Alain Caron, Eric Hellingman en Lulu Wang presenteren i.o.v. VCHO: Culinaire ontmoeting tussen Chinese en Nederlandse top-chefs op Horecava 2016, hartelijk welkom!

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Foto impressie Kookdemonstratie East Meets West 2006

Persuitnodiging

6 januari 2016

Culinaire ontmoeting tussen Chinese en Nederlandse top-chefs op Horecava 2016
Wat wordt het culinaire resultaat als Chinese én Nederlandse top-chefs met dezelfde ingrediënten koken? Samen zullen zij laten zien wat verschillende bereidingswijzen en kruiden kunnen doen met een gerecht en of er misschien ook wel overeenkomsten zijn tussen de oosterse en westerse keuken.
De kookdemonstraties “East Meets West” vinden plaats op 11 en 12 januari 2016 tussen 12:00 uur en 13:00 uur in het Aziatisch Paviljoen (standnummer 03.235) op de Horecava in de RAI Amsterdam.

Op maandag 11 januari 2016 gaat Julius Jaspers van Happyhappyjoyjoy aan de slag met varkensvlees, Ron Blaauw van Ron Gastrobar komt met een gerecht met eend en Alain Caron richt zich op een met kip. Deze Nederlandse top-chefs koken gelijktijdig met hun Chinese collega’s die hetzelfde hoofdingrediënt gebruiken, zodat de bezoeker zelf kan vergelijken. De Chinese bereidingswijze wordt gedemonstreerd door meester chefs Aijian Wu van Oriental City (Amsterdam), Han Ji van HanTing Cuisine (Den Haag), Shaoting Hu van Yu Woah (Amstelveen) en Tso Min Cheng van Red Chilli (Nieuwe Niedorp).
Op dinsdag 12 januari 2016 zal het Presidentsmenu bereid worden. Dit menu werd vorig jaar bereid voor de Chinese president Xi Jinping, die toen op bezoek was in Nederland. Voor de presidentiële delegatie hadden chefkok Patrick Otten van Hotels van Oranje en chefkok Wanzhong
Dong van Wok de Mallejan de handen ineengeslagen. Hun culinaire creatie kreeg zowel complimenten van de hoge Chinese gasten als van de Nederlandse minister-president.

Voor de kookdemonstraties “East Meets West” zijn o.a. de ambassadeur van China en Nederlandse politici uitgenodigd om komen te proeven. De presentatie is in handen van bekende Chinese schrijfster Lulu Wang, Cuisinier/tv-kok/Villages de Chefs Alain Caron en journalist Eric Hellingman.
East Meets West is een initiatief van de Vereniging Chinese Horeca Ondernemers in samenwerking met de Rai. Zij willen hiermee kennis en ervaring uitwisselen tussen twee verschillende culinaire culturen en dat zichtbaar maken voor een breed publiek. Daarom kijkt East Meets West ook naar de culinaire geschiedenis en laat daarbij verschillende kookstijlen tot leven komen.

Aziatisch Paviljoen

East Meets West is onderdeel van het Aziatisch Paviljoen. Hierin worden alle beursdagen kookdemonstraties en workshops gehouden om kennis en ervaring uit te wisselen tussen verschillende culinaire culturen, zoals sushi en dim sum workshops, een theeceremonie en een Chinese kookkunstshow.

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Noot voor de redactie (niet voor publicatie):
Voor meer informatie kunt u contact opnemen met Vereniging Chinese Horeca Ondernemers, mevrouw L. Lin, tel. 020 – 3458202, lplin@vcho.nl.
Voor meer informatie over de Horecava kunt u contact opnemen met Carla Granaada, Communicatie & PR Manager, tel. 06 129 78 367, c.granaada@rai.nl

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Whisper of the Yin and Yang Fish, Lulu Wang’s speech op TedX Maastricht2015 (Due to Lulu’s flu, she couldn’t go to Maastricht to give the speech)

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Chinese call this Yin and Yang Symbol the Yin and Yang Fish. Why? Have you ever had a heavy rain in your hometown? If yes, you may have noticed that after your street was flooded due to a heavy rain for a few days, you can go and fish on your own street. Fish babies are everywhere in the world, even in our very house, I suppose. If there is bit water, the fish babies would come to alive. We can almost say that fish never really dies. Fish symbolizes eternity. In the Yin and Yang Symbol hides the wisdom that helped the Chinese civilization, just like fish, survive the sharp jaws of time. One essential aspect of the wisdom is balance.

Balance and Eternity

More than two thousand years ago there was in China a great Taoist philosopher called Zhuangzi. When his beloved wife died, he laughed and made music by drumming at his cooking pan. When asked why, he said that he was celebrating a transition. His wife didn’t really die. She only changed her form of existence, just like the four seasons. When spring dies, winter gets born, a sign that the nature as a whole is still alive. Immortality wouldn’t be complete if it only consists of life. Death has an equal share of eternity as life.

