3.5 stars.
In 2005, the author decided to take her interest in cooking a bit further, and went to cookery school in Beijing. After passing the tests, she then became a noodle intern at a noodle stall serving mainly migrants, the later got more experience in Shanghai in the fine dining restaurants. She is a food critic and article writer, founded a cooking school in Beijing after the events mentioned in this book, and currently lives wherever her diplomat husband is (he appears in this book, where she dates and gets engaged to him).
Although her time in this cooking world is not as tightly tied to it as those who really do it (she has more money, and can detach herself from each place when she's ready), through her we learn what the life on each level is like, get to see how the political system influences it and people's attitudes, and see also how pollution, and drab buildings/neighborhoods/cities feel like, plus what the life is like for migrants, waitresses, cooks and restaurant owners (whatever level of a restaurant they are). And we also get in touch with food ingredients one might not like but don't mind reading about (civets, dogs, fish eyes, genital meat etc.).
Here and there in the text we gets recipes related to what we have read, and the recipes are also listed at the start for easy access. Sometimes the author is in a hunt for a perfect version of a certain dish (like certain dumpligs). She also struggles with understanding and speaking Mandarin at first on a good level, but I think that might improve over time. Some of her views also show her life in America before moving to China (not approved by her parents at first). It's good that she had enough confidence to stick to it when she couldn't quite do some dishes at first, and forgive herself some of her clumsiness.
And it's good that she met people that could help her through things and who would teach her to make certain dishes well.
I learned a lot about what food culture in China can be like, and more about MSG than I already knew. It didn't really make me want to visit, but I appreaciate that she had done the visiting, working, and tasting work for me. (Same thing can be said about some other things I'm quite unlikely to do, like mountain climbing, or traveling to certain places.)