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hunan – Mumbai Blogg https://www.mumbaiblogg.com Tips, Tricks and Things Not to Miss in Mumbai Thu, 10 Jun 2021 13:14:01 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.9.25 https://www.mumbaiblogg.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/05/cropped-dpa-stp-140166-32x32.jpg hunan – Mumbai Blogg https://www.mumbaiblogg.com 32 32 Beijing Cuisine — End of the Chinese culinary journey at the Shanghai Express ITC https://www.mumbaiblogg.com/mumbai/beijing-cuisine-end-of-the-chinese-culinary-journey-at-the-shanghai-express-itc/ Thu, 30 May 2019 11:35:04 +0000 http://www.mumbaiblogg.com/?p=2065

The Shanghai Express at the ITC Grand Central, Lower Parel has reached its terminus at Beijing and will halt there till June 9, 2019.

The ITC at Lower Parel will hold the last part of its five major Chinese Cuisine experience and host the famous Beijing Cuisine for the next ten days from May 30th to June 9th, 2019. Their far east restaurant The Shanghai Express will serve authentic Beijing dishes especially prepared by Master Chef Jia for their menu.

ITC Beijing
Master Chef Jia with our little friend Aarav & parents

Beijing or Mandarin cuisine is one of the five major cuisines of China. It is distinct from the Szechuan, Hunan, Canton and Shanghai cuisines in that, that it is the cuisine greatly influenced by Beijing being the capital city and therefore the political hub of the country for the last eight hundred years.

Each dynasty, whether native Chinese or from the surrounds, added to the fascinating imperial cuisine; wolf’s and swan’s meat by the Mongol Yuan Dynasty! The Court of Persia, which took refuge when fleeing from the Arab Aggression also had a lasting influence on the kitchens of the Imperial Court. ‘Shaobing’, a baked, flat bread, hot pots and grilled and sliced meats would be a good example.

Beijing is the cuisine from North of China with its variant served throughout the Northern region. The geographical location and its extreme climate —too hot, too dry, too cold — and surrounding hills made it incumbent on the cuisine to exclude, until very recently, fresh foods like fruits, fish and vegetables. Art of Pickling and Preserving foods developed.

The pollution of a well populated capital did not help! So originally and necessarily, staples were maize, sorghum and buckwheat not rice or wheat. Over the years Wheat, Soya, Vinegar, Maize were introduced and in the last eight hundred years the cuisine of Beijing has changed tremendously. Interestingly there is a ‘Beijing Cabbage’ —- a cabbage grown in the orient which unlike the cabbage known to us does not have a compact cluster of leaves at its heart, cylindrical in form, pale leaves with large crisp base.

Pork meat, and in Muslim habitats, beef or mutton and of course the Imperial Court added exotic fowl (Duck/Swan/Chicken) to its cuisine. Beijing flavours its food with coriander, ginger, garlic, scallions, wines and soy.

ITC Beijing
Peking Duck and Mushroom soup

The Shanghai Express is serving two varieties of set Beijing meals— @ Rs. 1500 per person and Rs. 2000 per person. Both tickets avail the customer one soup from a choice of 2 vegetarians and 2 non-vegetarian; one main dish from a choice of four vegetarian or four non-vegetarian; one noodles or rice again, from a choice of two noodles/rice and one out of a choice of two deserts.

ITC Beijing
Mango Jelly Veg Desert

 

 

 

 

 

 

The more expensive Rs. 2000 per person meal has one Appetizer added on from a choice of four vegetarian and four non-vegetarian.

ITC Beijing
Mala Xia

My friends and I tried the Peking duck and mushroom soup— mild, smooth and laden with little cubes of Duck meat accompanied by Mala Xia  — huge tiger prawns in mala sauce, fried to a crisp and chilly hot! Beijing Kaoya Juan — Peking roast duck rolls with pickled cucumbers thrown in for a sweet and salty taste and the vegetarian Haricot beans tossed with dry chilli and Chinese YACA.

THE quality of their lamb, both in the appetizers and the main dishes was as always excellent and delicious when cooked by Chef Jia. The cutely named Pixie Jiding gentle smooth and mild on the palate — chicken in a beer sauce. All in all, the meal was worth spending time over and value for money!

The Aiwowo (a steamed croquet of stewed walnuts and raisins in a sweet sauce covered in rice flour and shredded

ITC Beijing
Aiwowo Extreme right in the plate

coconut) was unique amazingly delicious and to die for. The nut and dry fruit stuffing was reminiscent of the flavours of Khubani Ka Meetha and yet with a distinct Chinese bent.

