pēng
verb #37,230

Meanings

  1. 1 to boil
  2. 2 to cook (especially by quickly stir-frying then dressing with sauce)
  3. 3 to boil to death (an ancient form of execution)

Examples

Chúshī yòng mànhuǒ pēng le yì guō jītāng.
The chef slowly boiled a pot of chicken soup.
Zhì dàguó ruò pēng xiǎo xiān.
Governing a great nation is like cooking a small fish.

Tips

history
Laozi's 《道德经》 chapter 60 famously says 大国 - 'governing a large country is like cooking a small fish'. Both demand a light touch: prod a frying minnow too much and it falls apart, just as too much meddling ruins a state. Ronald Reagan quoted it in his 1988 State of the Union address.
usage
In modern Chinese, mostly survives in compounds: 烹饪 (cooking, culinary art), 烹调 (to cook). Rarely used alone except in literary/classical contexts. The grim historical sense - 烹刑 (boiling alive) - was a real punishment in pre-imperial and early imperial China and shows up in 《史记》 stories about figures like 食其.

Components

radical
huǒ
fire (radical form of 火)
Four-dots fire radical at the bottom - flame form of , marking heat underneath. Carries the meaning of directly: cooking is the application of fire to food. Four dots licking upward beneath the pot give exactly the picture of heat rising. Family: boil, scorch, burn, cook-through.
phonetic
hēng
prosperous; smooth
Top supplies the sound - hēng shifting to pēng, a documented h/p alternation. itself comes from a picture of an ancestral hall used for sacrificial offerings, and one branch of that imagery became 'boil, cook' - the food prepared for the rites. So the phonetic also carries a faint cooking-related history.

Stroke Order

pēng