CHOP SUEY NATION; the Legion Cafe and other stories from Canada's Chinese 
restaurants (Douglas & McIntyre, 2019, 288 pages, ISBN 978-1-77162-222-6 
$24.95 CAD French flaps gatefold paperbound) is by Ann Hui, the Globe and Mail's 
National Food Writer since 2015 and a two-time nominee for a National Newspaper 
Award. It's an augmented version of a long piece she did for the June 21, 2016 
issue of the Globe and Mail. Notable log rollers include Mark Bittman, Chris 
Nuttall-Smith, and Lucy Waverman. Her book, in addition to being an 18-day 
discovery voyage of small town Chinese restaurants in Canada, also is a vivid 
memoir of her family, her Dad, and their own restaurant the Legion Cafe. The 
scope is nation-wide, from the Don Mee Seafood Restaurant in Victoria, BC to the 
Kwang Tung Restaurant on Fogo Island, NL – with stops along the way to several 
places in Alberta and Prairies through to Quebec and the Atlantic provinces. She 
explores the Canadian version of “chop suey” [mixed small bits – shap sui in 
Cantonese] and “chow mein” (which substitutes sliced cabbage for noodles in 
Newfoundland), both using local ingredients that can be adapted and turned into 
such plates as “bon bon ribs” or “ginger beef”. The memoir portions are 
skillfully interwoven with the visited restaurants.  
Audience and level of use: those interested in Chinese food and Canadian 
cultural history, lovers of memoirs.
Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: it was only after the article 
was published when Ann found out that own family could have been included – her 
parents had run a Chinese restaurant before she was born! And indeed, many of 
the owner families came from the same region, Toisan (“First home of the 
Overseas Chinese”).
The downside to this book: no index is provided – one might have been 
useful to co-relate the various dishes on offer nationwide.
The upside to this book: compelling reading.
Quality/Price Rating: 93.
Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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