- Green onion pancake
A green onion pancake (also called scallion pancake or scallion bread) is a salty, non-leavened Chinese
flatbread folded with oil and mincedscallion s (green onions). Unlike a truepancake , it is made fromdough instead of batter, similar to the Indianparatha . It is available inChina ,Taiwan , and other areas of the world with significant Chinese populations in restaurants and as astreet food item, and is also commercially available frozen in plastic packages inAsian supermarket s.Variations and innovations
Other ingredients, such as chopped
fennel greens andsesame seeds are sometimes added with the green onions. One could substitute the green onions with another topping of choice such as corn and diced bell peppers. There is actually a Chinese dessert called red bean pancakes (豆沙鍋餅) where the green onions and salt are replaced with a sweetred bean paste .Another method for cooking green onion pancakes is to fry them with eggs coated on one side. There is another Chinese snack called egg pancake (蛋餅), which is almost identical to the green onion pancake except that the dough of the egg pancake is thinner and moister.
A similar pancake may be made with
garlic chives instead of scallions. Such a pancake is called a "jiucai bing" (韭菜饼) or "jiucai you bing" (韭菜油饼).One variation involves leavening the dough and not flattening up the coil into a pancake. The coil is then fried or baked into a bread.
In
North America , the pancakes are often served withsoy sauce , hotchili sauce , orVietnamese dipping sauce .Chinese myth surrounding the invention of pizza
There exists in China and Taiwan a belief that
pizza is an evolution of green onion pancake, brought back to Italy byMarco Polo .Fact|date=February 2008 Here is one version of theMarco Polo missed green onion pancakes so much that when he was back in Italy, he tried to find chefs willing to make the pancake for him. One day, he managed to meet a chef from
Naples at a friend's dinner party and persuaded him to try recreating the dish. After half a day without success, Marco Polo suggested the filling be put at the top rather than inside the dough. The change, by chance, created a dish praised by everyone at the party. The chefs returned to Naples and improvised by adding cheese and other ingredients and formed today's pizza. [Xinhua, 12 September 2007, "Pizza and Ice Cream: The Chinese Delicacies Marco Polo Brought Back to the West (Chinese)" http://big5.xinhuanet.com/gate/big5/news.xinhuanet.com/overseas/2007-09/12/content_6707259.htm]References
ee also
*
paratha (Indian variant)
*Laobing
*Pajeon
*Banh xeo
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.