AUTHENTIC CUISINE. Cecilia Chiang poses by a 1950s painting showing her
in Japan, at her home in San Francisco. It’s hard to believe there was a
time before there was authentic Chinese food in America, but the tipping
point was 1961, when the now-94-year-old Chiang opened the famed Mandarin
restaurant in San Francisco. Her story is featured in the new movie, Soul
of a Banquet. (AP Photo/Eric Risberg)
From The Asian Reporter, V24, #05 (March 3, 2014), page 9.
Cecilia Chiang: The root of Chinese food in the U.S.
By Suzette Laboy
The Associated Press
MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Cecilia Chiang is credited with introducing Americans
to the taste of authentic Chinese food, though that wasn’t her initial plan.
Chiang wasn’t a chef and hadn’t intended to be an American restaurateur.
It was a case of an investment falling apart. As the story goes, in the
early ’60s she loaned friends some money to open a restaurant in San
Francisco. Except they backed out at the last minute and in order to save
the deal, Chiang decided to do it herself. "Maybe it was my destiny," she
said during a recent interview.
In time, that business grew into the city’s famed Mandarin restaurant,
forever changing Chinese food in America. It’s a story few Americans know,
but many more soon will. Chiang’s life is the subject of a new documentary
film, Soul of a Banquet, directed by Wayne Wang (who also directed
The Joy Luck Club).
The film follows Chiang as she prepares a banquet to honor the 40th
anniversary of Alice Waters’ Chez Panisse restaurant. The film — an
unfinished version of which was screened at the South Beach Wine and Food
Festival — weaves in details of Chiang’s life in China before she came to
the U.S., as well as her family’s struggles while she was running the
Mandarin restaurant.
Chiang, 94, grew up in China at a time when servants did the cooking. She
attended college in Beijing, but thought she’d never need to work. When the
communists came to power, Chiang and her family fled to Japan.
A few years later, around 1960, she visited her sister in the U.S. She
had no plans to stay, but while there made a loan to friends looking to open
a restaurant. When the deal fell apart, she couldn’t get her money back on
the lease, so she went into business on her own.
Meanwhile, she was eating at the restaurants in San Francisco’s Chinatown
neighborhood and noticed something strange: They were serving dishes she had
never heard of, things like chop suey and egg foo young.
"I thought it was really funny. You call this Chinese food?" she
recalled. "This is something really ridiculous, so I thought if I’m going to
open a restaurant, I really want to introduce Americans to real Chinese
food."
Not that this was easy. She’d never cooked in a professional kitchen
before and she spoke Mandarin, not English or Cantonese (the language of
most of her San Francisco suppliers). And then there were the customers. She
refused to serve American-style Chinese food, instead creating the menu from
her memories of what she ate as a child. For many American diners at the
time, this was new and strange.
"It’s not easy when I first opened the first year because all the dishes
on the menu, people were not very familiar with that," said Chiang. "Hot and
sour soup? All these funny names, but then they tasted and after years I
educated them to eat my food."
Chiang retired and sold the restaurant in 1991 (it closed down about 15
years later). But the legacy continues. Her son, Philip, is a co-founder of
the restaurant chain P.F. Chang’s. And Chiang still enjoys cooking authentic
Chinese food for herself, as well as teaching the cuisine to young chefs.
"The most important thing, I just want to educate America about the
Chinese food. And I think I did it," she said.
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