
–19,
135
,
137
–38,
149
,
151
,
171
,
206
,
207
in Midwest,
171
–72
in New York.
See
New York City
as peddlers,
107
,
120
–21,
123
,
129
,
149
racism toward.
See
racism
as railroad laborers,
137
–39
as restaurateurs.
See
Chinese restaurants in America
in San Francisco.
See
San Francisco
See also
Chinese food in America; Chinese restaurants in America
Chinese Cookery in the Home Kitchen
(Nolton),
185
Chinese cuisine:
adventurousness in,
71
,
75
,
81
,
153
,
155
,
199
,
249
–50
banquet tradition,
46
,
47
–48,
92
–93,
218
,
227
,
228
,
231
,
235
,
238
building blocks of,
67
,
79
,
92
,
98
cookbooks describing,
66
–67,
217
–19
cooking methods,
73
,
76
,
83
–87,
98
,
101
,
154
decline of, under Mao,
227
–28
delicacies of,
27
,
28
,
58
,
93
–94,
98
domesticated plants and animals in,
71
,
72
,
80
,
81
dough cookery,
88
–91
family-style meals,
94
,
129
,
218
,
247
fan-cai
dichotomy in,
79
–80,
94
,
98
,
101
,
134
–35
fish and shellfish,
67
,
72
,
81
–82,
84
–85,
86
food cut into small pieces,
23
,
51
,
84
,
129
,
158
–59
geography as influence on,
67
–70
grains,
71
,
78
–79,
83
–84,
87
–89,
91
,
99
meats,
14
,
23
–24,
48
,
80
–81,
84
–85,
86
regional distinctions in,
99
–102,
218
restaurant culture in,
34
–35,
94
–97,
98
,
100
–101
revolutions in,
87
–91
vegetables in,
71
,
79
–80,
83
–84,
86
See also
Chinese food in America
Chinese culture:
banquet etiquette,
46
,
47
–48,
92
–93,
235
,
238
chopstick etiquette,
46
,
48
,
51
,
63
early reference works on,
22
–
24
,
33
–35,
56
–59,
62
–63
gender separation in,
44
,
93
,
94
,
97
social hierarchies in,
93
See also
Chinese cuisine; Imperial China
Chinese Exclusion Act,
142
,
161
,
205
,
206
,
216
–17
Chinese food in America:
Americanization of,
191
–92
in arts and entertainment,
168
,
187
–88,
191
,
195
–98,
200
–204,
214
as cheap and filling,
159
,
192
,
203
,
211
,
251
cookbooks for,
185
,
186
,
217
–19,
222
,
248
on grocery shelves,
91
,
192
–94,
240
,
250
influence of Nixon’s visit on,
240
–43
Jewish embrace of,
198
–205
post-World War II revitalization of,
217
–24
See also
Chinese restaurants in America; chop suey; recipes
Chinese history:
Beijing Summer Olympics (2008),
248
–50
Boxer Rebellion,
165
–66
Communist takeover,
217
,
220
,
223
,
225
Cultural Revolution,
226
,
227
,
229
–30
early diplomacy with U.S.,
38
–50,
52
,
53
free market reforms,
246
Han Dynasty.
See
Han Dynasty
Japanese invasion (1937),
205
,
221
Korean War,
225
Li Hongzhang’s U.S. visit,
161
–64,
240
Nixon and Kissinger visits,
224
–39
Qing Dynasty.
See
Qing Dynasty
6000–3000 BCE,
71
and Soviet Union,
225
Tiananmen Square massacre,
247
Treaty of Wang Xia,
47
,
49
,
50
,
52
Xia Dynasty,
72
–73
Zhang Dynasty,
80
Zhou Dynasty,
75
–76,
80
,
81
,
84
,
86
,
92
See also
Emperors; Imperial China
Chinese Home Cooking
(Sia),
207
The Chinese in America
(Gibson),
127
Chinese-Japanese Cook Book
(Bossé),
186
Chinese language:
pidgin,
9
–10
teaching to barbarians,
29
See also
Cantonese language; Mandarin language
“Chinese Museum,”
50
Chinese Repository,
33
,
34
,
55
,
58
,
59
–60,
126
Chinese Restaurant News,
250
–51
Chinese restaurants in America:
adapting to American tastes,
111
–12,
132
–33,
138
,
139
,
166
,
167
,
223
,
243
,
245
–46,
251