From Publishers Weekly
Food writer Dunlop is better known in the U.K., where her comprehensive volumes on Sichuanese and Hunanese cuisine carved out her niche and eventually became contemporary classics. Turning to personal narrative through the backstory and consequences of her fascination with China, she produces an autobiographical food-and-travel classic of a narrowly focused but rarefied order. Dunlop's initial 1992 trip to Sichuan proved so enthralling that she later obtained a year's residential study scholarship in the provincial capital, Chengdu. There, her enrollment in the local Institute of Higher Cuisine, a professional chef's program, created a cultural exchange program of a specialized kind. The research for and success of her resulting cookbooks permitted Dunlop to return to China in a more experienced role as chef and writer; that led to this reflective memoir, which probes into the author's search for kitchens in the Forbidden City as well as the people and places of remote West China. One key to this supple and affectionate book is its time frame: by arriving in China in the middle of vast economic upheavals, Dunlop explored and experienced the country and its culture as it was transforming into a postcommunist communism. (Apr.)
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Product Description
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.
扶霞.鄧洛普(Fuchsia Dunlop)
扶霞.鄧洛普在牛津長大,於劍橋大學取得英國文學學士學位,其後於倫敦亞非學院以名列前茅的優異成績獲得中國研究碩士學位。一九九四年,扶霞在獲得了英國文化協會獎學金補助後,前往中國四川大學就讀一年;其後又在四川烹飪高等專科學校接受了三個月的專業廚師訓練。
扶霞著有三本書,分別是《四川烹飪》(Sichuan Cookery,在美國以《天府之國》(Land of Plenty)書名出版)、《湘菜譜》(Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook: Recipes from Hunan Province)、《魚翅與花椒》(Shark's Fin and Sichuan Pepper: A Sweet-Sour Memoir of Eating in China)。她在BBC中文頻道首度與中國當地電台合作時,擔任與成都電台合作的「吃東吃西」電台節目共同製作人,這是一系列以飲食為主題的雙語節目。她的文章曾刊登於各大報章雜誌,包括《金融時報》《紐約客》《美食家》《四川烹飪》雜誌等。她的作品也先後贏得了許多獎項。二○一○年,湖南省政府特別頒獎以肯定扶霞對湖南料理國際化的貢獻。
扶霞在最近十年裡,長期從事演講與烹飪示範工作,有時是獨立進行,有時則是和中國廚師合作,足跡踏遍了巴塞隆納、雪梨、紐約、加州、杜林、北京、上海與成都。她還曾擔任過中國烹飪旅行團的領隊。扶霞目前是倫敦「水月巴山餐飲集團」的顧問,負責對這家川菜館的菜單提出建議,同時指導或協助員工訓練,以及接待媒體的採訪。
结合当下分析得也通俗明了易懂
脑洞之大,角度只独特让我震撼
为我提供了一个解看历史和现实的全新视角。
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