Guazi
This article relies largely or entirely on a single source. (July 2022) |
Alternative names | Kuaci (Indonesian) |
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Course | Snack |
Region or state | East Asia and Southeast Asia |
Associated cuisine | China and Indonesia |
Guazi (Chinese:
History
[edit]The oldest documentation of the consumption of guazi is recorded in the Taiping Huanyu Ji though it is unclear what specific variety of seed was eaten.[1] Watermelon seeds were the earliest to be consumed in China during the Tang dynasty and only became widespread during the Ming and Qing dynasties.[1]
The Wanli Emperor was described by Liu Ruoyu in the Zhuo Zhong Zhi to have “loved eating fresh watermelon seeds baked with salt.”[1] There is a folk song from the late Ming that described a girl gifting a bag of shelled seeds to her lover.[1] Consumption of pumpkin and sunflower seeds only became commonplace after the Qing.[1] Republican-era artist Feng Zikai observed the popularity of eating seeds during his lifetime in an article on the matter titled "Eating Guazi".[1] Quan Yanchi wrote in his book Leaders Around the Dining Table how Mao Zedong and Liu Shaoqi enjoyed eating guazi.[1]
Idiom
[edit]The process of shelling each seed in order to eat the food is time-consuming for a relatively minimal amount of substance. Guazi are often cracked with the teeth, described by the verb kè (Chinese: 嗑; pinyin: kè), which requires some skill. This task can be viewed as wasteful and has been used to symbolize wasting time. It has also been used in context of wasting taxpayer money.[1]