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| Beyond the Great Wall: Recipes and Travels in the Other China | 
enlarge | Authors: Jeffrey Alford, Naomi Duguid Publisher: Artisan Category: Book
List Price: $40.00 Buy New: $19.25 You Save: $20.75 (52%)
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Avg. Customer Rating:   (16 reviews) Sales Rank: 2152
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published) Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 376 Shipping Weight (lbs): 4.8 Dimensions (in): 11.4 x 9.9 x 1.3
ISBN: 1579653014 Dewey Decimal Number: 641.59515 EAN: 9781579653019 ASIN: 1579653014
Publication Date: May 1, 2008 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| Customer Reviews:
  Shangri La June 26, 2008 1 out of 8 found this review helpful
A taste of the Real China, from one who has travelled there on numerous occasions, a true Shangri La experience
  A different cookbook June 14, 2008 10 out of 12 found this review helpful
Not only a marvelous recounting of fascinating travels, but in addition an interesting cookbook and recipes of foods that one would possibly overlook as Chinese. The images are superb of the not only the food, but the area and people, adding an additional dimension. If one has any interest in Asian ethnic foods, this book is well worthwhile having in your library.
  Beyond The Great Wall... Is Beyond a Great Cookbook! May 28, 2008 16 out of 21 found this review helpful
Watch Video Here: http://www.amazon.com/review/R2WGMJBM41SKM Beyond the Great Wall... Beyond a Great cookbook.Beyond the Great Wall: Recipes and Travels in the Other China
  Dazzling recipes and a wonderful ranging conversation with well-traveled, forthright friends May 20, 2008 15 out of 18 found this review helpful
As the Introduction states, the world's borders would look very different if based upon food and culture. Chinese Muslims don't eat pork, and in rural Tibet, chicken is considered inedible. There are papayas in the south of China, and millet in the hot arid regions.
Beyond The Great Wall layers many elements on a strong foundation of interesting recipes - maps, food anthropology, and travel notes, generously illustrated with the authors' truly spectacular location photos, and evocative studio photos by Richard Jung, each carefully captioned.
The recipes require few special ingredients, and when they do, the resulting combination is a revelation, such as chile paste spiked with Sichuan peppercorns, or pomegranate-marinated lamb kebabs. Each recipe is thoughtfully introduced with suggestions for meal combinations, the dish's origin, thoughts on timing and ease of preparation. Eating your vegetables will be more interesting with new takes on salad, soup and vegetable sides. The Beef-Sauced Hot Lettuce Salad was a huge hit in my house when I was recipe-testing for the authors.
The bread chapter includes flatbreads, a loaf baked in a lidded pot, and little stuffed breads. For experienced noodle-makers, the variations in shaping and saucing are fascinating. For those new to handmade noodles, the pinch method in Earlobe Noodles provides an easy introduction.
The book doesn't pretend to be a catalog of "authentic" recipes, which would have us searching for riverweed or camel meat, and drying yak cheese on a yak-dung fire. Rather, this is a cookbook for those who want to enjoy foods and flavors from that part of the world, respectfully translated into the Western kitchen. And for those interested in tasting at the source, there is advice on planning a trip and sample itineraries. Fans of the authors' previous books will appreciate that the travel stories are attributed to either Naomi or Jeff. Finally, the Glossary is a good read in itself - how sprouting changes the nutrients in beans, or how to choose and make the most of Sichuan peppercorns.
My advice: buy this book and engage it like you would a wonderful ranging conversation with well-traveled, forthright friends.
  Two broken pipes amid a chorus May 15, 2008 12 out of 210 found this review helpful
As Beijing Olympic Games approaches, people in China has been extremely busy and so have been those who are against China for one reason or another. Recently, we've witnessed the Lhasa riot, the overwhelmingly biased coverage by the Western media using fabricated footages, the often violent disruptions of the Olympic touch relay across major Western cities, and now, there is this "cook book".
First of all, the timing of this book is interesting. According to the authors, it was their long time editor who had commanded them to do this book. Equally revealing of a shared deep-rooted hatred and colonial bias against China is how the editor, and the authors call Tibet among themselves, instead of Tibet region of China, they refer it as par of the Central Asia, it shows that deep down, they really hate to see Tibet is part of China now, instead of part of India or the British Empire. And has anybody else noticed their collective eagerness to rush this "cook book" out before the Games? Coincidence or part of a pathetic, ill-intentioned collective effort orchestrated by some mysterious institution?
Once understand where those people came from, it's not hard to learn the hidden meaning behind the buzzword used in the sub title and throughout the book: the other China. China is consisted of 56 major ethic groups, while Han is the largest. The author claims that non-Han Chinese citizens "are not considered by the government to be Chinese" is totally false and seriously misleading! I wonder would the authors dare to highlight this false statement to the Chinese authority next time they apply for a visa to go to China (to make more money off her)?
The authors are heart-broken by the "many social changes" happened in China in the past 20 years. What's so terrible? Twenty years ago, the whole country was poor and so was the Tibet area. When a country is booming, people from relatively developed areas will migrate to less developed areas to make personal wealth, just like what Americans did in the migration west. If the authors really want to blame somebody, blame capitalism, not Chinese government, or maybe they secretly want the whole country still frozen in poverty so various cultural thieves, some are more ungrateful than others, can continue to get rich from there.
In conclusion, as a "cookbook", this is valueless! Just like no matter how many times you video tape Mike Tyson's game, you are still not qualified to publish a boxing textbook. Rather, this is a propaganda piece commanded by outside power to "tie-in" with the Olympic Games, so they can bark at the country and people whom so generously allowed them to poke around while getting handsome rewards from the Western capitalism system.
The question for the rest of us is: Should we pay to reward them as well?
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