While Cantonese is most familiar to Westerners, Chinese recipes span Southeast Asian–influenced Yunnan and Guangxi; chilli-loving Jiangxi, Hunan and Sichuan; and Muslim Xinjiang with its Uyghur traditions.
Cantonese cuisine focuses on fresh ingredients, delicate sauces, and balanced flavours, like the gentle sweetness in steamed fish with ginger & spring onion. Sichuan, on the other hand, is bold, spicy, and numbing, with Sichuan peppercorns and chilli defining dishes such as salt & pepper octopus.
Hunan, Jiangxi, and Sichuan are famous for heat. Recipes from these areas often feature chilli, garlic, and strong aromatics. Dishes like black bean & chilli chicken with crisp noodles or black bean & chilli prawns with crisp noodles showcase that fiery signature. Chinese salt & pepper seasoning (a.k.a. ‘prickly ash’) uses numbing Sichuan pepper.
Yunnan and Guangxi sit near Southeast Asia, so their food is fragrant, sometimes sour, and often uses fresh herbs. Guangxi-style smoked trout salad reflects these Southeast Asian influences, with smoky, herby layers of flavour.
Xinjiang and Muslim-style Chinese cuisine comes from the colder. drier north west of the country which relies heavily on wheat rather than rice. Wheat noodles, flatbreads, and dumplings form the basis of many meals. Flavours are bold and aromatic, often using ingredients rarely seen in other Chinese cuisine, such as cumin and lamb.
Yes — Southeast Asian-Chinese dishes evolved over generations in Malaysia and Singapore. Char kway teow shows this regional adaptation, combining Chinese techniques and ingredients of stir-frying and noodles with local flavours.
The cooking of the Chinese diaspora has created some unique hybrid dishes. For example, deep-fried ice cream is a Western take on Chinese flavours, showing how classic techniques can be adapted for local tastes. Sweet & sour sauce has become popular on Chinese restaurant menus in Western countries and is based on a traditional sauce made with Chinese black vinegar.
Classic Cantonese favourites include prawn-stuffed eggplant with brown sauce, steamed fish with ginger & spring onion, and gai lan with garlic. These highlight subtle seasoning and fresh ingredients, hallmarks of Cantonese cooking.
Hong Kong walnut biscuits and lotus paste shortbread biscuits reflect the Cantonese love of light, subtly sweet pastries.
It’s surprisingly easy to make hand-pulled noodles at home. Follow the step-by-step guide with video at the above link to learn how to hand-pull noodles like a Chinese chef.