Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Edit History

liuzhou

liuzhou

For the last several years Cindy's* job has been to look after me. She takes care of my residence papers, my health insurance, my travel, my housing and associated repairs. She makes sure that I am supplied with sufficient cold beer at official banquets. And she does it all with terrific efficiency and great humour.

 

This weekend she held her wedding banquet.

 

Unlike in the west, this isn't held immediately after the marriage is formalised. In fact, she was legally married months ago. But the banquet is the symbolic, public declaration and not the soul-less civil servant stamping of papers that the legal part entails.

 

So tonight, along with a few hundred other people, I rolled up to a local hotel at the appointed time. In my pocket was my 'hong bao' or red envelope in which I had deposited a suitable cash gift. That is the Chinese wedding gift protocol. You don't get 12 pop-up toasters here.

 

I handed it over, then settled down, at a table with colleagues, to a 17 or 18 course dinner.

 

Before we started, I spotted this red bedecked jar. Shaking, poking and sniffing revealed nothing.

 

IMG_3988 (Large).JPG

 

A few minutes later, a waitress turned up and opened and emptied the jar into a serving dish. Spicy pickled vegetables. Very vinegary, very hot, and very addictive. Allegedly pickled on the premises, this was just to amuse us as we waited for the real stuff to arrive.

 

IMG_3998 (Large).JPG

 

Then the serious stuff arrived. When I said 17 courses, I really meant 17 dishes. Chinese cuisine doesn't really do courses. Every thing is served at roughly the same time. But we had:

 

Quail soup which I neglected to photograph.

 

IMG_4037 (Large).JPG

Roast duck

 

IMG_4038 (Large).JPG

Braised turtle

 

IMG_4039 (Large).JPG

Sticky rice with beef (the beef is lurking underneath)

 

IMG_4040 (Large).JPG

Steamed chicken

 

IMG_4041 (Large).JPG

Spicy, crispy shell-on prawns.

 

IMG_4043 (Large).JPG

Steamed pork belly slices with sliced taro

 

IMG_4058 (Large).JPG

Spicy squid

 

IMG_4060 (Large).JPG

Noodles

 

IMG_4057 (Large).JPG

Chinese Charcuterie (including ducks jaws (left) and duck hearts (right))

 

IMG_4062 (Large).JPG

Mixed vegetables

 

IMG_4065 (Large).JPG

Fish

 

IMG_4066 (Large).JPG

Cakes

 

IMG_4067 (Large).JPG

Fertility soup! This allegedly increases your fertility and ensures the first born (in China, only born) is a son. Why they are serving to me is anyone's guess. It would make more sense for the happy couple to drink the lot.

 

IMG_4069 (Large).JPG

Greenery

 

IMG_4071 (Large).JPG

Jiaozi

 

There was a final serving of quartered oranges, but I guess you have seen pictures of oranges before.

 

IMG_3967 (Large).JPG

The happy couple. I wish them well.

 

*Cindy is the English name she has adopted. Her Chinese name is more than usually difficult to pronounce. Many Chinese friends consider it a real tongue-twister.

liuzhou

liuzhou

For the last several years Cindy's* job has been to look after me. She takes care of my residence papers, my health insurance, my travel, my housing and associated repairs. She makes sure that I am supplied with sufficient cold beer at official banquets. And she does it all with terrific efficiency and great humour.

 

This weekend she held her wedding banquet.

 

Unlike in the west, this isn't held immediately after the marriage is formalised. In fact, she was legally married months ago. But the banquet is the symbolic, public declaration and not the soul-less civil servant stamping of papers that the legal part entails.

So tonight, along with a few hundred other people, I rolled up to a local hotel at the appointed time. In my pocket was my 'hong bao' or red envelope in which I had deposited a suitable cash gift. That is the Chinese wedding gift protocol. You don't get 12 pop-up toasters here.

 

I handed it over, then settled down, at a table with colleagues, to a 17 or 18 course dinner.

 

Before we started, I spotted this red bedecked jar. Shaking, poking and sniffing revealed nothing.

 

IMG_3988 (Large).JPG

 

A few minutes later, a waitress turned up and opened and emptied the jar into a serving dish. Spicy pickled vegetables. Very vinegary, very hot, and very addictive. Allegedly pickled on the premises, this was just to amuse us as we waited for the real stuff to arrive.

 

IMG_3998 (Large).JPG

 

Then the serious stuff arrived. When I said 17 courses, I really meant 17 dishes. Chinese cuisine doesn't really do courses. Every thing is served at roughly the same time. But we had:

 

Quail soup which I neglected to photograph.

