Ova hibiscea
Appearance
Ova hibiscea[1] (Sinice 芙蓉蛋 fúróngdàn "ova hibiscea"; Anglice [egg] foo young) est ferculum quod ex arte coquinaria Cantonensi ortum in repertorium popinarum Sino-Americanarum rapidius diffusum est. Ad sphungata vel ova spongia Europaea adaequari licet. Sylvia Wu popinaria Sinensis Californiensis de ferculis Sino-Americanis huius generis se antea omnino nescivisse confessa est, "sed nihil aliud in ganeis Sinicis Californiensibus offerebatur."[2]
Notae
[recensere | fontem recensere]- ↑ Haec appellatio a Vicipaediano e lingua indigena in sermonem Latinum conversa est. Extra Vicipaediam huius locutionis testificatio vix inveniri potest.
- ↑ That's what was being served in Chinese restaurants in those days: Dosti (1994); Peck (1980)
Bibliographia
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Fontes antiquiores
- Recentiora
- Louisa Chu, "Celebrating egg foo young, the classic Chinese-American dish with a bad rap" in Chicago Tribune (26 Februarii 2018)
- Rose Dosti, "The Unsinkable Madame Wu" in Los Angeles Times (3 Novembris 1994)
- Michael Luo, "As All-American as Egg Foo Yong" in New York Times (22 Septembris 2004) Situs venalis
- Stacey Peck, "Home Q&A: Sylvia and King Wu" in Los Angeles Times (16 Martii 1980)
- David Tang, "Spare ribs, egg foo-yung, chop-suey and plenty of fried rice: how to murder a Chinese" in Daily Telegraph (8 Ianuarii 2006)
- Sylvia Wu, Madame Wu's Art of Chinese Cooking (Monicopoli: Charles, 1973) pp. 63, 174 editionis 1976; Exemplar mutuabile editionis 1976 (sunt qui "Madam" loco "Madame" primam editionem intitulant)
Nexus externi
[recensere | fontem recensere]- Melissa Joulwan, "The Egg Foo Yong Story"