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| The cover of Fuchsia Dunlop’s The Food of Sichuan uses the Chinese Wave Pattern. |
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| Peppercorns in our Japanese wave-pattern bowl. I’ll tell you about what dish we made with the peppercorns later on. |
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| The package from the imported peppercorns also uses the wave pattern. I assume this repetition is a coincidence, but I wonder if it means something. |
Blog post © 2023 mae sander




Wave patterns, it appears, are often used as a sign of prosperity.
ReplyDeleteI'm intrigued to know what you made.
ReplyDeleteThe Chinese wave pattern is almost hypnotic!
ReplyDeleteI always love that pattern- didn't realize it was Japanese
ReplyDeleteI was surprised how interchangeable the wave pattern is between Japanese and Chinese. It's definitely pleasing.
ReplyDelete