Jul. 3rd, 2017

underused: an illustration of a collared trogon,  a type of tropical bird (Default)
[personal profile] underused
heirloom chess pie and the Complete Pie Cookbook

Over at Word of the Day, I encouraged members to practice a little bibliomancy by picking up whatever book was closest, opening it, and pointing to a passage at random to provide "guidance" for their day.

My closest book was Farm Journal's Complete Pie Cookbook (Doubleday, 1965). I was sceptical it would give me a window to the future, but here we are.

get to the pie, plz )
full_metal_ox: A gold Chinese Metal Ox zodiac charm. (Default)
[personal profile] full_metal_ox
Not exactly the sort of sumptuous food porn that [personal profile] zhemao and [personal profile] underusedhave been posting here, this downright minimalist recipe comes from How to Cook and Eat in Chinese; once more, the author's remarks are italicized:

When you are absolutely out of soups, you can always make shên-hsien-t'ang, Soup for the Gods. Since it is too simple to count as a dish, I am numbering it 15.0
(Chapter 15 dealt with soups.)

6 cups boiling water
2 tb-sp. soy sauce
Some dozen 1/2-inch sections of garlic shoots or 1 scallion cut to 1/8-inch
sections
1 t-sp. sesame oil or salad oil or lard

Put seasonings into a bowl and pour boiling water in it.

Soup for the Gods is a good drink to go with rich foods, such as Eggs Stir Rice (what nowadays is termed "fried rice" in English.)

Not having brought up with traditional Chinese cookery and its surrounding cultural context, I've long wondered a couple things about the above concoction (which does serve as a useful quick-and-dirty soup base):

1. Why is it called "Soup for the Gods"? Is the name ironic, is it used in ritual offerings, or just what?

2. Just about every iteration of Soup for the Gods I've found online also includes ginseng:

https://recipeland.com/recipe/v/soup-for-the-gods-41328

http://www.recipesource.com/soups/soups/12/rec1258.html

http://www.cookingindex.com/recipes/74909/shen-hsien-tang-soup-for-the-gods.htm

The third link above cites The Ginseng Book (1973, Ruka Publications) by Louise Veninga; this would've been during an era that a lot of non-Chinese Americans exalted ginseng as a miracle substance that's Good For You and should be consumed at every opportunity (a characteristic product of the period was Ginseng Up, a root-beer-flavored ginseng-infused pop sold in health-food stores.) (See also the current adulation of things like açaí berries, quinoa, and goji.)

Now, according to Dr. Chao, one use of Soup for the Gods is as a light drinking soup/neutral palate-cleanser between banquet courses; I doubt that a powerful traditional medicinal herb would be added indiscriminately to such--particularly without specifying the type of ginseng, which would be an important consideration in Traditional Chinese Medicine; Chinese, Korean, and American ginseng have different effects (and the last is a different species entirely.)

So: how authentic an option is the ginseng?

Profile

thecookbook: (Default)
The Cookbook

March 2025

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16 1718192021 22
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Aug. 10th, 2025 07:40 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios