Guokui
![]() Guokui from Sichuan | |
Place of origin | Shaanxi, China |
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Associated cuisine | Shaanxi cuisine |
Main ingredients | Flour, Water, Yeast, Sugar, |
Variations | Chicken, beef |
Guokui (traditional Chinese: 鍋盔; simplified Chinese: 锅盔; pinyin: guōkuī),[1] literally "pot helmet", is a kind of flatbread made from flour originating from Shaanxi cuisine.
Variations[edit]
![](http://up.wiki.x.io/wikipedia/commons/thumb/c/c4/%E9%99%95%E8%A5%BF%E5%85%AB%E5%A4%A7%E6%80%AA%E9%93%9C%E9%9B%95%E2%80%94%E2%80%94%E9%94%85%E7%9B%94%E5%83%8F%E9%94%85%E7%9B%96_-_panoramio.jpg/220px-%E9%99%95%E8%A5%BF%E5%85%AB%E5%A4%A7%E6%80%AA%E9%93%9C%E9%9B%95%E2%80%94%E2%80%94%E9%94%85%E7%9B%94%E5%83%8F%E9%94%85%E7%9B%96_-_panoramio.jpg)
The dish is said to have been invented during the Tang dynasty by a laborer who cooked flatbread in his iron helmet over a wood fire.[2] There are many different versions including Shaanxi, Jingzhou (Hubei), Henan, Sichuan, and Gansu.
Jingzhou style[edit]
Hailing from Jingzhou, Hubei, in this style the dough of flour, water, yeast and sugar is stuffed with either a savoury filling like chicken, beef, and pickled vegetables, or a sweet filling like red bean paste.[3] It is then flattened and cooked until crispy inside a cylindrical charcoal oven. Since the preparation resembles making Indian naan in a tandoor oven, the dish is sometimes called "Chinese naan"[2]
Shaanxi style[edit]
The guokui originated in Shaanxi. In Shaanxi, a guokui is round in shape, about a foot long in diameter, an inch in thickness, and weighs about 2.5 kg. It is traditionally presented as a gift by a grandmother to her grandson when he turns one month old (滿月, a traditional custom in Han Chinese). Along with biang biang noodles, they are considered one of the "Eight/Ten Oddities of Guanzhong".[4]
Gallery[edit]
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Cooking Jingzhou-style guokui in the traditional cylindrical oven
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Jingzhou-style guokui flatbread with red bean paste, broken into pieces
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Beef guokui
See also[edit]
References[edit]
- ^ Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, ed. (1 September 2016). 现代汉语词典 [A Dictionary of Current Chinese] (in Chinese) (Seventh ed.). Beijing: The Commercial Press. p. 496. ISBN 978-7-100-12450-8.
锅盔 guōkuī
- ^ a b "This 1,000-Year-Old Chinese 'Naan' Was Once Cooked in a Hat, and It's Yummy".
- ^ 飘零星. "荆州锅盔". Archived from the original on 2021-05-09.
- ^ "The Eight Oddities of Guanzhong – Xianease".