I Don't Care, I Eat Pig Just as Usual

I Don't Care, I Eat Pig Just as Usual

When pigs catch up with this new flu virus, they will just endure it like a common flu — unlike humankind, who would be likely to die if they go untreated. Yet somehow, it’s the pigs that got the bad reputation. While the world was busy renaming menus, cancelling pork orders, and avoiding the butcher’s counter, I was in my kitchen doing what I always do: cooking pork. Deliciously, confidently, and without a single shred of guilt.

What to Eat in Wuxi

What to Eat in Wuxi

The traditional Wuxi foods are very sweet and savoury types of food, but there is a wide range of selection of western foods. In some alleys there are different snack stalls and tiny mom-and-pop eateries tucked away, offering everything from braised pork ribs to osmanthus-fragrant rice cakes — and every bite tells you something about a city that has been cooking with pleasure and pride for centuries. Kitchen is a magic place, and nowhere is that more true than in the food streets and family kitchens of Wuxi.

Swine Flu: Make Pig Under Focus

Swine Flu: Make Pig Under Focus

I used to think pig meat is pretty safe to eat, at least when compared to beef or chicken. Never thought Swine Flu disease would cause so much fuss in the world — or put the humble pork chop under such an intense spotlight. When the H1N1 outbreak swept across headlines in 2009, supermarkets in some countries saw pork sales plummet overnight, entire nations banned imports, and home cooks found themselves second-guessing recipes they’d made a hundred times. The kitchen, that magic place where yummy food adds joy to life, suddenly felt like uncertain territory. It didn’t need to.