Daily dispatches on the Washington, DC area's food, restaurant and dining scene.
|
Either/Or: Jennifer 8. Lee
China girl makes her picks
By
Sara Levine
Published Wednesday, May 21, 2008
Jennifer 8. Lee loves chicken feet and Chipotle. Photograph courtesy of Jennifer 8. Lee.
New York Times reporter Jennifer 8. Lee’s witty new book, The Fortune Cookie Chronicles: Adventures in the World of Chinese Food, unearths the origins of the fortune cookie, explores the invention of General Tso’s chicken, and recounts the kosher-duck scandal of 1989 at Rockville’s Moshe Dragon. During Lee’s stint in the Washington bureau of the Times, she was known for parties she held in her loft near the Washington Convention Center, featuring fried dumplings made from scratch and a slew of boldface names. Still reporting in addition to selling books, she took a few minutes to answer our either/or questions. Chop’t or Chipotle? Chipotle. I love that people think of burritos as a Mexican food when in fact—like beef with broccoli and spaghetti and meatballs—it is a dish that is largely indigenous to the United States. Chinatown bus or Amtrak? The Chinatown-bus network will take you to crevices of the map where Amtrak doesn’t go—anywhere you can find a Chinese restaurant: Kalamazoo, Michigan; Wausau, Wisconsin; Jackson, Tennessee.
Dim sum or 2 am Kung Pao chicken? Dim sum. Great for impromptu, low-key social gatherings. Yoga or Pilates? Yoga. But nothing with too much chanting. I want the General Tso’s version of yoga. Chicken feet or pig’s blood? Chicken feet. Love ordering them when I go out to dim sum with my non-Chinese friends. They will nibble on one to be adventurous and cultural, while I’ll gnaw on the rest of them. Lo mein or fried rice? Lo mein—though I have to say the Peruvians who love Chinese food have got it right. They have a combined lo-mein/fried-rice dish called aeropuerto. Pamela Harriman or Katharine Graham? Katharine Graham. Watergate and Pentagon Papers. Any woman working in print journalism reveres Katharine Graham. Broccoli or bok choy? Broccoli—because Americans think it’s Chinese. It’s originally from Italy and became an American mainstay in the 1920s and 1930s. I guarantee you that General Tso never saw a stalk of broccoli in his life.
>>Read our online chat with Jennifer 8. Lee
This article appears in the May 2008 issue of Washingtonian. To see more articles in this issue, click here. More>> Best Bites Blog | Food & Dining | Restaurant Finder
|
Comments
My jaw dropped when I read "China girl makes her pick." I was surprised you didn’t catch it before this printed and that I don’t see more comments on it. How many people realize that "China girl" is a derogatory term and it is offensive? I guess people may be more ignorant than I thought on racial issues, and/or don’t care much if Asians are slighted. Why specifically Asians? Asians will never "look white" and are rarely seen as "true Americans." Jennifer 8 Lee was born in America, yet not described as an American, not even as a Chinese-American. Instead, "China girl" is okay? It boggles my mind. Think about it, if the article had said, "Jew girl makes her picks," or heaven forbid, used the N-word, I guarantee there would have been a much larger outcry.
Even without the term "China girl" being a racial slur, Lee is certainly old enough not to be called a girl. "Girl" is a word often used to belittle women - where are the feminists here? Notwithstanding that, read differently, this heading could imply that Lee is THE authority on China, or else the only Chinese person worth mentioning. I hardly think so, her book was only on food. I also certainly hope people don’t think I’m like her when they look at me.
The Washingtonian and Sara Levine need to post an apology for being racially insensitive, perpetuating stereotyping, and for being so ignorant that this was actually written and printed.
Posted by: Not oriental either, that's my rug, Jun 04, 2008 10:28:32 PM
could you not call her china girl please?
Posted by: not china girl, May 23, 2008 01:55:06 PM
|
Post a comment
Feel free to leave a comment or ask a question. Because of the prevalence of spam, we ask that you fill out the code in the image below to help us eliminate spam comments. By posting here, you affirm that you are 13 years of age or older. Washingtonian.com reserves the right to remove or edit content once posted.
|
|
Tons of Fourth of July parties, fireworks, pool parties galore, a pig roast, the closing of the Folklife Festival and Artomatic, and lots more in this jam-packed weekend guide.
more
Send us your photos of Fourth of July fireworks to add to our slide show.
more
|