Chen Kenmin

Chen Kenmin (simplified Chinese: 陈建民; traditional Chinese: 陳建民; pinyin: Chén Jiànmín; Japanese: 陳 建民 Chin Kenmin); (June 27, 1912 May 12, 1990) was a Chinese-born Japanese chef. He was known as the father of Chen Kenichi, the Iron Chef Chinese on the television show Iron Chef.

Chen Kenmin
陳建民 (Chinese)
Born(1912-06-27)June 27, 1912
DiedMay 12, 1990(1990-05-12) (aged 77)
ChildrenChen Kenichi (son)

Born in Yibin, Sichuan, China, Chen emigrated to Japan in 1952, and became a Japanese citizen in 1954. Chen had originally specialized in Chinese imperial cuisine. However, in 1958, upon opening the Shisen Hanten (四川飯店) restaurant in Japan, Chen arranged his dishes to cater to the tastes of his Japanese clients. Chen introduced Shanghai-style Sichuan cuisine to Japan through the Shisen Hanten Restaurant as well as through nationwide TV shows, particularly NHK's TV show, Kyō no ryōri ("Today's Cuisine" in English). Chen came to be known as the "father of Chinese Sichuan cooking" in Japan.

Among the many Shanghai-style Japanese Chinese dishes Chen popularized in Japan include:

  • "Prawns in Chili Sauce" (simplified Chinese: 干烧虾仁; traditional Chinese: 乾燒蝦仁; pinyin: gān shāo xiā rén), which Chen renamed to Ebi Chili Sauce (エビチリソース, ebi chiri sōsu) for the Japanese.
  • Mapo doufu (Chinese: 麻婆豆腐; pinyin: má pó dòu fu).
gollark: That would imply that you can never send messages in politics chat (except at exactly the same instant as messages are sent in another, which is impractical).
gollark: You can't really do that.
gollark: Why? They're annoying. People do wrong things all the time.
gollark: This would only require 80 minutes.
gollark: Just watch at 1.25x speed.

References

  • A large portion of this article was translated from the corresponding article in the Japanese Wikipedia, retrieved on February 5, 2007.


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