Sauces and condiments In Cantonese cuisine, ingredients such as sugar, salt,
soy sauce,
rice wine,
corn starch,
vinegar,
scallion and
sesame oil suffice to enhance flavour, although garlic is heavily used in some dishes, especially those in which internal organs, such as entrails, may emit unpleasant odours.
Ginger,
chili peppers,
five-spice powder, powdered
black pepper,
star anise and a few other spices are also used, but often sparingly. File:Macharsiew by daxiang stef.jpg|
Char siu is often marinated with
plum sauce and
honey for sweet flavour. File:Steamed Oysters.jpg|Oysters steamed in two ways: with ginger and garlic, and in
black bean sauce Dried and preserved ingredients Although Cantonese cooks pay much attention to the freshness of their primary ingredients, Cantonese cuisine also uses a long list of preserved food items to add flavour to a dish. This may be influenced by
Hakka cuisine, since the
Hakkas were once a dominant group occupying
imperial Hong Kong and other southern territories. Some items gain very intense flavours during the
drying/
preservation/
oxidation process and some foods are preserved to increase their shelf life. Some chefs combine both dried and fresh varieties of the same items in a dish. Dried items are usually soaked in water to
rehydrate before cooking. These ingredients are generally not served
a la carte, but rather with vegetables or other Cantonese dishes.
Traditional dishes A number of dishes have been part of Cantonese cuisine since the earliest territorial establishments of Guangdong. While many of these are on the menus of typical
Cantonese restaurants, some simpler ones are more commonly found in Cantonese homes. Home-made Cantonese dishes are usually served with plain
white rice.
Deep-fried dishes There are a small number of deep-fried dishes in Cantonese cuisine, which can often be found as
street food. They have been extensively documented in
colonial Hong Kong records of the 19th and 20th centuries. A few are synonymous with Cantonese breakfast and lunch, even though these are also part of other cuisines.
Soups Old fire soup, or
lou fo tong (), is a clear
broth prepared by simmering meat and other ingredients over a low heat for several hours. Chinese herbs are often used as ingredients. There are basically two ways to make old fire soup – put ingredients and water in the pot and heat it directly on fire, which is called
bou tong (); or put the ingredients in a small stew pot, and put it in a bigger pot filled with water, then heat the bigger pot on fire directly, which is called
dun tong (). The latter way can keep the most original taste of the soup. Soup chain stores or delivery outlets in cities with significant Cantonese populations, such as Hong Kong, serve this dish due to the long preparation time required of slow-simmered soup.
Seafood Due to Guangdong's location along the
South China Sea coast, fresh seafood is prominent in Cantonese cuisine, and many Cantonese restaurants keep aquariums or seafood tanks on the premises. In Cantonese cuisine, as in cuisines from other parts of
Asia, if seafood has a repugnant odour, strong spices and marinating juices are added; the freshest seafood is odourless and, in Cantonese culinary arts, is best cooked by steaming. For instance, in some recipes, only a small amount of
soy sauce,
ginger and
spring onion is added to steamed fish. In Cantonese cuisine, the light seasoning is used only to bring out the natural sweetness of the seafood. As a rule of thumb, the spiciness of a dish is usually negatively correlated to the freshness of the ingredients. File:HK Hotpot foods Dec-2013 Ingredients 蟶子 Solenidae 蟹 Crabs 蝦 Prawn 雞肉腸仔 Sausage n 魚旦 Fishballs.jpg|Typical ingredients for Cantonese-style hotpot are
razor shell (), crab (), prawn (), chicken sausage () and
dace fishball ().
Noodle dishes Noodles are served either in soup broth or fried. These are available as home-cooked meals, on
dim sum side menus, or as street food at
dai pai dongs, where they can be served with a variety of toppings such as
fish balls,
beef balls, or
fish slices.
Siu mei Siu mei () is essentially the Chinese
rotisserie style of cooking. Unlike most other Cantonese dishes,
siu mei solely consists of meat, with no vegetables. All Cantonese-style cooked meats, including
siu mei,
lou mei and preserved meat can be classified as
siu laap ().
Lou mei Lou mei () is the name given to dishes made from
internal organs,
entrails and other left-over parts of animals. It is widely available in southern Chinese regions.
Meat and rice plates A portion of meat, such as
char siu, served on a bed of steamed white rice. A typical variant consists of half-and-half portions of two types of
siu mei and
lou mei (or sometimes more than two). A steamed vegetable (such as
choy sum) is frequently, but not always included.
Little pot rice Little pot rice () are dishes cooked and served in a flat-bottomed pot (as opposed to a round-bottomed
wok). Usually this is a
saucepan or
braising pan (see
clay pot cooking). Such dishes are cooked by covering and steaming, making the rice and ingredients very hot and soft. Usually the ingredients are layered on top of the rice with little or no mixing in between. Many standard combinations exist.
Banquet and dinner dishes A number of dishes are traditionally served in Cantonese restaurants only at dinner time. Said banquets were typically served in the capital's famous tea houses. Guangzhou’s tea houses have historically served as meeting places for the public, where political movements could foment and lead to action. The main draw of these tea houses was to enjoy dim sum. While eating dim sum in tea houses grew in popularity during the nineteenth century, the different snacks and small bites that were enjoyed grew Guangzhou staples to encompassing culinary traditions from China’s numerous provinces. After the Qing’s defeat in the first Opium War, culinary influences outside of China found their way into the dim sum served at tea houses, with ingredients such as Worcestershire sauce and Ketchup becoming staple ingredients.
Dim sum restaurants stop serving
bamboo-basket dishes after the
yum cha period (equivalent to
afternoon tea) and begin offering an entirely different menu in the evening. Some dishes are standard while others are regional. Some are customised for special purposes such as
Chinese marriages or banquets. Salt and pepper dishes are one of the few spicy dishes.
Dessert After the evening meal, most Cantonese restaurants offer
tong sui (), a sweet soup. Many varieties of
tong sui are also found in other Chinese cuisines. Some desserts are traditional, while others are recent innovations. The more expensive restaurants usually offer their specialty desserts. Sugar water is the general name of dessert in Guangdong province. It is cooked by adding water and sugar to some other cooking ingredients.
Delicacies Certain Cantonese delicacies consist of parts taken from rare or endangered animals, which raises controversy over
animal rights and
environmental issues. This is often due to alleged health benefits of certain animal products. For example, the continued spreading of the idea that
shark cartilage can cure cancer has led to decreased shark populations even though scientific research has found no evidence to support the credibility of shark cartilage as a cancer cure. Consumption of shark fin soup dates back to the Song dynasty, with the dish ultimately becoming ingrained into Cantonese food culture and Chinese food culture as a whole in the royal banquets of the Ming. Conservation efforts by the Chinese government and various NGOs have been historically difficult to implement. It can be difficult for fishermen who rely on the sale of shark fins to adopt alternative occupations, in addition to corruption at the local level impeding attempts at dismantling the shark fin trade. ==See also==