Chinese noodles#Rice based

{{short description|Noodles in Chinese cuisine}}

{{Use dmy dates|date=January 2020}}

{{Infobox food

| name = Chinese noodles

| image = File:On Hing Noodle Shop in Tuen Mun.jpg

| image_size = 250px

| caption = Chinese noodles at a noodle shop in Tuen Mun, Hong Kong

| alternate_name =

| country = China

| region =

| creator =

| course =

| type = Noodles

| served =

| main_ingredient =

| variations =

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}}

Chinese noodles vary widely according to the region of production, ingredients, shape or width, and manner of preparation. Noodles were invented in China, and are an essential ingredient and staple in Chinese cuisine. They are an important part of most regional cuisines within China, and other countries with sizable overseas Chinese populations.

Chinese noodles can be made of wheat, buckwheat, rice, millet, maize, oats, acorns, kudzu, Siberian elm, soybeans, mung beans, yams, cassava, potatoes, sweet potatoes, and meats such as fish and shrimp. There are over 1,200 types of noodles commonly consumed in China today,{{Cite web |title=Noodles in Contemporary China: Social Aspects underlying the Noodle Evolution (Qiulun Li) – Noodles on the Silk Road |url=https://scholarblogs.emory.edu/noodles/2018/06/29/noodles-in-contemporary-china-social-aspects-underlying-the-noodle-evolution-qiulun-li/ |access-date=2022-07-01 |language=en-US}} with tens of thousands of noodle dish varieties prepared using these types of noodles.{{Cite journal |last1=Zhang |first1=Na |last2=Ma |first2=Guansheng |date=2016-09-01 |title=Noodles, traditionally and today |journal=Journal of Ethnic Foods |volume=3 |issue=3 |pages=209–212 |doi=10.1016/j.jef.2016.08.003 |issn=2352-6181|doi-access=free }}

Chinese noodles have entered the cuisines of neighboring East Asian countries such as Korea, Japan, and Mongolia, as well as Southeast Asian countries such as Malaysia, Singapore, Indonesia, Vietnam, Cambodia, Myanmar, Laos, the Philippines and Thailand.

Nomenclature

File:Fried noodles at Chinese Food Shop in Yuen Long Market.jpg]]

Nomenclature of Chinese noodles can be difficult due to the vast spectrum available in China and the many dialects of Chinese used to name them. In Mandarin, miàn ({{zh|t=|s=}}; often transliterated as "mien" or "mein" ) refers to noodles made from wheat flour, while fěn ({{lang|zh|}}) or "fun" refers to noodles made from other starches, particularly rice flour and mung bean starch. Each noodle type can be rendered in pinyin for Mandarin, but in Hong Kong and neighboring Guangdong it will be known by its Cantonese pronunciation ("meen" or "mien" for wheat noodles, "fun" for non-wheat). Taiwan, Malaysia, Singapore and many other Overseas Chinese communities in Southeast Asia may use Hokkien (Min Nan) instead (e.g. "mee" for wheat noodles, "hoon" or "hun" for non-wheat). Wheat noodles, for example, are called "mian" in Mandarin, "mein" in Cantonese, "men" in Japanese, "mee" in Thai, and "myeon" in Korean.{{Cite news |last=RAICHLEN |first=STEVEN |date=January 30, 1992 |title=Noodle nomenclature |pages=W/6 |work=Atlanta Journal-Constitution, The (GA)}}

Sometimes, the principal ingredient used in the preparation (such as wheat, buckwheat, rice, potato, corn flour, bean or soybean flour, yam flour, mung-bean starch, sweet potato, or cassava) may also form the basis of naming noodles.{{Cite journal |last1=Adejuwon |first1=Ololade H. |last2=Jideani |first2=Afam I. O. |last3=Falade |first3=Kolawole O. |date=2020-04-02 |title=Quality and Public Health Concerns of Instant Noodles as Influenced by Raw Materials and Processing Technology |url=https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/87559129.2019.1642348 |journal=Food Reviews International |language=en |volume=36 |issue=3 |pages=276–317 |doi=10.1080/87559129.2019.1642348 |s2cid=199628755 |issn=8755-9129|url-access=subscription }}

History

File:Making of chinese noodles 5166105.jpg ]]