 

IMG_4037 (Large).JPG

Roast duck

 

IMG_4038 (Large).JPG

Braised turtle

 

IMG_4039 (Large).JPG

Sticky rice with beef (the beef is lurking underneath)

 

IMG_4040 (Large).JPG

Steamed chicken

 

IMG_4041 (Large).JPG

Spicy, crispy shell-on prawns.

 

IMG_4043 (Large).JPG

Steamed pork belly slices with sliced taro

 

IMG_4058 (Large).JPG

Spicy squid

 

IMG_4060 (Large).JPG

Noodles

 

IMG_4057 (Large).JPG

Chinese Charcuterie (including ducks jaws (left) and duck hearts (right))

 

IMG_4062 (Large).JPG

Mixed vegetables

 

IMG_4065 (Large).JPG

Fish

 

IMG_4066 (Large).JPG

Cakes

 

IMG_4067 (Large).JPG

Fertility soup! This allegedly increases your fertility and ensures the first born (in China, only born) is a son. Why they are serving to me is anyone's guess. It would make more sense for the happy couple to drink the lot.

 

IMG_4069 (Large).JPG

Greenery

 

IMG_4071 (Large).JPG

Jiaozi

 

There was a final serving of quartered oranges, but I guess you have seen pictures of oranges before.

 

IMG_3967 (Large).JPG

The happy couple. I wish them well.

 

*Cindy is the English name she has adopted. Her Chinese name is more than usually difficult to pronounce. Many Chinese friends consider it a real tongue-twister.

liuzhou

liuzhou

For the last several years Cindy's* job has been to look after me. She takes care of my residence papers, my health insurance, my travel, my housing and associated repairs. She makes sure that I am supplied with sufficient cold beer at official banquets. And she does it all with terrific efficiency and great humour.

This weekend she held her wedding banquet.

Unlike in the west, this isn't held immediately after the marriage is formalised. In fact, she was legally married months ago. But the banquet is the symbolic, public declaration and not the soul-less civil servant stamping of papers that the legal part entails.

So tonight, along with a few hundred other people, I rolled up to a local hotel at the appointed time. In my pocket was my 'hong bao' or red envelope in which I had deposited a suitable cash gift. That is the Chinese wedding gift protocol. You don't get 12 pop-up toasters here.

I handed it over, then settled down, at a table with colleagues, to a 17 or 18 course dinner.

Before we started, I spotted this red bedecked jar. Shaking, poking and sniffing revealed nothing.

IMG_3988 (Large).JPG

A few minutes later, a waitress turned up and opened and emptied the jar into a serving dish. Spicy pickled vegetables. Very vinegary, very hot, and very addictive. Allegedly pickled on the premises, this was just to amuse us as we waited for the real stuff to arrive.

IMG_3998 (Large).JPG

Then the serious stuff arrived. When I said 17 courses, I really meant 17 dishes. Chinese cuisine doesn't really do courses. Every thing is served at roughly the same time. But we had:

Quail soup which I neglected to photograph.

IMG_4037 (Large).JPG

Roast duck

IMG_4038 (Large).JPG

Braised turtle

IMG_4039 (Large).JPG

Sticky rice with beef (the beef is lurking underneath)

IMG_4040 (Large).JPG

Steamed chicken

IMG_4041 (Large).JPG

Spicy, crispy shell-on prawns.

IMG_4043 (Large).JPG

Steamed pork belly slices with sliced taro

IMG_4058 (Large).JPG

Spicy squid

IMG_4060 (Large).JPG

Noodles

IMG_4057 (Large).JPG

Chinese Charcuterie (including ducks jaws (left) and duck hearts (right))

IMG_4062 (Large).JPG

Mixed vegetables

IMG_4065 (Large).JPG

Fish

IMG_4066 (Large).JPG

Cakes

IMG_4067 (Large).JPG

Fertility soup! This allegedly increases your fertility and ensures the first born (in China, only born) is a son. Why they are serving to me is anyone's guess. It would make more sense for the happy couple to drink the lot.

IMG_4069 (Large).JPG

Greenery

IMG_4071 (Large).JPG

Jiaozi

There was a final serving of quartered oranges, but I guess you have seen pictures of oranges before.

IMG_3967 (Large).JPG

The happy couple. I wish them well.

*Cindy is the English name she has adopted. Her Chinese name is more than usually difficult to pronounce. Many Chinese friends consider it a real tongue-twister.

×
×
  • Create New...