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interesting Dim Sum lunch...

May 8 2008 at 10:15 PM
  (Login EDW209)

I was on a business trip a few months ago in Lima, Peru. This was second visit in the past year and had noticed quite a few restaurants named 'Chifas'. I asked my client about this and they explained that Chinese food is extremely popular in Lima and they even have a Chinatown. I was a bit skeptical but my client insisted that it was very good and that we try it out.

Well, we ended up for lunch in Lima's Chinatown and I was amazed! The chosen restaurant was 'Salon Capon' which is considered one of Lima's top dim sum restaurants.

(sorry for the poor pics, I used my Blackberry Perl camera):



Right away, my perception started improving as I walked past the front and see roasted ducks hanging in the deli/take out section! Pretty authentic, it can't be that bad if they have this:



We walked upstairs to the main area and another surprise, the typical round tables, lazy susans, teapots and dim sum carts.
I checked out the menu, it was interesting to see Chinese characters next to phonetic Spanish translations:


I don't speak Spanish, so I let my clients order... first up is the egg rolls, very nicely fried and tasty:



Next up was the shrimp dumplings (haw gow). Very good, once again I was surprised since I was expecting some type of dumbed down version to fit local tastes. But it was on par with the dim sum places in San Gabriel, California:



And orders of pork dumplings (sui mai) which is another standard dim sum dish:



Then a plate of barbecued pork (char sui). A little leaner than usual, but tastes exactly the same:



And a plate of fried rice. I really like this one:



An order of shrimp in lobster sauce, something I don't normally order but once again was very good:



Stir fried fish filet with shitake mushrooms and snow peas:



Overall, I enjoyed the meal and was pleasantly surprised by the quality and authenticity of the food. It was a wonderful experience!

Regards,
ED-209





 
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MTF
(Login MelvynTeillolFoo)
Admin

Origins of chinfa

May 10 2008, 8:09 AM 

Guano was harvested as a source of nitrates and was the richest commodity at the time. As usual, when work was back-breaking and soul-destroying, imigrant labour was called for.

The Chinese immigrants were mostly Hakka and Hokkien from Fukien province and other southern provinces of China. They saw a way out of poverty to the West...but into another field of poverty. Guano dust was hazardous to health, mainly respiratory. The work was incessantly hard; that and the mental stress / loneliness on those unihabited islands off the coast often led to suicides. There was no way back after you had sold your soul to the 'transporters'....er..labour agents.

The chinese labourers inisted on part payment as rice rations whilst attempting to send any money back to family in China. What intrigued the locals (Spanish speakers) was the ritual of stopping work before noon to cook the rice and then the mass lunch break. The chinese words for "cook rice" and "eat rice" (cze fan and chi fan) sounded remarkably similar to non-Chinese speakers and they invented a new 'Spanish' word for the combined ritual - 'chinfa'.

Thus, 'chinfa' has become the local Spanish word for 'Chinese Restaurant' and it is the most popular "foreign" food in the country.

As more waves of immigrants entered the country, even in the 1960s from Hong Kong, the cuisine has changed to the more refined Cantonese style, although the vestiges of the old peasant food of the Hakka still exist.

Hakka is a seemingly polite but actually derogatory term that means "Guest People". It refers to the once proud and ruling tribes of the Northern Han people, who live predominantly in the provinces of Guangdong, Jiangxi, and Fujian in China. Military defeat, famine, oppression and social stigma kept them moving in waves of migrations to nearly all of China, always guests and never 'belonging' nor owning land.

There is a saying, "If your pig is eaten or your baby stolen or sheer bad luck befalls you; look to a Hakka to blame."

Whenever there is trouble or times are hard , Hakkas are the first to be driven out. In a series of migrations, the Hakkas moved, settled in southern China, and then migrated overseas to various nations throughout the world - Taiwan, Singapore, Malaya, USA, Canada, Chile, Peru etc. Mysteriously, some are still found in northern Chinese provinces and it is not clear if those are retrograde immigrants or those who never left. The news programs in Xi'an are read in Hakka, even though it is not supposed to be a Hakka heartland.

The Hakka have had a significant influence on the course of Chinese and overseas Chinese history: in particular, they have been a source of revolutionary, political and military leaders. The sad thing is that most Hakkas will not admit to being Hakka, preferring to pretend to be whatever tribe is predominant - Cantonese, Hokkien, etc They speak the common dialect to outsiders but reserve their distinctive dialect for home use. Their food is salty, fatty and "aromatic" (which is an euphemism for smelly); but mostly cheap....er....."economical".