The earliest written record of noodles is from a book dated to the Eastern Han period (25–220 AD).{{Cite web |last=Yasmin Noone |date=2019-01-07 |title=Who invented the noodle, Italy or China? |url=https://www.sbs.com.au/food/article/2016/07/29/who-invented-noodle-italy-or-china |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220606045200/https://www.sbs.com.au/food/article/2016/07/29/who-invented-noodle-italy-or-china |archive-date=2022-06-06 |website=SBS Food |language=en}} Noodles, often made from wheat dough, became a prominent staple of food during the Han dynasty.{{cite book|last=Sinclair|first=Thomas R.|title=Bread, beer and the seeds of change : agriculture's imprint on world history|year=2010|publisher=CABI|location=Wallingford|isbn=978-1-84593-704-1|pages=91|author2=Sinclair, Carol Janas}} In the Western Han dynasty, due to demand by the military, it was necessary for the government to implement food processing technologies that would make the food storage easier and more affordable. During this time, "Laomian" emerged, it was made with starch-rich buckwheat, millet and pea flours with lower water content, making it easier to store and transport.{{Cite journal|title=AACCI Grain Science Library|doi=10.1094/cfw-62-2-0044|doi-broken-date=1 November 2024 }}

During the Song dynasty (960–1279) noodle shops were very popular in the cities, and remained open all night. During the earlier dynastic periods Chinese wheat noodles were known as "soup cake" ({{zh|c=湯餅|p=tāng bǐng|s=|t=}}), as explained by the Song dynasty scholar Huáng Cháo Yīng (黃朝英) mentions in his work "A delightful mixed discussion on various scholarly topics" ({{zh |c=靖康緗素雜記 |p=jìngkāngxiāngsùzájì}}, Scroll 2) that in ancient times bready foods like pasta are referred collectively as "bing" and differentiated through their cooking methods.{{citation |last=黃 |first=朝英| language=zh | script-title =zh:靖康緗素雜記 |volume=2 |url=http://zh.wikisource.org/wiki/靖康緗素雜記/卷二}}·

Up until 1992, most dried Chinese noodles in the United States could not be sold labelled as "noodles".{{Cite web|last=Service|first=Steven Raichlen, Cox News|title=NOODLENOMENCLATURE|url=https://www.chicagotribune.com/news/ct-xpm-1992-05-07-9202100632-story.html|access-date=2021-02-23|website=chicagotribune.com|date=7 May 1992 |language=en-US}}{{Cite web|title=Cook's Thesaurus: Asian Noodles|url=http://www.foodsubs.com/Noodles.html|access-date=2021-02-23|website=www.foodsubs.com}} This is due to fact that many Chinese noodles are made without eggs and do not always use wheat as starch, thus resulting in the United States Department of Agriculture obliging manufacturers to label them as "imitation noodles" or "alimentary paste".

Production

Chinese noodles are generally made from either wheat flour, rice flour, or mung bean starch, with wheat noodles being more commonly produced and consumed with the ancient wooden noodles mold technology in northern China and rice noodles being more typical of southern China. Egg, lye, and cereal may also be added to noodles made from wheat flour in order to give the noodles a different color or flavor. Egg whites, arrowroot or tapioca starch are sometimes added to the flour mixture in low quantities to change the texture and tenderness of the noodles' strands. Although illegal, the practice of adding the chemical cross-linker borax to whiten noodles and improve their texture is also quite common in East Asia.{{citation|title=使用硼砂替代品吃得更安心 |date=4 September 2008 |publisher=彰化縣衛生局 (Changhua county health bureau) |url=http://www.chshb.gov.tw/news_detail.asp?news_type=3&sysno=3431 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130729183344/http://www.chshb.gov.tw/news_detail.asp?news_type=3&sysno=3431 |url-status=dead |archive-date=29 July 2013 }} In general, the Chinese noodles cooking method involves making a dough with flour, salt, and water; mixing the dough by hand to form bar shapes; bending the bars for proofing; pulling the bars into strips; dropping the strips into a pot with boiling water; and removing the noodles when finished cooking. Chinese type noodles are generally made from hard wheat flours, characterized by bright creamy white or bright yellow color and firm texture.{{Cite journal|last=Ranhotra|first=Gur|date=1998|title=ASIAN NOODLE TECHNOLOGY|url=https://secure.aibonline.org/aibOnline_/secure.aibonline.org/catalog/example/V20Iss12.pdf|journal=Asian Noodle|volume=XX|issue=12|pages=1|access-date=2 March 2019|archive-date=25 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180725003030/https://secure.aibonline.org/aibOnline_/secure.aibonline.org/catalog/example/V20Iss12.pdf|url-status=dead}}

