In an exploration of her own experience as a first-generation American, Kristina Cho, author of the award-winning baking book Mooncakes and Milk Bread, offers 100 recipes that blend the flavors of traditional Cantonese cooking with California ingredients and a midwestern sensibility. In Chinese Enough, Cho turns to the savory side of cooking with recipes that are neither entirely Chinese nor entirely American, but Chinese enough. Here is an array of dishes to pair with rice, the cornerstone of Cantonese cuisine, including Triple Pepper Beef, Miso Pork Meatballs, and Seared Egg Tofu with Honey and Soy. Recipes like Smashed Ranch Cucumbers and Saucy Sesame Long Beans honor the Cantonese focus on vegetables. There’s a chapter dedicated to the joy of noodles, with creative takes on traditional dishes, birthed anew in a California kitchen—from San Francisco Garlic Noodles to Creamy Tomato Udon. Plus, a chapter of Banquet-Worthy Dishes teaches the Chinese art of food as celebration, a step-by-step guide shows how to employ friends and family in the kitchen to make dumplings, and the fruit-focused dessert section acts as a lesson on finishing a meal with a small, sweet act of affection. Woven throughout, Cho’s stories of her grandmother’s Chinese garden situated in the middle of Cleveland and falling in love over dim sum are a warm tribute to the nuanced and personal ways in which one can discover and define their own culture.
This is Kristina Cho’s second cookbook and it is phenomenal. A great balance of weekday meals and recipes that you can invest in. I made the dumplings on a weeknight, had plenty freeze, and enjoyed them thoroughly! I used to live in LA (SGV side, IYKYK), so my dumpling standards are high - these hit the mark!
Kristina’s blog has great recipes. The cookbook is worth buying because it has many more recipes AND she explains a lot of core concepts and ingredients needed for the recipes.
A great compliment to other books on the shelf for Chinese cooking from different regions! More accessible than many other cookbooks of its class, but not sacrificing flavor or deliciousness.
I love this cookbook! The recipes are very easy to follow, using every day ingredients. The pictures and layout are very well done. The meals are delicious!
I had the pleasure of meeting Kristina Cho at the Tucson Festival of Books in March 2025 and I attended her cooking demonstration as well. I was very impressed with her story, her storytelling, and the ease with which she prepared her spring rolls all while talking to the audience.
I held off on buying her cookbook at the festival because it's BIG and HEAVY and I'd flown to the event so I was REALLY judicious with my purchases. I opted to check the book out of the Penn State Library upon my return, knowing that I could have it for a few months to really pour over it in detail.
I've spent the last few months reading the cookbook and all the recipes. There are about a dozen or so that I am intrigued to try, but a lot of them feel intimidating, time-consuming, or ingredient-intensive and that wound up making them unappealing.
Maybe I'm not the intended audience here and that's OK. I surely enjoyed hearing from and meeting Ms. Cho, and greatly respect her story and what she's doing with this cookbook. There's a population that clearly struggles with the label of being "Chinese enough," and I suspect that her cookbook will help resolve some cognitive dissonance I don't have...bridging the gaps between their Chinese and American identities with the universal love language - food!
I know nothing about Chinese food beyond the occasional takeout order. I liked how approachable this book makes the unknown ingredients and processes. I made the brussel sprouts and the fried rice. I thought they had way too much spicy sauce flavor, overpowering the other ingredients, but some of that was probably my fault for getting the proportions wrong. I still want to make the tomato rice and pickled carrots recipes.