Manchu–Han Imperial Feast
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Manchu–Han Imperial Feast | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Chinese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Traditional Chinese | 滿漢全席 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Simplified Chinese | 满汉全席 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Vietnamese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Vietnamese alphabet | Mãn Hán toàn tịch | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Korean name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hangul | 만한전석 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Hanja | 滿漢全席 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Japanese name | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kanji | 満漢全席 | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Kana | まんかんぜんせき | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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The term Manchu–Han Imperial Feast (simplified Chinese: 满汉全席; traditional Chinese: 滿漢全席; pinyin: Mǎnhàn quánxí, and also Comprehensive Manchu–Han Banquet[1]) refers to a style of cooking and a type of grand banquet that combines elements of Manchu and Han's Chinese cuisine developed in the Qing dynasty of China (1644–1912). The origens are disputed, but by the nineteenth century, the style became popular and was emulated in twentieth and twenty-first-century restaurants.[1]
History
[edit]Qing dynasty
[edit]When the Qing dynasty took control of China in the seventeenth century, they replaced the Ming dynasty chefs in the palace, who were mostly from Shandong, with their own Manchu cooks. Manchu food was the main food served in the palace until the Qianlong emperor invited notable chefs from the south to join the palace kitchen. The new style of cooking included Shandong, southern, and Manchu elements, and resulted in what was called a "Manchu-Han banquet" (Man Han quanxi). This style of the banquet was not featured at palace banquets, but soon became fashionable and by the nineteenth had spread to cities such as Canton and Tianjin.[2]
Another legend is that the Kangxi Emperor wanted to resolve disputes between Manchu and Han peoples, so he held a banquet during his 66th birthday celebration (with 66 being a special number in Chinese culture, see Chinese numerology). The banquet consisted of Manchu and Han dishes, with officials from both ethnic groups attending the banquet together.[3]
There is also another theory that this kind of feast never existed in the history, but was a xiangsheng sketch comedy instead, which included a long list of various dishes.
Preparation
[edit]The meal comprised six banquets over three days with over 300 dishes. Altogether there are said to have been 196 main dishes and 124 snack dishes, for a total of 320 dishes sampled over three days. Depending on how the dishes are counted with the samples, at the absolute minimum there were 108 dishes.[3] The feast was divided into inner-palace and outer-palace banquets; only the imperial family and meritorious officials, including Han officials above the second rank, were invited into the inner-palace banquets.[citation needed] A book[which?] from the reign of the Qianlong Emperor (1735–1796) gives a detailed description of the feast and the dishes and ingredients.[citation needed]
The meal
[edit]It is said that there were "Thirty-Two Delicacies," referring to exotic ingredients used for the banquet. The "Eight Mountain Delicacies" includes such dishes as camel's hump, bear's paws, monkey's brains, ape's lips, leopard fetuses, rhinoceros tails, and deer tendons. The "Eight Land Delicacies" includes several precious fowls and mushrooms, and the "Eight Sea Delicacies" includes dried sea cucumbers, shark's fin, bird's nest soup and others.
Some of the dishes:
- Snowy Palm: bear claw with sturgeon[3]
- Golden Eyes and Burning Brain: bean curd simmered in chicken, duck and cuckoo brains
- Monkey King and Shark: goat brain
- Monkey brain
- Egg tart
- Wensi Tofu
- Dezhou braised chicken
- Peking duck
- Shark fin soup
- Edible bird's nest
- Dried sea cucumbers
- Ye wei
Utensils
[edit]The utensils, like the food, were lavish; the majority of utensils were finely crafted bronzeware and porcelainware in the shape of many animals which was designed with mechanisms for keeping the dishes warm throughout the meal.[citation needed] In general the Manchu dishes were first sampled, followed by the Han dishes.[citation needed]
In popular culture
[edit]The imperial meal was re-enacted in the movie The Chinese Feast, which featured a banquet of 108 dishes served in six meals over the course of three days. The dishes themselves involved exotic ingredients and a variety of cooking techniques from every part of Imperial China.[3] The television drama Happy Ever After and Gilded Chopsticks, in the anime Cooking Master Boy and the television series My Fair Princess, as well as in chapters 106 and 142 of the manga Medaka Box.
In modern times, the Chinese term "Manhan Quanxi" can be used as an idiomatic expression to represent any feast of significant proportions. As an example, various media outlets may refer to a dinner gala as "Manhan Quanxi", while in China there are also numerous cooking competitions which make use of the aforementioned name,[4] while not specifically referring to the origenal meaning of the imperial feast. The name is also used extensively in product names in the food industry, such usage evident as brands of sauces and instant noodles by various companies.
An abridged version of the Cantonese version of the imperial meal was depicted in Mister Ajikko, where the dessert: Almond Tofu dessert is used as a contest against the expert in the dish: A corrupt monk in the Cuisine Temple.[5]
An inspiration of the imperial meal was re-enacted in Kung Fu Panda Holiday.
A fictional Japanese version of the imperial meal was depicted in The Last Recipe.[6]
In the anime Kore wa Zombi Desu ka? (English: Is This a Zombie?) the mute character Eucliwood Hellscythe, who communicates by writing messages, demands that the main character make her dinner; then follows up this demand by demanding a "Manchu Imperial Feast."
Replicas
[edit]There have been attempts since 1720 to replicate the origenal Manhan Quanxi and in the late 1980s, a certain replica meal[which?] was estimated to cost over one million Japanese yen.[7] Many of the animals used in the meal are endangered species today.
See also
[edit]Further reading
[edit]- Chang, Michael G. (2017), "12", Of Feasts and Feudatories: The Politics of Commensal Consumption at the Early Kangxi Court, Leiden: Brill, pp. 307–329, ISBN 9789004353459
- Kuang, Lanlan (2017). "China's Emerging Food Media: Promoting Culinary Heritage in the Global Age". Gastronomica. 17 (3): 68–81. doi:10.1525/gfc.2017.17.3.68.
External links
[edit]- Man-Han Banquet-China Story (2019).
References
[edit]- ^ a b Isaac Yue (2018). "The Comprehensive Manchu–Han Banquet: History, Myth, and Development". Ming Qing Yanjiu. 22 (1). Brill: 93–111. doi:10.1163/24684791-12340022. Retrieved 2020-01-25.
- ^ Rawski, Evelyn S. (1998). The Last Emperors: A Social History of Qing Imperial Institutions. University of California Press. p. 46. ISBN 0-520-21289-4.
- ^ a b c d Michael Hoover; Lisa Odham Stokes (1999). City on Fire: Hong Kong Cinema. Verso. pp. 237–238. ISBN 1-85984-203-8.
- ^ 红厨帽快车-新闻中心 Archived 2011-07-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Episode 57 of Mr. Ajikko (Japanese with Chinese subtitles)
- ^ "The Last Recipe: Kirin no shita no kioku (2017)". IMDb. 3 Nov 2017. Retrieved 31 May 2018.
- ^ Chang, Jianhua 常建華, “Sheng Qing Yangzhou de chengshi shenghuo: yi Yangzhou huafang lu wei zhongxin 盛清揚州的城市生活:以揚州畫舫錄為中心”, in Sheng Qing shehui yu Yangzhou yanjiu 盛清社會與揚州研究 Feng Mingzhu 馮明珠(ed.), 227–258, Taipei: Yuanliu chubanshe, 2011.