Regards,

MTF (proud to be 46% hakka)



    
This message has been edited by MelvynTeillolFoo on May 12, 2008 8:00 AM
This message has been edited by MelvynTeillolFoo on May 10, 2008 8:15 AM
This message has been edited by MelvynTeillolFoo on May 10, 2008 8:11 AM


 
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Gaz
(no login)

Thanks for such an interesting post...

May 11 2008, 7:12 PM 

From a proud 50% Hakka , the other half is Teow Chew However, I grew up in a predominantly Hakka household.

I enjoyed reading your post very much and it made me recall my own heritage. I hope you don't mind me sharing...

My maternal grandfather was one such "displaced" person, who left the Fujian province in the 20s. He settled in Indonesia initially and then eventually wound up in Perak, Malaya. I believe that in Malaya, the Hakka's have a strong heritage in the state of Perak where many worked as labourers in the mine. He eventually married my grandmother, who was also a Hakka. Her father owned a number of tin mines in the outskirts of Ipoh.

They eventually found their way to Kuala Lumpur where my grandfather started a successful wholesale business which moved everything from dried shrimp to school bags... mmmm... dried shrimp (you did mention "aromatic" after all).

My grandfather is no longer with us, but my grandmother is still fiesty as ever, at 87 years. At least I still get to practice my, very broken, Hakka with her.

I have to say, one of my favourite illustrated cultural stories of the Hakka was done by the Malaysian cartoonist, Lat. He tells a story of the courtship rituals of a Hakka male and female in Ipoh of the late 30's, early 40's. I have always found Lat's approach to illustrating cultural diversity amazing and was so pleased he did such an amazing piece on the Hakka.

MTF - thanks for taking me down memory lane

Cheers
Gaz

 
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(Login MelvynTeillolFoo)
Admin

Oops

May 12 2008, 7:54 AM 

My great grandfather also owned tin mines around Ipoh......and some of his sons were married off to part-Peranakan Hakka women.

We're not related .....are we?

Regards, MTF


 
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Gaz
(no login)

I don't think we are...

May 12 2008, 4:53 PM 

While it would be interesting to chart our family trees, our great grandparents could have been friends or associates. I understand that Ipoh is not that big a place. My brother married into a family whom their great grandmother taught my grandmother how to sew, so you never know.

I believe that my great grandfather had very little luck in spawining sons. My grandmother was from his first wife, whom he did not have any sons with. He sired a son with his second wife...

Not sure how he handled two wives. I am having enough trouble with one

 
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(Login MelvynTeillolFoo)
Admin

How about 4 official wives and others?

May 13 2008, 8:19 AM 

My great grandfather left original family in China and had 4 new wives in Ipoh. Only females bearing sons were promoted to wife status.

Other concubines only produced daughters. So, we never really knew how many wife-lets he had.

I had a grandfather and 6 grand-uncles on paternal side but nobody counted the direct bloodline paternal grand-aunts because girls didn't count; I've never been told. 

MTF


 
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Gaz
(no login)

In that case, we may never know if we are indeed related...

May 15 2008, 7:14 PM 

LOL.

Gaz

 
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(Login EDW209)

Thanks MTF for the details...

May 18 2008, 10:31 PM 

Very interesting read. Now that I think about it, the integration of Chinese culture clearing has influenced Peruvian food. For example, one of the most well know Peruvian dishes is Lomo Saltado and is basically a beef and vegetable stir fry (but with french fries instead of white rice).
Thanks for the details.

 
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(Login AnthonyTsai)
Admin

Your meal looks pretty tasty! You should see what Ping ate when she was in Peru...

May 13 2008, 2:41 PM 

Guinea Pig

She said there wasn't much meat and had a lot of bones. Tasted like roast chicken.

Cheers,
Anthony



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(Login EDW209)

Wow, that's pretty cool!

May 18 2008, 10:40 PM 

Hi Anthony,

LOL, I tend to stay away from the 'mystery meats'

But I did try cui (guinea pig) at a restaurant in Lima named Huaca Pucllana. The restaurant is really cool since it is located in the city and within a archeological site which is a 1500 year old adobe pyramid type structure.
I agree with Ping that it didn't have much meat and didn't have any special taste.

Regards,
ED-209

 
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