Chinese Materia Dietetica, Ming: Fermented sauce (jiang)

  • Anonymous
  • Digital Images
  • Online

Available online

view Chinese Materia Dietetica, Ming: Fermented sauce (jiang)

Public Domain Mark

You can use this work for any purpose without restriction under copyright law. Read more about this licence.

Credit

Chinese Materia Dietetica, Ming: Fermented sauce (jiang). Wellcome Collection. Public Domain Mark. Source: Wellcome Collection.

Selected images from this work

View 1 image

About this work

Description

Illustration of jiang (fermented sauce/paste, soy sauce etc.) from Shiwu bencao (Materia dietetica), a dietetic herbal in four volumes dating from the Ming period (1368-1644). The identity of the author and artists is unknown. It contains entries on over 300 medicinal substances and is illustrated by almost 500 paintings in colour. The illustration shows a jar containing jiang. The text states: Jiang is acid and salty in sapor, and very cold in thermostatic character. It has the medicinal effects of eliminating heat, relieving a distressing sense of fullness (fanman), and destroying poisons from a wide variety of drugs and foodstuffs. Jiang is commonly made from beans and legumes. The best quality jiang is made purely from fermented soybeans; that made from a mixture of soybeans and flour or from flour alone is second best. Flour jiang (fermented sauce/paste, soy sauce etc.) is likewise non-poisonous, but it cannot destroy a variety of poisons. There is also a kind of fermented elm kernel paste (yuren jiang), which has a similar pungent, delicious flavour. It stimulates the elimination of urine and faeces, but should not be taken in large quantities. Stinking elm (fructus ulmi) paste (wuyi jiang) is very tasty. It kills the three worms/three cadaveric demons (san chong). Though it smells somewhat unpleasant, it has a good, pungent flavour. Eaten in excess, it causes hair loss.

Contributors

Lettering

Jiang (fermented sauce/paste, soy sauce etc.)

Type/Technique

Permanent link