Before the automatic noodle machine was invented in 1950s, the processing of Chinese noodles were made with four steps, including:

  • Fresh – The noodles are often consumed within 24 hours of manufacture due to quick discoloration. Their shelf life can be extended to 3–5 days if stored under refrigeration;
  • Dried – Fresh noodle strands are dried by sunlight or in a controlled chamber;
  • Boiled – Fresh noodle strands are either parboiled or fully cooked. After parboiling, Chinese noodles are rinsed in cold water, drained and covered with 1–2% vegetable oil to prevent sticking;
  • Steamed – Fresh alkaline noodle strands are steamed in a steamer and softened with water through rinsing.{{Cite journal|last=Ranhotra|first=Gur|date=1998|title=ASIAN NOODLE TECHNOLOGY|url=https://secure.aibonline.org/aibOnline_/secure.aibonline.org/catalog/example/V20Iss12.pdf|journal=Asian Noodle|volume=XX|issue=12|pages=2|access-date=2 March 2019|archive-date=25 July 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180725003030/https://secure.aibonline.org/aibOnline_/secure.aibonline.org/catalog/example/V20Iss12.pdf|url-status=dead}}

The dough for noodles made from wheat flour is typically made from wheat flour, salt, and water, with the addition of eggs or lye depending on the desired texture and taste of the noodles. Rice or other starch-based noodles are typically made with only the starch or rice flour and water. After the formation of a pliable dough mass, one of the six below types of mechanical processing may be applied to produce the noodles:

class="wikitable sortable"
English

!Chinese

!Pinyin

!Process

Cut

|切

|qiē

|The dough is rolled out into a flat sheet, folded, and then cut into noodles of a desired width

Extruded

|挤压

|jǐ yā

|The dough is placed into a mechanical press with holes through which the dough is forced to form strands of noodles

Peeled

|削

|xiāo

|A firm dough is mixed and formed into a long loaf. Strips of dough are then quickly sliced or peeled off the loaf directly into boiling water{{citation |title=中国美食探秘 (Secrets of Chinese Cuisine) |number=5 (面点: 21:55) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ-4S8MzXiI&t=1310 |publisher=中国中央电视台 (CCTV) |date=7 November 2014}}

Pulled

|拉

|lā

|The dough is rolled into a long cylinder, which is then repeatedly stretched and folded to produce a single thin strand{{citation |title=中国美食探秘 (Secrets of Chinese Cuisine) |number=5 (面点: 20:35) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ-4S8MzXiI&t=1235 |publisher=中国中央电视台 (CCTV) |date=7 November 2014}}

Kneaded

|揉

|róu

|A ball of dough is lightly rolled on a flat surface or kneaded with one's hands until it is formed into the desired shape{{citation |title=中国美食探秘 (Secrets of Chinese Cuisine) |number=5 (面点: 20:06) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ-4S8MzXiI&t=1206 |publisher=中国中央电视台 (CCTV) |date=7 November 2014}}

Flicked

|柭

|bó

|A soft dough is prepared, placed in a bowl, strips of dough are pulled and flicked directly into boiling water using a flexible bamboo stick or chopstick{{citation |title=中国美食探秘 (Secrets of Chinese Cuisine) |number=5 (面点: 21:13) |url=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZ-4S8MzXiI&t=1273 |publisher=中国中央电视台 (CCTV) |date=7 November 2014}}

While cut and extruded noodles can be dried to create a shelf-stable product to be eaten months after production, most peeled, pulled and kneaded noodles are consumed shortly after they are produced.

File:Datong Daoxiaomian.jpg|Cutting thin strips of dough from a loaf directly into a container of boiling water to make knife-cut noodles in Datong, Shanxi

File:Chinese noodles.JPG|Pulling wheat dough into one thin strand to form lamian

File:Noodle making in Peng Zhou.ogv|Noodle maker in Pengzhou, Sichuan, extruding noodles directly into a pot of boiling water

Cooking

File:Datong Fideos.jpg beef daoxiaomian (刀削面)]]

Noodles may be cooked from either their fresh (moist) or dry forms. They are generally boiled, although they may also be deep-fried in oil until crispy. Boiled noodles may then be stir fried, served with sauce or other accompaniments, or served in soup, often with meat and other ingredients. Certain rice-noodles are made directly from steaming the raw rice slurry and are only consumed fresh.

