Sammy Boy (post: 1275473) wrote: Thanks for those extra bits of knowledge, I will note them down, but don't think I will be eating papaya anytime soon so I should be safe, LOL.
I don't think that chart my mum has is really related to Chinese medicine/herbalism all that much, because the ones my mum told me about from the chart are all common sense ones to do with food poisoning, indigestion, etc. and does not necessarily require the Chinese yin / yang view of the universe, and the "heaty" and "cool" aspects of ingredients (if this part is not making sense feel free to ignore it).
But you are right in that often it's hard to separate the Chinese understanding of food ingredients completely from that view.
As I understand it (and admittedly, a Norwegian-American is unlikely to understand it all that terribly well) the Chinese understanding of 'Medicine' and 'Healthy Nutrition' are fairly strongly intertwined. Somwhere in the late Nineteenth century we lost that sort of thinking in the West, tossing it all out the window as 'old wive's tales', and we are still trying to recover a lot of lost wisdom.
I would suggest you just sit down with Mom and go through the list, getting western alphabet spellings of the words (plus the original characters) whenever you two can't work out what they are in English. Then, you can go elsewhere to try to work out the translations. It would be a shame not to hold onto every bit of knowledge you can get from her.
(It's almost painful to think of all the old-world recipes that passed away with my grandmother!)
I feel your pain, being unable to communicate ingredients. A common conversation in my kitchen goes like this:
My lovely bride of twenty years, born in the Philippines: "Honey-ko, taste this. What's it missing?"
Me: "Mmm. Maybe you could add some thyme. That would be good in this."
Wife: "...."
Me: "What?"
Wife: "What's that in Tagalog?"
Of course, since I don't speak more than a few words of Tagalog (aka Filipino) all I can do is go digging for the thyme myself.
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