Zha Cai - Wikipedia

Pickled mustard plant stem from Chongqing, China
iconThis article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.Find sources: "Zha cai" – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (March 2013) (Learn how and when to remove this message)
Zha cai
Whole heads of zha cai coated in chili paste
Chinese榨菜
Hanyu Pinyinzhà cài
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyinzhà cài
Wade–Gilescha4 ts'ai4
Wu
Romanization[tsɤtsʰɛ]
Yue: Cantonese
Jyutpingzaa3 coi3
Southern Min
Hokkien POJchà-chhài

Zha cai ([ʈʂâ tsʰâɪ]; 榨菜), also romanized as Cha tsai, is a type of pickled mustard plant stem originating in Chongqing, China. The name may also be written in English as cha tsai, tsa tsai, jar choy, jar choi, ja choi, ja choy, or cha tsoi. In English, it is commonly known as Sichuan vegetable, Szechwan vegetable, or Chinese pickled vegetable, although all of these terms may also refer to any of a number of other Chinese pickles, including the several other types in the Sichuan province itself.[1]

Production

[edit]
Zha cai is made specifically from the swollen stem of Brassica juncea subsp. tsatsai.

The pickle is made from the knobbly, fist-sized, swollen green stem of Brassica juncea, subspecies tsatsai. The stem is first salted and pressed, and dried before being rubbed with hot red chili paste and allowed to ferment in an earthenware jar.[2]

Flavour

[edit]

The taste is a combination of spicy, sour, and salty. Its unique texture—crunchy, yet tender—can only be vaguely compared to Western pickled cucumbers. Excess salt in the preserved vegetable is leached out by soaking in fresh water. Considered to be rich in umami, zha cai varies in spiciness depending on the amount of chili paste used in preparation.[3]

Uses

[edit]
Zha cai cut into thick strips for cooking

Originating in Sichuan and believed to be one of the world's oldest types of pickles,[4] zha cai is used in many of the various cuisines of China such as in Sichuan dan dan noodles,[5] in soups with ground pork and mifen, and as a condiment for rice congee.[6] It is generally sliced into thin strips and used in small amounts due to its extreme saltiness, although this saltiness can be tempered somewhat by soaking the strips in water prior to use.

A popular Chinese dish featuring zha cai is "noodles with Zha Cai and shredded pork" (榨菜肉絲麵; zhà cài ròusī miàn).[7] Zha cai is also an ingredient of ci fan tuan, a popular dish in Shanghai cuisine.

In Japan, the pickle is common in Chinese restaurants (though it is usually less spicy, to suit Japanese tastes), and it is transliterated into Japanese as zāsai (katakana: ザーサイ; kanji: 搾菜).

Like other vegetable stems in Chinese cuisines, particularly celtuce, zha cai can also be sliced and sautéed.

Manufacturers

[edit]

Fuling, a district in Chongqing, is closely associated with zha cai.[8] The largest manufacturer, Fuling Zhacai, manufacturers of the Wujiang (乌江, Wu River) brand, is listed on the Shenzhen Stock Exchange[9] and in 2021 celebrated selling 15 billion packets.[10]

See also

[edit] Wikimedia Commons has media related to Brassica juncea subsp. tsatsai var. tumida.
  • iconFood portal
  • List of pickled foods
  • Ya cai – Chinese pickled vegetable
  • Meigan cai – Type of dry pickled Chinese mustard
  • Pao cai – Pickle in Chinese, and particularly Sichuan cuisine
  • Suan cai – Traditional Chinese pickled vegetables
  • Tianjin preserved vegetable – Type of pickled Chinese cabbage originating in Tianjin, China