Balance and Wholeness

By regarding death as another form of existence, Chinese is freed from the fear of death. However, Chinese as individuals die too, just as Westerners. How can they be freed from the fear of death? If we see a living person as the white part of the Fish and a dead body as the black part, what else do we see? We see the whole Fish. It stands for the whole country of China. No civil war, no invasion, no plague, no earthquake, no flood, no nuclear weapon, nothing can erase every single soul of a country from the world atlas. As long as two persons manage to survive – preferably a man and a woman, life goes on. Immortality can only be reached if we look beyond individuals and see the collectivity of which individuals are part of – that Chinese are collective-minded has deeper reasons than that they think together we are stronger.

Balance and Modesty

People in the west often wonder why the Chinese communities abroad are so invisible. As new comers in the west, the Chinese have to cope with assimilation problems and endure hardships, but they never grudge, nor get themselves in trouble with their hosting country. Just like fish babies, they become invisible when the circumstances get harsh. As soon as they see a chance, they show up and earn a living again. However, they take care that they never get too visible and they are at every moment ready to resume their invisibility. Because the Yin and Yang Fish whispers to them that the best proportion in life is 50% black and 50% white. The world population consists 50% of men and 50% of women. A day consists half of the day and half of the night. Therefore the visibility of overseas Chinese in their hosting country should be 50%. By being modest, not only the Chinese in their homeland but also in foreign countries succeed to survive and even flourish. No wonder that there are 1.3 billion Chinese inside and about 50 million people of Chinese origin outside China.

Balance and Half Efficiency

I have lived twelve year in the beautiful Dutch city of Maastricht. About two thousand years ago the Roman soldiers stationed in this Dutch city could receive within a week a letter from their parents back in their hometown. At that time there was no plane, no train, no car, no telegram or Wi-Fi. How efficient should the Romans be to realize the post at that speed? From this we can see that the Roman Empire was extremely powerful and well-organized, but even though it couldn’t escape the fate of decay. How does the Yin and Yang Fish explain this short lived luck? If we regard the white part of the Yin and Yang Fish as success and the black part as failure, what else do we see? The whole Fish. That is life at its best. In order to live a longer life, we should be half success and half flop. If we want an extra portion of success, we have to pay for it with our early decay.

Balance and Peace

When we look at China’s thousands of years of history, we see that Chinese invented lots of methods and machineries to increase their productivity, but they didn’t show an incessant urge to develop new technologies for a faster and bigger production. They were quickly satisfied with what they made and what they had. Due to their contentedness, they didn’t have to exhaust their natural resources to get more and more, bigger and bigger, better and better, nor did they have to go abroad to exhaust the natural resources of foreign countries for more and more, bigger and bigger, better and better. So they didn’t have to destroy their own nature, nor did they have to make enemies with foreign countries by exploiting the people and exhausting the nature there. In this way they didn’t have to get involved in ongoing wars with foreign countries that refused to get exploited. As we know, no matter how powerful a country is, if it non-stop tries to conquer foreign countries, it shall sooner or later get itself in conflict with others, which shall finally lead to its decay.

Balance and Survival

Why does the Yin and Yang Fish teach us to be satisfied with half efficiency? Is high efficiency not desirable? The point is, the faster and the more we produce and possess, the greedier we get. Greed ruins our natural resources and those of foreign countries. Greed seduces us to repress the people of our own country and that of foreign countries. Greed consumes our energy without charging it. We become weaker and weaker. Before we know, we are taken over by a stronger country. Chinese followed the advice of the Yin and Yang Fish and their civilization has escaped the sharp jaws of time. If China shall go on following this advice of their ancestors, I can’t tell, since I am not a fortune teller.

Half alive and half dead, half arrogant and half humble, half success and half flop, half efficient and half worthless, this balance may not lead to a mega success and a superpower, but it leads to a long life. Laozi, the forefather of Taoism, says, our real happiness is to live long and to see. To see what? To see how superpowers come and go, how mega successes kiss the sky and smash to the ground, while we, thanks to our long life, just sit there and enjoy the show on the stage of the human history.

Conclusion

Most of us have heard of this famous question: Do you want to be right or happy? The question the Yin and Yang Fish whispers to us is: do you want to be very efficient or very alive? No superstar, superman or superpower can be both. No fish can swim out of the circle of the Yin and Yang Balance, which can only be reached by being half white and half black.

©Lulu Wang
The Hague, the Netherlands
23 September 2015

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Foto: Lulu met Jos Netto en Mohamad Garrout, twee prachtige muzici

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