New China on Gerrard Street - ridiculously hot, just stupidly hot.
yeah that place! my big tough mate had to leave his own leaving dinner cos it was just too much. just unbelievably hot and unbelievably sour.
New China on Gerrard Street - ridiculously hot, just stupidly hot.
yeah that place! my big tough mate had to leave his own leaving dinner cos it was just too much. just unbelievably hot and unbelievably sour.
Are they pure Szechuan or mix of stuff?
Chilli Cool (The business, so nice. Not had the aubergine dish Baboon but will try asap. Gung Pao chicken and fish slice is spicy oil amazing)
Red Bar (Bethnal Green Rd, ate pigs blood hotpot in the windowless karaoke bit downstairs, slightly surreal)
Sichuan Folk (Really nice apart from dish, not very spicy).
Gourmet San (Seemed pretty authentic to me but no real marker. First one I wever went to so got soft spot for it and usually really nice. My fae rendition of beef in spicy oil is here)
Golden Day (Hunan - Was ok)
Silk Road (Xinjiang - Amazing IMO. Everything was so spot on, probs my top meal of whole of 2010)
In ChengDu people were laughing at us when we ordered things, then clapping after we ate them, it's kinda cultural knowledge that they just eat ridiculously hot shit.
Hm, that doesn't really sell this place to me - is it for people who like good authentic food or is it for macho idiots who always order the hottest thing going just for the sake of it?
Pretty much agree with this except Gourmet San which I didn't like at all - greasy - and Golden Day where I got mild food poisoning, but that wouldn't put me off going again, though I'm not in a hurry.
There's another one opened called San Xia Ren Jia at 29 Goodge Street
www.sanxia.co.uk
but haven't tried it yet.
Places-wise I've tried
Chilli Cool (The business, so nice. Not had the aubergine dish Baboon but will try asap. Gung Pao chicken and fish slice is spicy oil amazing)
Red Bar (Bethnal Green Rd, ate pigs blood hotpot in the windowless karaoke bit downstairs, slightly surreal)
Sichuan Folk (Really nice apart from dish, not very spicy).
Gourmet San (Seemed pretty authentic to me but no real marker. First one I wever went to so got soft spot for it and usually really nice. My fae rendition of beef in spicy oil is here)
Golden Day (Hunan - Was ok)
Silk Road (Xinjiang - Amazing IMO. Everything was so spot on, probs my top meal of whole of 2010)
PS, any tips on books (either cookbooks are just interesting social/history stuff) or websites about this type of Chinese regional cooking/area? I have the Fuscia Dunlop one and a couple of older American ones. Thanks.
edit for Mr Tea : No, it's not just for hot macho, but they've kept the hotness which is tempered a little bit over here. In ChengDu people were laughing at us when we ordered things, then clapping after we ate them, it's kinda cultural knowledge that they just eat ridiculously hot shit.
...sounds like this Szechuan stuff is a different pile of peppers, though.
Sounds like the meze wing of Antepiler...
Kenneth Lo did one called Regional Chinese Cooking very early, 1981. I was brought up not to use his recipes though. He adapted things all over the place. Recipes have no Sichuan pepper for example, even ones that should have.* But it's an interesting read, and he was certainly the first to try spreading the good news in the West I think, but it's one to read rather than to use.
Picked up one recently in a charity shop called From China to Chinatown which is a history of the spread of Chinese food to the West, interesting read :
http://books.google.com/books/about/China_to_Chinatown.html?id=6Oxh3JUVK3sC
*due to availability of ingredients I suspect so he was making the best of what people would be able to get
I always kind of assumed it was until I head a bunch of Alison's housemates in Glasgow having a lengthy argument about whose home region of India had the hottest chillies - "you should try the massala powder we had at home, mate, you would die..."OK, cool. I'm never quite sure with ultra-hot food whether it's an authentic taste of what-these-people-really-in-the-old-country or whether it's just been made up to cater for the lagered-up-lads'-night-out demographic. I'm pretty sure 'phaal' is Hindi for 'drunk white twat'...
What did people in India/SE Asia use for 'hotness' before chilies arrived from the new world? There's only so far you can get with garlic and cumin, I presume...