Member Reviews

This cookbook is a wonderful summary of Chinese traditions and food. The dishes cover everyday and celebratory foods. The author provides descriptions of sources and sample menus. The one thing is that since it’s vegetarian and in many places vegan, some contortions had to be made in order for the recipes to work. Also a lot of the ingredients seem difficult to find. The book also is beautifully illustrated.

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This book is beautiful and something I have been trying to find! Recipes are not 30-minute simple, but they are clear and have plenty of background explanation. Can't wait for this one to be published.

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This might be my new favorite cookbook. The recipes are delicious and easy to follow. I think this cookbook is great for someone who feels pretty confident in the kitchen as some recipes were a bit challenging. My favorite recipe was the Singapore noodles.

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Thanks to the publisher and NetGalley for letting me review this book. There were some great recipes in here and several I can’t wait to try! The photos were nice as well.

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I love it when you can feel the love through the pages of a book, and this is exactly what Christine Wong does while walking you through her grandmother’s cuisine.
I can't wait to try making one of these with my hands, even if they won't look as good as in here.

Thanks to Chronicle Books and NetGalley, who provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest opinion.

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We love a vegetarian cookbook, and please give me more like this one. Great primer to vegetarianism in Asia and a love book full of recipes I desperately want to try. Some of the ingredients might be harder to find in the Midwest where I live by I am going to try my best.

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This is a fantastic cookbook! First of all, aesthetically, the book is absolutely gorgeous. The photography both of the scenery and the food is stunning. The use of colors and textures and light really makes this interesting to look at. I also loved that at the beginning of the book there is a section explaining the staple ingredients needed to cook the recipes in this book. As this is geared toward an international audience, not everyone has everything available everywhere, so this gives someone the ability to special order ingredients that would be considered specialized where they live. The recipes all sound delicious and are explained a way that is easy to follow even for someone who is unfamiliar with this cooking style. I thoroughly intend to test out some of these recipes very soon. Seriously, one of the better cookbooks that I have reviewed here on Netgalley so far.,

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Seriously gorgeous cookbook that makes me wish my local Asian grocery was better stocked so I could try these all out.

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This is a decently presented cookbook that doesn't pander to a Western audience - the dishes look and taste authentic. Some ingredients can be difficult to find and some recipes can be confusing (e.g., an ingredient "Chinese vegetable mixture" for a stir fry may leave heads scratching). Instructions are kind of chunky and blocky but there is really nice variety here along with cultural insights into the food as well. Those choosing vegan for health probably won't find much here - it has the usual sugars, salt, coconut oil, deep frying, etc.

The book breaks down as follows: introduction, pantry staples, food preparation/cooking techniques/ kitchen tools, staple recipes/ breakfast and dim sum, cha chaan teng and lunchbox favorites, family style dinners from festival foods to dai pai dongs, snacks/sweets/siu yeh, sample meals, stockists. Recipes include soy milk, grandma's curry paste, iced lemon tea, lotus leaf rice, yeung chow fried rice, mango pudding, longevity buns, five nuts mooncakes, curry puffs, Hong Kong sweet buns, mango pomelo 'sago', typhoon shelter celeriac, lunar new year dumplings, year cake, and many more.

Most recipes come with photographs. The photographs are serviceable but not of a more professional quality. The formatting/design of the cookbook is ok - recipes are kind of clunky, roll over onto a second page too often, and the fonts are all nearly the same size, making the introduction take up far too much room (you read an introduction once or twice but the ingredients/directions several times, so it doesn't make sense to have the intro take up over 1/4-1/2 of the page).

Each recipe comes with an English name, the Chinese name, Chinese characters, large introduction, serving size, ingredients separated by final product type (e.g., for 'egg' tarts, there are separate ingredient lists for the oil dough, the 'egg' custard, and the water dough). The directions are one huge chunky paragraph (or 2-3 paragraphs for different parts (e.g., the 'egg' tarts has chunky paragraphs for making the oil dough, making the water dough, assembling, and then the 'egg' custard). There are occasionally tips but no nutrition information, substitution suggestions, allergy concerns, etc.

I found several ingredients particularly hard to get and many recipes referred back to other recipes in order to complete. The author gives recipes in the beginning that are staples to have ready so in that way, it might be best to have Chinese all week in order to save time having to do up separate recipe ingredients all the time and instead have staples premade and ready to go.

In all, I greatly appreciated the authenticity of these foods. The taste was spot on when I could find the ingredients and spent the time needed to make these. The directions were clunky and I can't say I loved the photography (but was glad to at least have pictures of the dishes otherwise I'd have no clue what I was making or how it should have looked finished). There are also good tips on buying and storing some of the more uncommon ingredients such as lotus root. Reviewed from an advance reader copy provided by the publisher.

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This is a lovely cookbook, it just didn't make me want to run out and get the ingredients to prepare any of the dishes. That said, if you're looking for more plant-based recipes to add to your rotation, this could be a great option. Thanks so much to Net Galley and the publisher.

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Vibrant it is! Vegan cooking is something I’ve always wanted to do and learn with ease. Especially Asian vegan cooking. The recipes look rather intimidating but once I read through, I realized I can do this! So I’m super excited to try these out.

The book is so vibrant! In color of the pages, in pictures. Great book to keep in the kitchen.

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Great recipes 👌
I cannot wait to get started creating skme of these recipes. Some ingredients might be a bit difficult to find but I am confident the finished product will be great.

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So many recipes that I cannot wait to try. I love HK food and this cookbook has a lot of recipes of my favorite dishes. All the recipes are easy to follow.

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This cookbook is a true cultural experience. The author's descriptions and notes make this feels like a close friend or relative is sharing knowledge passed down from generations of home chefs. The information about how certain dishes or food practices became a part of Hong Kong's fair is great! There is history here. There is political commentary. There is delicious food. We will be bringing this into our store.

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I really enjoyed reading the book! The recipes sounded amazing and I would love to try making these dishes. The photos made my mouth water as I was paging through the book. I always like to read the history of the family and why the authors came to write a cookbook.

Growing up I ate a lot of these dishes and it is great to see these recipes in vegetarian/vegan form. I am especially I treated to see how the wontons would turn out. I would definitely purchase this book.

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