Obama’s Humble Feast in China: Four Dishes and A Soup and Much More
For those who have been to a meal hosted by Chinese, you will know what ’too much of a good thing’ really means. Indeed, it is the social norm in China to crowd the table with dozens of dishes with the objective to impress your guests and genuinely giving them a treat. (Many even see having empty dishes as a dining faux pas). But the way China’s leadership entertains is vastly different from the burgeoning middle class. This week, President Obama was treated to four dishes and one soup followed by ice cream by President Hu Jintao at the state banquet. The four dishes consist of an appertizer, tofu soup, Chinese style steak and fish. It is a far cry from China’s ubiquitous display of opulence. But what’s also worth noting is that the four-dish, one-soup menu, known as 四菜一汤/si4 cai4 yi1 tang1 is a protocol set by the PRC’s first and much beloved premier Zhou Enlai. Premier Zhou believed that the menu was satisfying enough without being extravagant, a true reflection of the regime’s proletariat roots and also of the trying times. The menu later bacame the standard for entertaining guests and colleagues in both official and private occasions.
Decades have gone by and hardly anyone exercises the 四菜一汤 protocol. But China’s ultimate authority still pays culinary homage to the founding fathers. As they would have said, ’a glorious tradition’ indeed.
Tags: China visit 2009, food, Hu Jingtao, Obama
This entry was posted on Wednesday, November 18th, 2009 at 4:42 pm and is filed under China. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

7:41 pm on November 18th, 2009
> followed by ice cream by President Hu Jingtao
Well, not sure your leader would be happy to see his name spelled like this
Just my 0.14 RMB
zima
2:58 am on November 24th, 2009
Very interesting. Its good to see the leaders of Chinese government preserving tradition. What did you think of the Town Hall meeting? There was actually quite a lot of talk about Shanghai that night. I wasn’t aware of Shanghai’s connection to Chicago either.