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Food and Drinks
LifestyleFood & Drink

How a new wave of Chinese diaspora cookbook authors are exploring identity through recipes

  • From soy sauce brownies to Italian udon, a new wave of cookbooks offer tastes of the Asian diaspora while asking what it means to be Chinese

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Cacio e pepe udon is a dish Chinese-Australian cookbook author Hetty Lui McKinnon grew up on. She is one of many diaspora food writers who express themselves in dishes fusing Eastern and Western flavours and techniques. Photo: Hetty Lui McKinnon
Jenny Lau

Two different recipes for a dish published a century apart illustrate the importance of cookbooks in documenting the evolution of Chinese diaspora cooking.

In his new cookbook Kung Food, Chinese-American chef Jon Kung highlights war su gai, or almond boneless chicken, a popular dish in Michigan, the US state where he grew up.

In 1917, one of the first English-language Chinese cookbooks, The Chinese Cook Book, by Shiu Wong Chan, was published in New York.

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On page 35, there is a recipe for hung yuen guy ding – almond boneless chicken. But the dish bears little resemblance to the crispy battered chicken on shredded lettuce Kung writes about, known today as “ABC”.

Chinese-American chef Jon Kung, who has a recipe for almond boneless chicken in his cookbook Kung Food. Photo: Johnny Miller
Chinese-American chef Jon Kung, who has a recipe for almond boneless chicken in his cookbook Kung Food. Photo: Johnny Miller
Recently, there has been a wave of cookbooks – from Betty Liu’s My Shanghai to The Woks Of Life by the Leung family behind the blog of the same name – by a new generation of Chinese diasporic food writers.
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Rather than merely telling the reader how to cook dishes, these writers focus on their identity.

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