How One Menu Perfectly Encapsulates Chinese Food's Evolution in America
How One Menu Perfectly Encapsulates Chinese Food's Evolution in America - Menuism Dining Blog, August 14, 2017
As I have
mentioned numerous times, the presence of over 300,000 Mainland Chinese
university students in the United States has altered the face of
Chinese dining in the United States, bringing authentic Chinese food to
cities and towns where such a find would
have been unimaginable even just a decade ago. As a big fan of both
college sports and US geography, and having visited all 50 states, I
have used my familiarity with these to track down authentic restaurants
in many college towns.
Recently I was watching the replay of an ESPN college football telecast
from a couple of years ago, when they did a promo for their College Game
Day telecast. It was a slow period early in the season, so ESPN
decided to do their show from a small (athletically
speaking) campus, James Madison University in Harrisonburg, VA. While I
had heard of that school, I was surprised that I had never heard of the
town in which it was located. Looking it up, I saw that it was in
rural Virginia, a two hour drive away from both
Washington DC and Richmond, explaining why it had never come to my
attention. Obviously I decided to check whether James Madison was a
school that had enough Chinese students to warrant authentic Chinese
food, and indeed it is, with A Taste of China Restaurant
providing anything a homesick Mainland Chinese student would want to
eat.
The menu at A Taste of China is absolutely fascinating. As I have
written before, these college town Chinese restaurants serve a mixed
audience--students from China, students not from China, and local
residents. The result is an interest mashup of old time
Americanized Chinese dishes and cutting edge items from the Chinese
interior. However I don't think this has been any more starkly
demonstrated than by the menu at A Taste of China. For example, look at
the "soup" section of their menu.
Talk about going from the ridiculous to the sublime! From the most primitive Toishanese American classic egg drop soup to the slightly more sophisticated wonton soup to the post 1960s immigration reform "northern" Chinese Americanized classic hot and sour soup, to the post immigration reform advanced Cantonese Westlake beef soup, to today's Sichuan boiled fish soup and pork rib pot. It's like 150 years of Chinese dining in America capsulized in 8 lines.
Likewise, the hot appetizer section of the menu was also like a diorama of Chinese food in America.
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