Unlike many Western noodles and pastas, Chinese noodles made from wheat flour are usually made from salted dough, and therefore do not require the addition of salt to the liquid in which they are boiled. Chinese noodles also cook very quickly, generally requiring less than 5 minutes to become al dente and some taking less than a minute to finish cooking, with thinner noodles requiring less time to cook. Chinese noodles made from rice or mung bean starch do not generally contain salt.

Types

=Wheat=

{{redirect|Wheat noodle|wheat noodles in other cuisines|Noodle#Wheat}}

These noodles are made only with wheat flour and water. If the intended product is dried noodles, salt is almost always added to the recipe.

class="wikitable sortable"

! Common English name !! Characters!! Pinyin !! Cantonese !! Hokkien !! Description

Cat's ear貓耳朵māo ěr duǒmaau1 ji5do2?Looks like a cat's ear; similar to western Orecchiette
Cold noodles凉面

涼麵

| liáng miàn

loeng4min6?

| Served cold

Knife-cut noodles刀削面

刀削麵

| dāo xiāo miàn

dou1soek3min6?

| Relatively short flat noodle peeled by knife from a firm slab of dough

Lamian拉麵lā miànlaai1min6la-mī

| Hand-pulled noodles from which ramen was derived

Yaka mein一個麵
一家麵

| yī gè miàn; yījiā miàn

| jat1go3 min6; jat1gaa1 min6

| ?

| North American Chinese style wheat noodles similar to spaghetti; sold in Canada and the United States

Lo mein捞面

撈麵

| lāo miàn

laau4min6; lou1 min6lo mi

| Egg noodles that are stir fried with sliced vegetables, meats or other seasonings

rowspan=2| Misua面线

麵線

| miàn xiàn

min6sin3mī-sòaⁿrowspan=2| Thin, salted wheat noodles (1 mm diameter). Can be caramelized to a brown colour through extensive steaming. Similar to very fine vermicelli
宮麵gōng miàngung1min6?
Saang mein生面

生麵

| shēng miàn

sang1min6senn mī

| Soapy texture

Thick noodles粗面

粗麵

| cū miàn

cou1min6chho͘-mī

| Thick wheat flour noodles, from which udon was derived

==Lye-water or egg==

These wheat flour noodles are more chewy in texture and yellow in color either due to the addition of lye (sodium carbonate, potassium carbonate, calcium hydroxide, or potassium hydroxide) or egg (either using only the egg white, yolk, or both). This class of lye-water noodles ({{zh |c=碱面/碱麵 |p=jiǎn miàn}}) has a subtle but distinctive smell and taste, described by some as being "eggy".{{citation |title=For Old-Fashioned Flavor, Bake the Baking Soda |first=HAROLD |last=McGEE |date=14 September 2010 |publisher=The New York Times Company |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/15/dining/15curious.html}}

class="wikitable sortable"

! Common English name !! Characters!! Pinyin !! Cantonese !! Hokkien !! Description

Oil noodles油面

油麵

| yóu miàn

jau4min6iû-mī

| Made of wheat flour and egg or lye-water; often comes pre-cooked.

Thin noodles幼面

幼麵

| yòu miàn

jau3min6iù-mī

| Thin lye-water noodles; one of the most common Cantonese noodles

Mee pok麵薄miàn báomin6bok6

| mī-po̍k

Flat egg or lye-water noodles. Similar to tagliatelle
Yi mein伊麵
伊府麵
yī miàn;

yī fǔ miàn

| ji1min6;

ji1fu2 min6

| i-mī

i-hú-mī

| Fried, chewy noodles made from wheat flour and egg or lye-water

Shrimp roe noodles蝦子麵xiā zǐ miànhaa1zi2 min6hê-tsí-mī

| Made of wheat flour, lye-water, and roe, which show up as black spots

Jook-sing noodles竹昇麵zhú shēng miànzuk1 sing1 min6tik-sing-mī

| A rare type of Cantonese noodle in which the dough is tenderized with a large bamboo log

=Rice=

Rice-based noodles can be:

  1. Extruded from a paste and steamed into strands of noodles
  2. Steamed from a slurry into sheets and then sliced into strands

These noodles are typically made only with rice and water without the addition of salt. Although unorthodox, some producers may choose to add other plant starches to modify the texture of the noodles.

class="wikitable sortable"

! Common English name !! Characters!! Pinyin !! Cantonese !! Hokkien !! Description

