China Daily (Hong Kong)

Hotpots vary, but popular everywhere

China is divided into as many culinary regions as there are different ethnic groups. And its geographic­al diversity and kaleidosco­pic cultural profiles contribute to an unending banquet of flavors,

- says Pauline D Loh. Contact the writer at paulined@chinadaily.com.cn

The steam rises, warming faces and hands. The table is piled high with raw slices of meat and platters of vegetables. Every diner is cradling a bowl of sauce in front of him, ready to dip the freshly cooked ingredient­s.

All over China, hotpot is the most popular meal in winter. And although the range of ingredient­s may differ from east to west and north to south, the concept is generally similar.

Bite-sized pieces of meat and vegetables are cooked at the table in a simmering pot of stock.

It is often the first cooking that college kids experiment with, using nothing more than a rice cooker.

Most food historians agree that the hotpot came in with the Mongolians during the Yuan Dynasty (1271-1368). Apparently, the soldiers traveled light, so they boiled water in their helmets and cooked pieces of meat in them.

But it was Muslim chefs who had settled in the Forbidden City who refined it into an art, with lamb and beef and Silk Road spices such as chili, fennel and cumin, and fermented wild chive flowers from the northern grasslands.

They also introduced the tall copper pots with funnels that have become a Beijing icon.

These early chefs set the template for the hotpots so popular north of the Yangtze River, with their preference for gamey lamb, strong sauces and winter cabbage.

In the past, there was little or no seafood available, and the fish that were used were freshwater varieties such as carp.

For seafood hotpots, we need to go much farther south to the coastal communitie­s in Fujian, Chaoshan and other parts of Guangdong province.

Here, fresh fish, shellfish and processed products such as fish balls feature prominentl­y in a hotpot meal. There are also lots more greens, with mustard shoots, cabbage hearts and garland chrysanthe­mum vegetables necessary in every hotpot meal.

The other difference is in the stock. You can almost immediatel­y tell which region the chef is from by looking at the stock that comes to the table.

In Beijing, the stock is clear, almost tasteless. You are expected to flavor it as you cook the meat. No one takes a sip until the meal is halfway through.

There is another northern version where lamb shanks are cooked in a spicy thick broth. This is known as “scorpion bones”, yangxiezi. Tofu, meatballs and other products are dunked in to cook as the broth bubbles away. This hearty hotpot is a grassroots favorite and especially popular in the hutong restaurant­s, where regular diners prefer heavily seasoned dishes.

But if you are talking about spicy soup stocks, nothing beats the Chongqing or Chengdu hotpots. Spadefuls of fiery chili peppers and Sichuan peppercorn­s are fried up with other spices in plenty of rendered beef fat and poured onto a light stock.

This creates a 3-centimeter-thick layer of oil and chili on top of the stock in a simmering cauldron of spicy lava. A quick dip into that quickly cooks the meat, or whatever innards the Sichuan gourmets are so fond of.

One of the most famous hotpot brand names to come out of Sichuan is the Haidilao franchise. The chain has perfected the hotpot formula, with excellent and showy service and comfortabl­e holding areas while you wait for your table.

But when it comes to trendsetti­ng hotpots, you have to hand it to the Hong Kong foodies.

It first started with humble steamboat stalls that popped up in the winter in back alleys. Each low wooden table had a charcoal burner with a pot of simmering stock, and a metal tray loaded with slices of meat, oysters, clams, chicken wings, vegetables, mushrooms, fresh tofu and dried tofu.

From these pop-up daipaidong, the Hong Kong hotpot went upmarket into restaurant­s offering top-grade wellmarble­d beef, feiniu huoguo.

Several reincarnat­ions and many decades later, the current craze is for tonic soup hotpots that are full of natural collagen. The stock is usually made of pork hocks or shark cartilage and a secret blend of dried herbs.

The hotpot is now a sophistica­ted gourmet meal, but it started as a convenient way to use up meat and vegetables while eating around a warm fire in winter.

In almost every city in China, you can enjoy an excellent hotpot with regional characteri­stics, from chicken, beef and lamb to very special local ingredient­s.

In Sanya city in Hainan island, they use coconut water and chicken for a tasty hotpot.

Once, on a visit to Jingning county in Yunnan while visiting Admiral Zhenghe’s hometown, we had a hotpot made with pigs’ trotters flavored by an aromatic but extremely tart suanmugua,a local fruit known as “sour papaya”.

This rustic hotpot was one of the most delicious I had ever eaten.

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 ?? PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY ?? Top: Tall copper pots with funnels have become a Beijing icon. Middle: Seafood hotpots are popular in coastal communitie­s in Fujian and Guangdong provinces. Above: Chongqing or Chengdu hotpots feature fiery chili peppers and Sichuan peppercorn­s fried...
PHOTOS PROVIDED TO CHINA DAILY Top: Tall copper pots with funnels have become a Beijing icon. Middle: Seafood hotpots are popular in coastal communitie­s in Fujian and Guangdong provinces. Above: Chongqing or Chengdu hotpots feature fiery chili peppers and Sichuan peppercorn­s fried...
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