Overview
Maylin cooks delicious meals every day in her father's restaurant, but her lazy brothers take all the credit. One day a contest is held to honor the visiting governor of South China, and Maylin's brothers decide to pass off her cooking as their own. But when neither they nor the governor can replicate Maylin's wonderful dish, they all learn that there's more to the art of good cooking than the right ingredients. Paul Yee's charming text and Harvey Chan's dramatic watercolors transport the reader to another time and culture in this engaging tale.Despite a greedy father and lazy brothers who try to conceal her identity as the real cook in their restaurant, Maylin manages to receive the recognition she deserves when a governor from China comes to a New World Chinatown.
Synopsis
Maylin cooks delicious meals every day in her father's restaurant, but her lazy brothers take all the credit. One day a contest is held to honor the visiting governor of South China, and Maylin's brothers decide to pass off her cooking as their own. But when neither they nor the governor can replicate Maylin's wonderful dish, they all learn that there's more to the art of good cooking than the right ingredients. Paul Yee's charming text and Harvey Chan's dramatic watercolors transport the reader to another time and culture in this engaging tale.
School Library Journal
Gr 1-3-- Each and every day of the year Maylin cooks in her father's restaurant in a turn-of-the-century Chinatown. The restaurant is renowned for its fine food, but Maylin has never heard the praise, because her father tells everyone that his two sons are the chefs. When the governor of South China comes to town, each Chinese restaurant is invited to send its best dish for a banquet. Maylin's creation, Roses Sing on New Snow, is of course the governor's favorite. When he asks the two brothers to re-create it for him so he can take it home, they are unable to do so. Maylin is then brought in--and the story could end here, with the men getting their just deserts. Instead the young woman says hers is a New World dish that cannot be re-created in the Old. To prove her point she and the governor cook the same dish, side by side, and the results differ greatly. If the logic seems to falter here and the story does not quite hold together, the watercolor illustrations and layouts are a veritable feast, with many delights. Rich in browns and terra cottas, set upon white, they are at times contained within rectangles, at others within trapezoids. Sometimes comically drawn figures cross the page. Perspective changes from a crow's-eye view above Chinatown to a closeup of the governor's dragonlike nose and eyes. --Diane S. Marton, Arlington County Library, VA