I started cooking when I moved out my parent's place to go to university in another city. I always loved Chinese food (or whatever they serve you here as Chinese) but being a "poor" student I didn't have the funds to go to restaurants or takeouts often enough to satisfy my craving. That's why I decided to start learning how to cook.
I pretty soon discovered that the results - though edible and often yummy - didn't really match the food served in China restaurants. Without the proper equipment and no money to buy it I gave up cooking Chinese and headed a bit to the west. Indian dishes were "easier" to reproduce at home. Over the years I moved further west - over the Middle East to the Mediterranean area until I finally started enjoying traditional German dishes as well. (Giving the fact I started getting interested in the cuisine of the Southern US states, you could say I continued my journey to the west.
Now ever since I saw that brilliant BBC documentary Ching He Huang & Ken Hom Exploring China: A Culinary Adventure. (4 episodes, each about an hour) I become obsessed with cooking Chinese food, especially from the Sichuan region again. My own culinary journey round the world has now got me full circle.
And this time the results are way better. Be it because I have way more experience (and patience) now, be it that I got the money to buy better equipment or whatever the reason is, I start to understand Chinese food and the philosophies behind it. The only thing I now need is a good gas burner. Yes, I already discussed this with Menolly like 4 years ago, but now I have found a good (and rather cheap) solution. A "manniu" burner with around 90,000 btu.
Why do I love Sichuan food? Because it tends to combine all sorts of flavor in one dish. It's the only kitchen in the world where you find all kinds of pepper in one dish.
Today I cooked some Sichuan influenced spicy chicken with white pepper, chilis, fermented chili paste and sichuan flower peppers. The first bite was hot, but then after keeping eating it surprisingly got milder. The numbing effect of the Sichuan pepper (ma la = numbing and spicy) sort of protects from the heat and still gives you all the flavor.

Clockwise from the top: ginger, spring onions, dried chilies, freshly crushed Sichuan pepper corns, garlic.

Cashew nuts.

Bamboo and carrots.

spring onion greens, bean sprouts

Marinated chicken (light soy sauce, rice wine, salt, white pepper, corn starch and an egg white lightly beaten until foamy.
This here is chicken breast. I used it simply because it was in the fridge and needed to be processed. Usually I use leg meat for stir fries. First of all I like the taste and texture better and secondly I think traditionally people in China would have taken a whole chicken and used the different parts for different dishes or cooking techniques. I would use the breast for roasts, oven baked dishes or anything deep fried in a batter. I would use the leg meat for stir fries.

Chicken stock.

A sizzling hot wok.

Sesame oil for flavoring and sunflower oil for cooking.

Rice vinegar. I need to buy the black variety.

Chili bean paste.

dark soy and rice wine (Shaoxing)

The result in the wok ...

... and on a plate.