Chinese cuisine without chile peppers seems unimaginable. Entranced by
the fiery taste, diners worldwide have fallen for Chinese cooking. In
China, chiles are everywhere, from dried peppers hanging from eaves to
Mao's boast that revolution would be impossible without chiles, from the
eighteenth-century novel Dream of the Red Chamber to contemporary
music videos. Indeed, they are so common that many Chinese assume they
are native. Yet there were no chiles anywhere in China prior to the
1570s, when they were introduced from the Americas.
Brian R. Dott explores how the nonnative chile went from obscurity to
ubiquity in China, influencing not just cuisine but also medicine,
language, and cultural identity. He details how its versatility became
essential to a variety of regional cuisines and swayed both elite and
popular medical and healing practices. Dott tracks the cultural meaning
of the chile across a wide swath of literary texts and artworks,
revealing how the spread of chiles fundamentally altered the meaning of
the term spicy. He emphasizes the intersection between food and
gender, tracing the chile as a symbol for both male virility and female
passion. Integrating food studies, the history of medicine, and Chinese
cultural history, The Chile Pepper in China sheds new light on the
piquant cultural impact of a potent plant and raises broader questions
regarding notions of authenticity in cuisine.