Chop Fry Watch Learn
Fu Pei-mei and the Making of Modern Chinese Food
4 July 2025
Territory Rights — Worldwide.
Description
A spirited new history of Chinese food told through an account of the remarkable life of Fu Pei-mei, the woman who brought Chinese cooking to the world
In 1949, a young Chinese housewife arrived in Taiwan and transformed herself from a novice to a natural in the kitchen. She launched a career as a cookbook author and television cooking instructor that would last four decades. Years later, in America, flipping through her mother’s copies of Fu Pei-mei’s Chinese cookbooks, historian Michelle T. King discovered more than the recipes to meals of her childhood. She found, in Fu’s story and in her food, a vivid portal to another time, when a generation of middle-class, female home cooks navigated the tremendous postwar transformations taking place across the world.
In Chop Fry Watch Learn, King weaves together stories from her own family and contemporary oral history to present a remarkable argument for how understanding the story of Fu’s life enables us to see Chinese food as both an inheritance of tradition and a truly modern creation, influenced by the historical phenomena of the postwar era. These include a dramatic increase in the number of women working outside the home, a new proliferation of mass media, the arrival of innovative kitchen tools and the shifting diplomatic fortunes of China and Taiwan. King reveals how and why, for audiences in Taiwan and around the world, Fu became the ultimate culinary touchstone: the figure against whom all other cooking authorities were measured.
Reviews
"King is acute and sensitive in presenting the paradoxes of Fu's identity….She has produced that rare biography in which a protagonist comes to complex, contradiction-ridden life with no sacrifice of painstaking factual accuracy." — Anne Mendelson, The Wall Street Journal
"Fascinating.... As Michelle T. King demonstrates in this moving and ambitious biography, Fu Pei-mei was far more than ‘the Julia Child of Chinese cooking.'" — Thessaly La Force, The New York Times Book Review
"King presents not just a biography of an indomitable woman, but a portrait of how cultures eat." — The New York Times