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30 votes
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I'm visiting the region you're from, what's your favorite food I should try?
Recommend 3 from your city or region? Probably more interesting than entire country but whatever you prefer. Edit: Not necessarily traditional. e.g. I've heard Vancouver have some awesome Ramen shops.
47 votes -
The baguette revolution: Banh Mi, Num Pang, and a Thai sandwich challenge
11 votes -
Seal, whale, reindeer – and plankton? When your restaurant is high in the Arctic Circle you have to get pretty creative with your fine dining.
12 votes -
Automated wok cooking machines prepare traditional Chinese dishes at reasonable prices at new LA restaurant Tigawok
12 votes -
Denmark has recalled several spicy ramen noodle products by South Korean company Samyang, claiming that the capsaicin levels in them could poison consumers
42 votes -
India's butter chicken battle heats up with new court evidence
11 votes -
The hidden, magnificent history of chop suey
9 votes -
Keith eats everything at a Michelin dim sum restaurant
12 votes -
Cal-Mex is having a moment in New York. But how does it taste?
8 votes -
The food of war and isolation - International influences on Russian sausage cuisine
10 votes -
Amanda Churchill on embracing her Japanese heritage through food
8 votes -
The United States of barbecue, mapsplained
15 votes -
Kenji's Vietnamese garlic noodles... with twenty cloves of garlic
41 votes -
Teach me about biryani
I was watching this video. The auto-translated subtitles are not great, but I followed along a bit. We tried 15 types of Biryani It made me realise that in the UK I have access to a very limited...
I was watching this video. The auto-translated subtitles are not great, but I followed along a bit.
It made me realise that in the UK I have access to a very limited selection of biryani. From a supermarket it will look like this: https://www.iceland.co.uk/p/iceland-chicken-biryani-375g/87458.html. I'm missing so much knowledge about an enormous region that covers over a billion people.
I'd be really interested to hear about biryani, especially regional variations with different ingredients. What things are essential and often missed? What makes a biryani great?
I'd also love to hear more about delivery - those "handi" ceramic dum cooked to order pots look amazing. There's another video here of an "unboxing" - https://www.youtube.com/shorts/Q5OA4XiGl34 , and the makers have a video here too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H6nE1Nla3u0
20 votes -
Sundays are for Bolognese
6 votes -
Grace Young and her ever-growing wok collection
12 votes -
The Mayor of Bologna is unequivocal: Spaghetti Bolognese doesn't exist. The real recipe from Bologna, Italy, is called Ragù.
16 votes -
Cooking from clay tablets: Babylonian lamb stew
16 votes -
The Kikkoman soy sauce bottle is priceless
22 votes -
From Vækst to Gro Spiseri, these six outstanding Danish restaurants offer a Nordic dining experience that stands out from the crowd in Copenhagen
6 votes -
Michelin star chef (and possible Viking), Ragnar Eiríksson, guides Matty through an Icelandic winter wonderland of odd food, crazy buggy rides, and steamy hot springs
12 votes -
My ultimate roast chicken recipe
13 votes -
Palm oil - The good, the bad, and the oily
8 votes -
America does not have a good food culture
46 votes -
The lime crisis: Why ceviche has become a luxury for Peruvians
13 votes -
A comprehensive guide to making P.F. Chang's Mongolian Beef at home
10 votes -
With its glaciers, fjords and craggy mountains, Southern Norway is jaw-droppingly beautiful – and nature leads the region's chefs who draw on the local bounties
6 votes -
Digging in: Why don’t Americans eat mutton?
26 votes -
What are some foods you really like, from countries not well known for great cuisine?
It doesn't need to be from countries known for "bad" cuisine. Just try to avoid obvious countries like Italy, France, Japan or China (as a handful of examples). Having said the above, that is also...
It doesn't need to be from countries known for "bad" cuisine. Just try to avoid obvious countries like Italy, France, Japan or China (as a handful of examples).
Having said the above, that is also coming from a western (European) perspective. If those countries are not well known for their cuisine in your area, then feel free to choose them!