Kway teow粿条gǔo tiáogwo2tiu4kóe-tiâuFlat rice noodles
rowspan=2| Ho fun, Chow fun沙河粉shā hé fěnsaa1ho4 fan2

| sa-hô-hún

| rowspan="2" | Very wide, flat, rice noodles

河粉|hé fěnho2fan2hô-hún
Lai fun瀨粉
酹粉
lài fěnlaai6 fan2luā-húnThick round semi-transparent noodle made from sticky rice
Mixian or Mai sin米線
米线
mǐ xiànmai5sin3bee suaRice noodles also called Guilin mífěn (桂林米粉)
Rice vermicelli米粉mí fěnmai5fan2bí-hún

| Thin rice noodles

=Starch=

File:Liangpi-sichuan.jpg

These noodles are made using various plant starches. Mung bean starch noodles will often be cut with tapioca starch to make them more chewy and reduce production costs.

class="wikitable sortable"

! Common English name !! Characters!! Pinyin !! Cantonese !! Hokkien !! Description

Winter noodles冬粉dōng fěndung1fan2tang-húnVery thin mung bean starch noodles, similar to vermicelli
Bean threads粉絲fěn sīfan2si1?Thin cellophane-like noodles
Mung bean sheets粉皮fěn pífan2pei4hún-phê

| Wide, clear noodles made from mung bean starch

Liang pi凉皮líang píloeng4pei4

| ?

| Translucent noodles made from wheat starch left from producing gluten

rowspan=2| Silver needle noodles銀針粉yín zhēn fěnngan4 zam1fan2?

| rowspan="2" | Spindle-shaped wheat starch noodles, ca. 5 cm in length and 3–5 mm in diameter

老鼠粉|lǎo shǔ fěn|lou5syu2 fan2|niáu-chhú-hún
Suān là fěn酸辣粉suān là fěnsyun1 laat6 fan2?Chongqing hot & spicy sweet potato starch noodles

=Oat=

File:Oatnoodles.jpg

In China, particularly in western Inner Mongolia and Shanxi province, oat (Avena nuda) flour is called yóu miàn (莜面), and is processed into noodles or thin-walled rolls, which are consumed as staple food.{{cite web|title=Braised potato and oat noodles|url=http://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/2013-11/01/content_17074487.htm|website=China Daily|access-date=16 October 2017|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180627073235/http://shanxi.chinadaily.com.cn/2013-11/01/content_17074487.htm|archive-date=27 June 2018|url-status=dead}} The process of making oat noodles relies on twisting them on a marble plate to ensure the dough will not stick on it, and turning them into strips and thin-rolls. It can be boiled or steamed, then served with different sauces to eat.{{cite web|title=[Eat it]: Shanxi Oat Noodles|url=http://www.smartshanghai.com/articles/dining/eat-it-shanxi-oat-noodles|website=smartshanghai|access-date=16 October 2017}}

= Millet =

The oldest archaeological evidence of noodles shows that they came from China and were made from millet, which is an indigenous crop to northern China.{{cite journal |last=Roach |first=John |date=12 October 2005 |title=4,000-Year-Old Noodles Found in China |url=http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2005/10/1012_051012_chinese_noodles.html |journal=National Geographic |archive-url=https://archive.today/20210831004300/https://www.nationalgeographic.com/history/article/4-000-year-old-noodles-found-in-china |archive-date=31 August 2021}} In 2005, a team of archaeologists reported finding an earthenware bowl that contained 4000-year-old noodles at the Lajia archaeological site.{{cite journal|last1=Lu|first1=Houyuan|last2=Yang|first2=Xiaoyan|last3=Ye|first3=Maolin|last4=Liu|first4=Kam-Biu|last5=Xia|first5=Zhengkai|last6=Ren|first6=Xiaoyan|last7=Cai|first7=Linhai|last8=Wu|first8=Naiqin|last9=Liu|first9=Tung-Sheng|display-authors=3|date=13 October 2005|title=Culinary archaeology: Millet noodles in Late Neolithic China|journal=Nature|volume=437|issue=7061|pages=967–968|doi=10.1038/437967a|pmid=16222289|bibcode=2005Natur.437..967L|s2cid=4385122}} These noodles were said to resemble lamian, a type of Chinese noodle. Analyzing the husk phytoliths and starch grains present in the sediment associated with the noodles, they were identified as millet belonging to Panicum miliaceum and Setaria italica.

Chinese noodle dishes

See also

References

{{Reflist}}