Obviously, camels’ humps, apes’ lips, bears’ paws, preserved exotica like birds’ nests (edible nests of swifts) and sea cucumbers of the Imperial Cuisine are a thing of the past. Beijing Cuisine in the modern times is a sophisticate set of dishes delicious and very appealing to the Indian Palate.

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Ride the Shanghai Express at the ITC, Lower Parel https://www.mumbaiblogg.com/mumbai/cantonese-food-in-mumbai/ Mon, 01 Apr 2019 06:25:28 +0000 http://www.mumbaiblogg.com/?p=1957 Authentic Cantonese food  will be served for the next 10 days at The Shanghai Club Express, ITC Grand Central Lower Parel, from March 27th to April 7th, 2018.  To avail of the Cantonese Cuisine served, the diner has a choice of two special menus executed by Master Chef Jia from China — a chef acclaimed in various parts of the world for his prowess at the varied Chinese Cuisine.

ITC MasterChef Jia

A unique culinary voyage , a delectable luxury dining experience that braces’ quality with accessibility, Shanghai Club is a discovery. The restaurant showcases a perfect blend of ancient Chinese tradition along with contemporary décor with touches of the symbolic red colour to emphasize upon the Chinese ambiance.

Like we experience in India, Chinese Cuisine too varies almost every hundred miles or so. There is the Szechuan, Hunan, Cantonese, Beijing, and Peking with umpteen other variations in between.

Cantonese cuisine, originally known in China as Guangdong Cuisine, is often referred to as Yue cuisine. This is the cuisine of China’s Guangdong Province, and more specially adheres to its Capital, Guangzhou. Cantonese is a Cuisine with a mild taste, the Cantonese enjoy the natural flavors of fresh sea fish and Sauces, including hoisin sauce, oyster sauce, plum sauce, sweet and sour sauce, and soy sauce. the flavours are well balanced and not greasy. To leave intact the flavours of the primary ingredients, which are at the peak of their freshness and quality, very little few and very little spices are used. The spice does not engulf the natural flavor of the main ingredients. Except the use of garlic and coriander, in order to retain the taste and flavours of the main ingredients, the Cantonese avoid the use of fresh herbs as against the  liberal use of the same in Sichuanese, Vietnamese,  Lao, Thai and European. In fact, garlic is often used as a vegetable in Cantonese cooking!

This makes Cantonese a popular cuisine in China and Cantonese Chefs are highly sought after in China. Chef Jia brought to India by the ITC being one of them. As required, he uses a variety of cooking methods from roasting, steaming to stir frying.

Prawn Starters

Cantonese cuisine, less spicy than the Sichuan and Hunan methods of preparation is yet a flavorful and delicious cuisine; far more delicate than other eight forms of Chinese food.

these 10 days at the Shanghai club Express traces the Cantonese route through two set menus – the Superior ticket and a First class ticket on The Shanghai Express. the Superior ticket @ Rs.1500 per person + taxes, avails the diner a four course meal including soup and dessert.

A soup from the choice of four—two pure vegetarian and 2 non-vegetarian. Our Jain friends had their choice too.

One main course from a choice of 4 vegetarians (including for Jains), 1 fish, 1 prawn, 1 lamb, 1 chicken. The Sliced Lamb in chili oyster Sauce paired with Guangzhou Glass Noodles from the vegetarian Menu was YUMMY! So was the enchanting flavours of Wok tossed noodles with pickle vegetables, Asparagus in Chili garlic sauce, Steam tofu in special hot black bean sauce, crispy baby corn salt and pepper at Shanghai Club.

One Noodles/rice from a choice of 3 vegetarians and 3 non-vegetarian.

One dessert from a choice of three. Apricot honey rice pudding with a sprinkle of Pista and julienne of Apricot, highly recommended.

The FIRST CLASS ticket is available for Rs. 2000 and the menu includes a choice of 4 Vegetarian and 4 N0n-vegetarian starters

MENU FOR SUPERIOR
ITC
MENU FOR FIRST CLASS TICKET

The Cantonese experience will soon be followed by Beijing and Shanghai destinations on THE SHANGHAI CLUB EXPRESS.

So book your tickets now to experience delicately balanced flavours of yin and yang, dished out by Master Chef Jia.

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