Tong Qin Lou, the restaurant with the century-old brand was said to be closed by the end of the year. The old staff bought the restaurant to try to change the situation and Rong Yisheng, the retired chef of Tong Qin Lou, explained why they did so. Surrounding the development of diet culture and the legendary life experiences of the master and his apprentice, it witnessed the tremendous changes of the age of Guangdong and Hong Kong since the Revolution of 1911, covering businessmen and politicians, revolutionaries, people living in affluence, etc.
The novel masterfully combines traditional food with people and events (history), making it brilliant! However, the Chinese language used is somewhat challenging for me and occasionally hard to understand. The Cantonese used is appropriate for the era but relatively “old-fashioned.” Overall, the novel remains excellent, and the depiction of the master-apprentice relationship, which seems rare in this era, is touching.
This will be one of the best contemporary mandarin novels. Deep, sophisticated, refined, a whole perspective of the development of the hk and southern Chinese cuisines. Warm characters without some too fake personality-configurations. Chef d’œuvre.