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Food

There's more to American food than burgers and french fries

1
2015-06-29 15:25China Daily Editor: Si Huan
American-style barbecue.(Photo/Zhang Zhuangfei)

American-style barbecue.(Photo/Zhang Zhuangfei)

Take the words "American" and "food", and you have the ingredients for a popular misconception: In the United States the cooking lessons ended once the burgers, French fries and ketchup hit the table.

Of course, that thinking is as simplistic as thinking chicken chow mein is the pinnacle of Chinese cuisine, yet many people in China cheerfully chew, swallow and digest this simplistic view of American food, and Michael Rosenblum wants to dispel it.

Rosenblum, executive chef and chief of mission of the US ambassador's residence in Beijing, and Yannick Ehrsam, executive chef of the Conrad Beijing, have cooked up the idea of a festival - American Classics. It was held in Beijing last week.

During the festival, held in the Chapter restaurant of Conrad hotel, visitors were able to feast on a host of delicacies once found along the fabled Route 66, the highway that stretched almost 4,000 kilometers from Chicago to Santa Monica, California.

Naturally, a Californian dish was served at the festival, walnut pesto salad. Other dishes included New Mexico pecan pralines, San Antonio chili verde and Texas brisket. Not exactly stereotypical US fare, but food that many of the Americans who attended felt at home with, and Chinese visitors relished.

Rosenblum, who has worked as a chef in China for more than 10 years, says: "I don't think China in general has associated America with great food and wine.

"We are trying to educate them that American food is not just fast food. We also promote healthy ingredients. Chinese use goji berries, and Americans use cranberries. They both have antioxidant benefits.

"And there are Californian wines that stand shoulder to shoulder with the best wines in the world."

Rosenblum seems to be the perfect fit for the role of executive chef for the US ambassador in China given that he has been linked to the country and its food ever since he was a boy.

When he was 14, he found a job as a busboy, washing dishes, cleaning tables and packing delivery orders at Formosa, a Chinese restaurant in Marietta, Georgia.

The owner and chef was from Hong Kong, and the youngster was soon learning from him about the city's culinary traditions and language.

He went on to do Asian Studies at Cornell University in New York and was awarded a scholarship to Shanghai Normal University for a semester in 1998.

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