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10 votes
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Food place recommendations in Paris?
Me and my girlfriend will be in Paris for 2 nights soon. Since this is such a short trip, we'll mostly be visiting the most popular "essential" tourist attractions - so we will generally be around...
Me and my girlfriend will be in Paris for 2 nights soon. Since this is such a short trip, we'll mostly be visiting the most popular "essential" tourist attractions - so we will generally be around the center of the city. However, most advice I found online seems to agree that you probably shouldn't just enter a random restaurant in the center of Paris, because it is very likely to be a tourist trap with very high prices and relatively low quality.
So, if any of you have suggestions on good places to eat for a reasonable price, I would really appreciate that!
Also, the end of our trip happens to fall on valentine's day, and we were thinking about having a nice early dinner (late lunch? around 15:00) before we leave, preferably in a pretty place. I'm fine with spending a bit more (~50€ per person) on that one. So if you know any places that fit, please suggest those as well.
Thanks!
21 votes -
[God’s thread] The art of somen: 300 years of Japanese handmade perfection
9 votes -
Chinese takeout menu
13 votes -
What’s the most iconic Michelin dish of all time? (ft. Alexander the Guest)
5 votes -
Who/what are your go-to sources for authentic recipes of regional cuisines?
Years ago I had a decently-curated set of bookmarks of sites where I'd found recipes for specific cuisines and I figured I could trust the source... by which I mean that if I'm looking up a Cajun...
Years ago I had a decently-curated set of bookmarks of sites where I'd found recipes for specific cuisines and I figured I could trust the source... by which I mean that if I'm looking up a Cajun recipe like a shrimp étouffée, I'm not going to just take the word of a random housewife in Wisconsin (no matter how good the SEO is on her blog... sorry Ashley) or even a home cook you can recognize is a huge foodie by the number of trips they've taken to Louisiana. I don't necessarily doubt their skill, but you undoubtedly get a better starting point for must-have ingredients, important techniques, and trustworthy brands from people who've grown up as a part of the culture the food comes from.
In any case, I lost that collection during the pandemic after dealing with one computer issue or another, and a few that I had committed to memory seem to have gone down. I'm trying to rebuild it now - any recommendations?
Here's some of what I have saved:
Chinese - Chef Wang
Guyanese - Alica at Alica's Pepperpot
Italian(-American) - Not Another Cooking Show
Jamaican - Feed and Teach
Japanese - Nami at Just One Cookbook
Korean - Maangchi the OG, or Seonkyoung Longest
Thai - I used to check ThaiTable but it looks like it's not around anymore?! At least it's archived pretty well
Trinidadian - Cooking With Ria and Foodie NationSo, any suggestions? Feel free to recommend any specific cookbooks as well. I'm still looking for some resources for the huge cuisines like Mexican, Indian, Chinese... I remember I also found a great YouTube channel years ago with a Vietnamese auntie that may have had an actual cooking show in Vietnam, and I think it even had English subtitles, but now I can't find it for the life of me.
31 votes -
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12 votes -
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6 votes -
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30 votes -
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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 -
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11 votes -
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12 votes -
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42 votes -
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11 votes -
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9 votes -
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12 votes -
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8 votes -
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10 votes -
Amanda Churchill on embracing her Japanese heritage through food
8 votes -
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15 votes -
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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 -
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6 votes -
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12 votes -
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16 votes -
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16 votes -
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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 -
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12 votes -
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13 votes -
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8 votes -
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46 votes -
The lime crisis: Why ceviche has become a luxury for Peruvians
13 votes -
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10 votes -
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6 votes -
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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 -
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23 votes -
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16 votes -
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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