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Pictures and more descriptions of zha cai
  2. ^ "Zha Cai | Local Condiment From Sichuan". TasteAtlas. Archived from the original on 2022-10-24.
  3. ^ Karen Yuan (2021-09-14). "Dear Pickle People, Zha Cai Should Be Your Favorite Condiment". Bon Appétit. Retrieved 2022-10-24.
  4. ^ Dr Q.V. Nguyen; Peter Core (September 2000). "Pickled and Dried Asian Vegetables (page vii)" (PDF). AgriFutures Australia. Archived (PDF) from the original on 2022-10-09.
  5. ^ Katie Workman (2018-01-09). "COOKING ON DEADLINE: Dan Dan Noodles". National Post. Retrieved 2022-10-25.
  6. ^ Marion, Jane; Cohen, Lauren; Hong, Henry; Unger, Mike; Woolever, Lydia (2019-10-07). "Eat Global (under the GLOBAL PANTRY section)". Baltimore Magazine. Archived from the original on 2022-10-25.
  7. ^ 航迷老叟 (2021-11-03). "食譜/家常版榨菜肉絲麵 味濃湯美肉絲嫩滑" [Recipe/Home-style mustard and pork noodles]. United Daily News (in Traditional Chinese). Archived from the original on 2021-11-11.
  8. ^ "The pick of Chinese pickles: Zhacai". 4 May 2014.
  9. ^ "About Us". Archived from the original on 2021-06-24. Retrieved 2021-03-21.
  10. ^ "15 Billion Packets Sold Globally, China's Wujiang Now World Famous!" (Press release). 27 January 2021.
[edit]
  • Whole zhacai being sold
  • Zhacai article[permanent dead link]
  • Zhacai making article
  • Q&A of Zhacai with Brassica juncea var.tumida images
  • Production technique
  • Production method Archived 2011-07-07 at the Wayback Machine
  • Grading and sorting for production
  • v
  • t
  • e
Cantonese cuisine
Main dishes
  • Bao yu
  • Bird's nest soup
  • Buddha's delight
  • Cantonese seafood soup
  • Chinese steamed eggs
  • Congee
  • Crispy fried chicken
  • Dragon tiger phoenix
  • Egg foo young
  • Eight treasure duck
  • Hot pot
  • Lemon chicken
  • Pork knuckles and ginger stew
  • Seafood birdsnest
  • Shark fin soup
  • Snake bite chicken
  • Soy sauce chicken
  • Steam minced pork
  • Subgum
  • Suckling pig
  • Sweet and sour pork
  • White boiled shrimp
  • White cut chicken
  • Wonton noodles
  • Yangzhou fried rice
Dim sum and yum cha
  • Almond tofu
  • Beef tripe
  • Cha siu bao
  • Chicken feet
  • Coconut bar
  • Har gow
  • Jian dui
  • Jiaozi
  • Lo mai gai
  • Lotus seed bun
  • Nian gao
  • Ox-tongue pastry
  • Rice noodle roll
  • Shumai
  • Spring roll
  • Steamed meatball
  • Swiss wing
  • Taro cake
  • Taro dumpling
  • Tendon
  • Tofu skin roll
  • Turnip cake
  • Water chestnut cake
  • Yau gok
  • Youtiao
  • Zhaliang
Siu laap
  • Char siu
  • Chinese sausage
  • Lou mei
  • Orange cuttlefish
  • Roast goose
  • Siu mei
  • Siu yuk
  • White cut chicken
Desserts and pastry
  • Almond biscuit
  • Biscuit roll
  • Deuk Deuk Tong
  • Douhua
  • Ginger milk curd
  • Lo mai chi
  • Malay sponge cake
  • Mooncake
  • Red bean cake
  • Red bean soup
  • Sausage bun
  • Snow skin mooncake
  • Tang bu shuai
  • Tong sui
  • White sugar sponge cake
Condiments and spices
  • Fermented bean curd
  • Five-spice powder
  • XO sauce
Ingredients
  • Beef ball
  • Black bean paste
  • Chenpi
  • Conpoy
  • Fermented black beans
  • Fish ball
  • Fishcake
  • Frog legs
  • Garland chrysanthemum
  • Kai-lan
  • Mantis shrimp
  • Ong choy
  • Pig blood curd
  • Pig's ear
  • Rapeseed
  • Saang mein
  • Sea cucumbers
  • Shahe fen
  • Shrimp roe noodles
  • Spare ribs
  • Suan cai
  • Tofu skin
  • Wonton
  • Yi mein
  • Youmian
  • Zha cai
Others
  • Chinese herb tea
  • Dried shredded squid
  • Lou fo tong
  • Cantonese restaurant
  • Beijing cuisine
  • Shanghai cuisine
  • Hong Kong cuisine
  • Macanese cuisine
  • Chinese cuisine
  • History of Chinese cuisine
  • v
  • t
  • e
Chinese pickles
  • Meigan cai
  • Pao cai
  • Suan cai
  • Tianjin preserved vegetable
  • Zha cai
  • Suan mei
  • Cai fu

Từ khóa » Cái Eng