V-Slicer V8 Juice Vache Qui Rit Cheese Vacherin Chaput Cheese Vacherin d'Abondance Vacherin du Haut-Doubs Vacherin Fribourgeois Vacherin Mont d'Or Valdeón Cheese Valdôtaine -- À la Valencia Oranges Valencia Peanuts Valenciano Pumpkins Valencienne -- À la Valentine Beans Valentine Buns Valerian Valetta Potatoes Valisa Potatoes Vallarta Beans Vallée des Baux Cracked Olives Valor Potatoes Van Cherries Van Der Hum Cream Liqueur Van Gogh Potatoes Vandevere Apples Vanessa Potatoes Vanilla Vanilla -- Marseille Vanilla Baking Powder Vanilla Bean Paste Vanilla Essence Vanilla Extract Vanilla Ice Cream Vanilla Pod Previous | Next | Chop Suey© Copyright 2009. All rights reserved and enforcedRemember when we were young and clever, we delighted in telling people in worldly tones that Chop Suey wasn't actually Chinese food, that it was instead invented in San Francisco by a Chinese cook who was asked to throw together a meal out of leftovers after hours? Well, guess what, the joke's on us, and now we have to track down all those dinner party companions over the years and tell them that we were parroting a popular myth without doing any fact checking. Chop Suey comes from the Cantonese "tsap seui", which means mixed scraps. It comes from Toisan, a district south of Canton, in China, where it combined leftover vegetables chopped up and fried up with noodles. It was brought over to America by Chinese workers. The American addition was probably the addition of meat: the very poor in China probably would have rarely had meat seating around as a leftover item. Other entries for:Savoury DishesAlfredo Sauce, Béaltaine Caudle, Boiled Dinners, Bouchées à la Bénédictine, Bouchées à la Périgourdine, Chop Suey, Crappit Heids, Curry, Darioles, Favetta, Fondue, French Fries, Koromo, Pancakes, Pies & Tarts, Pizza, Porridge, Relish Trays, Sandwiches, Soups, Spring Rolls, Steak Tartare, Sushi, Tenkas, Teriyaki, Timbales, TV Dinners, Yakimono, Zakuska Other entries for: DishesDesserts, Dumplings, Salads |
It's a myth that Chop Suey was actually invented in America. It is indeed a Chinese dish, from Canton.
|

