☯☼☯ SEO and Non-SEO (Science-Education-Omnilogy) Forum ☯☼☯

Non - SEO knowledge => Food => Topic started by: SEO on June 09, 2018, 01:10:40 AM

Title: Dan dan noodles (dandan noodles, i. e. 担担面)
Post by: SEO on June 09, 2018, 01:10:40 AM

About the dan dan noodles (aka dandan noodles, dun dun noodles or dandan mian)


First of all, let me tell you that dan dan noodles is only one of the names of this Chinese dish. Let me show you the others (English, Chinese, etc.), because it'll be more useful for you (not just for your culinary and/or Chinese knowledge, but also for your information searching online and offline about it). Here comes the list:

Dan dan noodles photograph


If you never saw dan dan noodles I'll show you a photograph and you'll be able to recognize this dish in future: (https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/d/d2/Dan-dan_noodles%2C_Shanghai.jpg/1024px-Dan-dan_noodles%2C_Shanghai.jpg)By Steven G. Johnson - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=4381140 (Dan-dan (dun-dun) noodles served at a Sichuan restaurant in Shanghai, China.)

Facts about this Chinese dish

Dan dan noodles is a noodle dish originating from Chinese Sichuan cuisine. It consists of a spicy sauce containing preserved vegetables (often including zha cai (榨菜), lower enlarged mustard stems, or ya cai (芽菜), upper mustard stems), chili oil, Sichuan pepper, minced pork, and scallions served over noodles...

The name refers to a type of carrying pole (dan dan) that was used by walking street vendors who sold the dish to passers-by. The pole was carried over the shoulder, with two baskets containing noodles and sauce attached at either end. As the noodles were affordable due to their low cost, the local people gradually came to call them dandan noodles, referencing the street vendors. Literally, the name translates as "noodles carried on a pole", but may be better translated as "peddler's noodles"... Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dandan_noodles (Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License).

More about the Sichuan cuisine


If you want to know more dishes from the Sichuan cuisine (in Chinese: 四川菜), you may read it: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sichuan_cuisine.

At the end: about the Chinese cuisine: https://www.britannica.com/topic/Chinese-cuisine.