Imperial food from the Ming and pre- Ming dynasties has mostly
disappeared by today. What has been preserved is the Qing Dynasty
imperial cuisine because its cooks passed down their knowledge and
skills, and because the palace kept dietetic records.
General Feng Yuxiang (1882 - 1948) drove Puyi (1906 - 1967), the
last Qing emperor, out of the Forbidden City in 1924 and disbanded
the imperial garden, was opened to the public in 1925. Former cooks
of the Qing imperial kitchen, Sun Shaoran, Wang Yushan, Wen
Baotian, Niu Wenzhi, and Zhao Yongshou, then opened a tea house in
Beihai Park with help from Zhao Renzhai, former chief of the palace
vegetable storehouse. Their teahouse was named Fangshan, which
means imitation imperial food. They specialized in making and
selling the orthodox pastries of the Qing Palace. From making and
selling tea, pastries, and refreshments, Fangshan gradually evolved
into serving the traditional dishes of the Qing Palace. Many
literati and tourists dined at the restaurant out of admiration for
their imperial dishes. The restaurant soon became famous throughout
the city because of its fresh raw materials, excellent cooking, and
unique flavors.
The Fangshan Restaurant is located in Yilantang Hall on the north
side of the Jade Isle, where Empress Dowager Cixi (1835 - 1908)
used to take her meals after sight seeing in the park. The food
made in the Qing Palace for the emperors was called imperial food,
so a restaurant operating outside the palace making and selling
imperial food was only an imitation.
The restaurant's staple food was cooked wheaten products, such as
baked sesame seed cakes with fried minced-meat filling and pastries
shaped like apple, peach, fingered citron, and lucky rolls.
Whatever wheaten food you ate, you received a good luck message:
apple all is well; peach longevity, you will live a long life;
lucky rolls everything is fine.
The pastries included steamed corn-flour cake, rolls of kidney bean
flour, and mashed pea cake, which were all favorites of Empress
Dowager Cixi. The most sumptuous food at Fangshan Restaurant was
their Manchu and Han banquet. These dishes have the flavors of the
Beijing cuisine palace dishes.
There is another Fangshan Restaurant at Dongdan, and a Tingliguan
(Listening to the Oriole) restaurant at the Summer Palace.
Although imperial food originated with the common people, imperial
food uses different raw materials. The rice, flour, meat,
vegetables, melon, fruit, poultry, fish, and delicacies from land
and sea were carefully chosen tributes from local officials
throughout the country. They were unmatched in quality and
purity.
The rice used in the imperial kitchen was only grown at Jade Spring
Hill and Tang Spring in the Haidian District, west of Beijing. It
was known as Jingxi Rice (west of Beijing) or Haidian Rice. Because
of its low yield and excellent taste, only the emperors could eat
it. Top quality rice tributes from other parts of the country were
also eaten only in the palace.
The mutton eaten in the palace came from the Qingfeng Department
(Department of Celebrating Good Harvests). The Qing Dynasty
Imperial Kitchen did not serve beef, but it did use cow's milk,
which came from the same department. All kinds of melon and fruit,
and delicacies from land and sea were tributes from different parts
of the country. The palace cooking water was brought every morning
from the Jade Spring, which Emperor Qianlong named the "Number One
Spring in the world." Poultry and seasonal vegetables were bought
at the market. Carefully chosen raw materials were a pre requisite
for preparing imperial food.
All cooks in the imperial kitchen were famous. They cooked their
dishes to emphasize taste, color, and shape. Besides tasting good,
every dish must look as good as a work of art. Many cooks
specialized in making one or several dishes during their lives. The
more their labor was divided, the better the dishes were. What they
created was not so much a dish as a valuable work of art. Their
excellent cooking skills were the key to the making of palace
delicacies.
Ingredients in the imperial dishes were strictly blended, and the
auxiliary ingredients could not be modified. In public restaurants
cooks can adjust the ingredients according to whatever ingredients
are available as long as they make dishes with appealing color,
aroma, and taste. But in the palace, not a single auxiliary
ingredient could be replaced. If a cook wished to create a new
dish, he had to assume a risk. If the emperor liked his new dish,
his bonus would be impressive, but if the emperor disliked it, the
cook would be punished or beaten.
Imperial cuisine stresses the original stock and taste of the
dishes. Between shape and taste, taste is emphasized. For example,
if the main ingredient is chicken, the dish should taste of
chicken. Regardless of what auxiliary ingredients and seasonings
are used, they should not affect the taste of the chicken. This was
also true of venison, aquatic products, seafood, and of hot and
cold dishes. Imperial food requires the presence of color,
fragrance, and taste. A dish that looks good but does not taste
good is not good, and vice versa.
Cold dishes could not be combined on one plate. A plate of boiled
chicken should just be boiled chicken and nothing else. A plate of
jellyfish salad should be nothing but jellyfish salad, and the same
for smoked fish, preserved eggs, and pork cooked in soy sauce. They
should all be served on separate plates. There was nothing similar
to the assorted cold dishes of today, which are modeled like a work
of modern art.
The dragon and phoenix designs were not used in the palace. The
dragon and phoenix were the symbols of the emperor and empress, so
they could not be eaten. Special dishes were created for display,
such as the snow-white bird's nest, which was put in four big bowls
with four big Chinese characters that meant, "a long life." Other
display dishes had characters like "Moon Festival greetings," "many
happy returns of the day," "good luck to you for life," and "New
Year's Day greetings." The display dishes were prepared especially
to flatter the emperors, but they also were delicious in case the
emperor wanted to taste them.
Palace dishes were named simply, usually for their cooking methods,
main ingredients, or for the major and minor ingredients so the
emperors knew what was in the dish as soon as they saw it. For
example, quick fried chicken with fresh mushrooms; balls of pork;
shrimp and sea cucumber; stir fried fish slices; and quick fried
mutton with onion. Looking through more than 200 years of files
from the Qing Palace Imperial Diets, we found no dishes with showy
names. Maybe this was because the emperors wanted their ministers
to think and act consistently. While the imperial dishes were named
differently from those in restaurants, they were very similar to
dishes eaten by the common people. Palace cuisine can be regarded
as a collection of the best examples of Chinese food. The imperial
cooks who started the Fangshan Restaurant in 1925 passed along
their cooking skills so that today we can taste imitations of the
palace dishes.