One time I talked to an acquaintance about why she hadn’t tried the best taco truck that I love that is literally next to her house.
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@skinnylatte we had a family friend in the Midwest in the 80s who had grown up in a household that didn’t even use alliums, so coming over to our place for dinner was a flavor adventure!
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@pixiecata I don’t know if I told you but it’s pretty easy for me to get to a lot of Filipino food here (in Daly City). It makes me happy
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@skinnylatte sounds like I need to make a trip to Singapore and/or Malaysia
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@rbmath great food 24/7. never have to repeat a food type or cuisine.
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@skinnylatte The world is delicious and I have an appetite for its beauty. It's alien to me but I do understand some people just aren't as sensual or as transported by sensation as I am. Though I do always feel a bit sorry for people who just grew up without food culture.
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@gannet @skinnylatte We don't use alliums in my house either, but in our case it has to do with IBS.
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@skinnylatte I love this! I think, even if I can't live it, it's what I want out of life.
Living in my corner of North America this means I need to go broke or cook my own food. I'm currently doing more of the latter, but oh my the time investment... Coming back from a recent trip to Indonesia, the food is plentiful, good, and cheap there.
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@fifilamoura @skinnylatte The cool thing is, you can grow into one if you're willing and able! One of my closest early adulthood friends back home (Midwest) was Tai Dam and had a huge family. I got invited to a number of occasions, and I swore I would try ANYTHING at least once before asking what it was. That, plus how she was a big foodie, as well as cooking my own stuff and reading about food cultures, including my ancestral ones, meant that I slowly expanded my palate. It can happen!
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@fifilamoura @skinnylatte I'm still not sure I can claim a long-standing family food culture (Midwestern Scandinavian-American comes closest, maybe, with adopted French from my husband), but I'm building one my son can claim. And he's willing to try all kinds of foods of other food cultures, and I can't complain about that
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@aehdeschaine @fifilamoura I once interviewed a Swedish chef and I was like what was your relationship with food at home and he said ‘I just wanted to make better food than what I grew up with’
But
A lot of Nordic food things (curing, preserving) are also super valid and I’ve learned some of them. I guess the Lutheran dislike of ‘hedonism’ is something I really struggle with
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@meganL @skinnylatte this is me sometimes I like a lot of different foods and trying new things, but when I’m really in need of something soothing or comforting, bland things call to me
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@bluestocking @skinnylatte Surely there's a difference between bland and "lacking flavor", though? Oatmeal is bland, but it doesn't completely lack flavor, for instance. Same for potatoes baked in their jackets.
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@ddr yes! So I grew up with food in Indonesia / Malaysia / just like that and you can see how it’s a big cultural shift
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@epicdemiologist @gannet the Jains and religious Japanese / Koreans make delicious food without alliums!
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@meganL @skinnylatte I mean, I can taste a lot of flavor and texture nuance in stuff other people find really bland and it brings me a ton of pleasure but it’s things other people would absolutely describe as disgustingly flavorless.
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@bluestocking @meganL there’s a term used for some types of Chinese food that’s like ‘flavorful and bland’
I don’t think everything needs to be heavily seasoned, but I do want food to be made of good ingredients and made with care. My favorite food in the world is simply steamed fresh fish with just soy sauce. But every part of it has to be good to work.
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@skinnylatte I think cold climate relationships to food (and obviously available foods) are very different than tropical ones. Very different flavor personalities but deliciousness usually comes down to the quality of ingredients and someone being a good cook because they care about the food they're cooking. @aehdeschaine
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@fifilamoura @skinnylatte I'd agree. And I've actually really enjoyed learning about traditional Nordic cuisine! Not a fan of the fermented fish, but the broader preservation practices are fascinating, and the "Nordic diet" counterpart of Mediterranean is really interesting, too. And spice DOES have a long history in the cuisine, but in specific places.
I admit the most flavorful explorations I've done have been in mostly-warmer cuisines. But living in the PNW's growing season really helps!
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@fifilamoura @skinnylatte It is interesting that, the more I explore, say Chinese or Mediterranean or Middle Eastern food, the less I crave the few "traditional" foods from childhood. I always want to find a jazzier version, and the craving becomes nostalgia but not culinary appreciation...
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@skinnylatte This sounds extreme for me! I understand spice, or a *specific* flavour, but I have never heard of someone not liking flavour full stop!