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i always think of his statement whenever I see the Chinese Chicken Salad option at the Cheesecake Factory...
American Chinese food is a cuisine all on its own and I would argue that Fortune Cookies are Chinese, just not traditional Chinese cuisine. I'm pretty sure it's invented by a Chinese in San Francisco. :)
Another thing about Chinese cuisine, I think, is that everything is either good for you or brings you good omen. So that's where American Chinese and Traditional Chinese cuisine differ.
I'm a Cantonese but I too stay away from chicken feet (BBQ or Vinegared) . Just not my style... lol
And, the fortune cookie is indeed a Japanese creation.
While I generally avoid Americanized Chinese (easy to do in Silicon Valley), blends of Chinese food with other ingredients and cultures can yield interesting results. Filipino food has Chinese influences. Malaysian and Singaporean restaurants are pretty popular now, the food there a blend of Chinese, Malay, and Indian influences. I have been to a number of Chinese oriented Japanese restaurants. The one Chinese blend I want to try is Indian style Chinese food (Desi Chinese food). Does anyone know if there any desi chinese places in the Bay Area?
I remember when I was a Jewish kid growing up in Pittsburgh, my parents used to get La Choy Chow Mein from the supermarket. To this fussy kid it looked incredibly unappetizing. I didn't try Americanized Chinese food until I was nearly 30.
I remember being introduced to authentic Cantonese food by a co-worker several years after my first Americanized experience, starting with jellyfish, cheung fun, and barbecue-sauce chicken feet at a dim sum place in SF Chinatown. I loved it.
Yeah, there are some dishes I don't go for (sea cucumber, bitter melon, egg yolk in my moon cakes) or don't even want to be in the same room as (stinky tofu). But I've gotten much fussier about the Americanized Chinese food I still sometimes eat.