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发表于 2016-7-10 18:31:14
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It is not every day that people treat what they eat as part of their
culture. But it could certainly be argued that Chinese food is the only part of
Chinese tradition that has deeply touched almost every other culture around the
globe.
In the US, for instance, even small towns with no Chinese inhabitants
have
Chinese restaurants.
Chinese food is known to be delicious and affordable - maybe not exactly
Michelin-caliber - and for those places which do have a Chinese community, the
restaurant can act as a lifeline of many who settle there.
However, for a long time, some have harbored the elitist view that food is
somehow low on the list of a country's cultural markers.
In the 1980s, I joined a group of Chinese dignitaries on a tour of North
America.
They dined out in so many Chinese restaurants (they were not yet accustomed
to Western food, not even fast food) that some feared that many Americans might
simply consider Chinese food was all China had to offer.
That offended many Chinese-Americans, who made a good living as
restaurateurs. But after watching this show, surely nobody would now dare make
such a flippant remark.
Today, people are so genuinely proud of Chinese food that some have moved
to the other end of the scale, believing in the superiority of what they eat, to
the exclusion of everything else. In an era of little mobility, people ate what
they grew, with almost no chance of tasting things from afar.
People grew attached to their own foods, taking them along when they
relocated.
This was extolled as a virtue, or a sign of nostalgia, in the series.
I certainly view our food as a key part of our cultural identity, which is
etched on us, mainly because of economic necessity.
Nowadays young people in big cities have access to all kinds of food. They
may not like all of them, but that smirk of disdain is no longer visible on
their face because they probably don't have their home cuisine as the only
benchmark.
There is nothing wrong with thinking your hometown's food is the best.
However, one should caution against the flip side of this belief - that
unfamiliar foods are simply inferior.
When CNN's website ran an article headlined "Top 10 disgusting foods in the
world" about two years ago, many cried foul.
Most of the items highlighted were from Asia, including my personal
favorite, pidan: the famous "hundred-year egg" or "thousand-year egg". Duck,
chicken or quail eggs are preserved in a mixture of clay, ash, salt, quicklime
and rice hulls for up to several months.
I have to admit, I would not have had the guts to taste some of the other
choices. But I'm sure their own locals love them. All have to be taken in
perspective.
I'm sure most citizens of Atlanta, Georgia, where CNN is headquartered,
would have been appalled by some of these foods.
But CNN is not just an Atlanta operation. It has viewers across the
world.
Maybe to be accurate, the piece should have added a qualifying clause "from
the point of view of middle Americans".
Likewise, Chinese foodies intoxicated by the pride of their own food should
avoid rushing to any prejudicial conclusions.
Yes, Chinese cuisine is rich in its regional diversity, but it is not the
world's only great food.
The way the Chinese prepare their food has as much flair as art - but so
does French food.
Worldwide, Chinese food may not be on a par with French in terms of
prestige. Then again, I'm not bothered by prestige.
Cultural confidence lies in the conviction of your own roots and at the
same time in the awareness that there are other equally great things to consider
in the national identity mix.
There is no conflict between preserving our own cultural heritage and
absorbing nutrients from other cultures.
Only when one is extremely weak would one see all things different as a
threat.
Food culture evolves with time. Unlike other culture-based products, food
is first of all a necessity and, as such, its health values should not be
ignored.
But food rises above that. It goes beyond filling the stomach and
satisfying hunger, and slips into the realm of culinary art that appeals to all
senses.
As the pace of globalization accelerates, there will be less and less
pure-bred food.
So, for a younger generation so fixated on Western-origin fast food, this
documentary is a gentle reminder of a luxury being offered up every day in our
own kitchens, that we all may well have been taking for granted.
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