国产日韩欧美一区二区三区三州_亚洲少妇熟女av_久久久久亚洲av国产精品_波多野结衣网站一区二区_亚洲欧美色片在线91_国产亚洲精品精品国产优播av_日本一区二区三区波多野结衣 _久久国产av不卡

?

Eating likeemperors

2019-04-19 01:38孫佳慧

孫佳慧

Piqued by pop culture, Chinas public is hungry for all things imperial

Just a month after opening, the Forbidden Citys “Corner Tower Restaurant” has closed. The problem? Overcapacity—seats at its “imperial” hot pot feast, first unveiled on February 5, had been reserved through to mid-March, and walk-in customers were lining up for hours to partake.

While most reviews agree that the Corner Towers food was fine, those in the queue would freely admit that they were really there for the imperial “atmosphere”: portraits of emperors and empresses on the walls, a menu written in the tone of an imperial edict, and a chrysanthemum soup base supposedly favored by Qing Empress Dowager Cixi. “Its more about getting close to the culture of the Forbidden City,” a customer told Beijing Youth Daily.

In the era where restaurants and food trends go viral on video apps like Douyin, imperial dining has become big business. Desserts such as date-yam cake, lotus pastry, and lotus-root starch balls have become bestsellers after appearing on emperors and concubines tables in popular TV dramas like 2011sEmpresses in the Palaceand 2018sStory of Yanxi Palace. In Beijings Wangfujing area, time-honoredsiu mairestaurant Duyichu advertises the fact that its name was bestowed by the Qing Emperor Qianlong. High-end restaurant Guigongfu in Houfangjiayuan Hutong, a residence of Cixi before her marriage, is now a foodie pilgrimage site that serves a menu known as the “Empresses Dowagers Family Feast.”

Fangshan Restaurant in Beihai Park, founded by former imperial cooks in 1925, was the pioneer in the food genre now known as “court cuisine.” In ancient China, imperial families enjoyed exclusive dishes that the common people had no opportunity to eat; exact menus can only be guessed from historic documents or folk tales. The contents of the famous Manchu-Han Banquet, said to have consisted of 196 main dishes and 124 sides, was among the greatest mysteries of the Qing court—theres even some doubt whether this ?banquet ever existed.

Though the Qing dynasty perished over 100 years ago, restaurants have been trying to recreate the “l(fā)ost” banquets menu since at least the 1970s. In 2004, 12 diners at a Xian restaurant spent 366,000 RMB on 14 entrees and several side dishes from a purportedly authentic Manchu-Han Banquet menu.

Modern interest in imperial cuisine “reflects curiosity [about nobility], and a desire for a dainty lifestyle,” food critic Liu Zhilin tells TWOC. “Its a transition from tasting food to tasting culture.” Compared to the Xian banquet, a two-hour wait for a Forbidden City hot pot sounds like a steal—if the restaurant ever opens again. – SUN JIAHUI

五家渠市| 新晃| 南靖县| 株洲县| 双辽市| 博客| 绵阳市| 高邮市| 汉阴县| 海伦市| 扶风县| 贡山| 航空| 霍州市| 宣武区| 巢湖市| 慈溪市| 安溪县| 鹤壁市| 荆门市| 南昌市| 广汉市| 德兴市| 洮南市| 航空| 彭山县| 嘉禾县| 潜江市| 容城县| 陇西县| 东宁县| 黎平县| 阳曲县| 习水县| 清河县| 新宁县| 司法| 惠安县| 资溪县| 四会市| 大冶市|