53 votes -
Rubaboo - Pemmican stew of Canadian Mounties
9 votes -
The physics of tossing fried rice
23 votes -
Fajitas, a Mexican dish that was really born in Texas
16 votes -
British cooks try Filipino food and cooking methods
7 votes -
Made with vanilla sponge, meringue, almonds, custard and whipped cream – Norwegians love this cake so much they nicknamed it "the world's best cake"
28 votes -
I’m making tteokbokki for the first time tonight: any tips?
I’m going purely on YouTube vids for the technique. They all seem to agree to soak in water and then cook the rice cakes in stock, then add gochujang, gochugaru, soy sauce, sugar, cook until...
I’m going purely on YouTube vids for the technique. They all seem to agree to soak in water and then cook the rice cakes in stock, then add gochujang, gochugaru, soy sauce, sugar, cook until thick, top with spring onion and optionally add cheese. (I’m skipping the fish cakes).
Some recipes start by frying some garlic, some fry off the gochugaru etc for a minute, some add the white part of the spring onion much earlier… I’m not sure whether any of these steps are necessary/make a big difference.
Anyone who is familiar with the dish - is there anything extra you do to elevate this dish? Anything I should know about the cooking process?
30 votes -
Three-Michelin-star restaurant relocates from Copenhagen to London for one day – Noma looks to a future without its celebrated Danish restaurant
10 votes -
Pasta Grannies: A discussion on favorite recipes and pasta advice
Greetings ~food! Not too long ago, I posted a topic asking for cookbook recommendations and received a flood of amazing recommendations. Thank you all for sharing your favorites; I have expanded...
Greetings ~food! Not too long ago, I posted a topic asking for cookbook recommendations and received a flood of amazing recommendations. Thank you all for sharing your favorites; I have expanded my collection thanks to that thread! One that has become a quick favorite of mine is Pasta Grannies, although I accidentally grabbed Book 2 and I'm still needing to grab Book 1.
Something that has dawned on me with that cookbook is the desire to make all the recipes similar to how Ash Ketchum wanted to catch all the Pokémon! The first recipe I made was Rina's Capriccio and oh lordy did it blow my mind how good it was and that I made it! My only complaint was the struggle to just pick one recipe to try and I'm aspiring to make a pasta dish every Sunday now.
Since there are several recipes from Pasta Grannies between the two books and their Youtube channel, I'm indecisive on what to do next. To all who have dived into their recipes, what are your favorites that are absolute must tries? What are some that might not be worth the effort? I'd love to hear everyone's experience with pasta making regardless if it's a Pasta Grannies recipe!
23 votes -
In his Arctic Circle restaurant, chef Halvar Ellingsen has made it his focus to change the misconceptions of Norwegian cuisine one guest at a time
11 votes -
Waging war on the Jamaican patty: Canada’s bizarre beef with the delicious snack | Patty vs Patty
6 votes -
Can you buy Chinese takeout style garlic sauce in a jar?
I really like the "Broccoli in Garlic Sauce" dish offered in Chinese takeout restaurants. I have a few big Asian food markets near me. Is it possible to buy the garlic sauce the takeout places use...
I really like the "Broccoli in Garlic Sauce" dish offered in Chinese takeout restaurants.
I have a few big Asian food markets near me.
Is it possible to buy the garlic sauce the takeout places use in a jar? If so, what would it be called? I imagine there is more than one type of jarred sauce called "garlic sauce" in the world.
17 votes -
Insects find their way onto Italian plates despite resistance
38 votes -
Cordon Bleu and mashed potatoes in a French Michelin two-star restaurant with Giuliano Sperandio
8 votes -
Don't make hummus at home, make msabbaha instead
22 votes -
United States of America
7 votes -
The original fettuccine alfredo with no cream
29 votes -
The woman preserving the endangered cuisine of Indian Jews. Esther David traveled from the spice port of Cochin to the mountains of Mizoram to record this culinary culture.
7 votes -
The hyper-regional chippy traditions of Britain and Ireland
28 votes -
Why Britain's curry houses are in decline
21 votes -
Restaurants in Denmark, the recent darling of the culinary world, are outdoing each other to emulate Noma
6 votes