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13 votes
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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 -
French post office rolls out croissant-scented stamp
15 votes -
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13 votes -
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16 votes -
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7 votes -
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10 votes -
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33 votes -
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14 votes -
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8 votes -
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15 votes -
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24 votes -
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11 votes -
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6 votes -
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16 votes -
What are your traditional Christmas dinners, and do you do anything that's unusual in your country?
I am interested in the amount of variety there is in Christmas dinners. In the UK it tends to be roast meat (and turkey is popular) and a lot of roast veg. The table ends up being quite...
I am interested in the amount of variety there is in Christmas dinners. In the UK it tends to be roast meat (and turkey is popular) and a lot of roast veg. The table ends up being quite complicated because Aunt Mabel really wants cauliflower cheese and Cousin Bert needs that braised red cabbage and etc so you end up with a lot of stuff set out.
And that's just the UK - I'd be really interested to know about what people eat in other places.
For me it's going to be simple and quiet this year. Chemotherapy and immunotherapy mean my immune system is struggling and I feel very gently nauseous. I am going to have roast chicken, glazed roast parsnips, carrots (not sure whether mashed, or roasted, or gently steamed), roast potatoes, and roast sprouts. And then my sister made me a Christmas pudding so I'll have that for after.
Here's a description of and recipe for Christmas Pudding: https://www.nigella.com/recipes/ultimate-christmas-pudding
30 votes -
Cardamom has been a key spice in Swedish culture since medieval times, and now it's popularity in soft, fluffy kardemummabulle is taking the pastry global
22 votes -
America does not have a good food culture
46 votes -
There's a belief that some form of cider was made by Vikings in Norway, and today, its growing popularity has people convinced it's the country's national drink
13 votes -
Bubble Tea, also called Boba, is everywhere. But who made it first?
11 votes -
Fajitas, a Mexican dish that was really born in Texas
16 votes -
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29 votes -
Insects find their way onto Italian plates despite resistance
38 votes -
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45 votes -
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13 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 -
Why Britain's curry houses are in decline
21 votes -
"Kraft Singles, the standard for American cheese, cannot legally be called American cheese, or even 'cheese food'"
23 votes -
The history of the Hawaiian Luau
6 votes -
How they saved the holes in Swiss cheese
6 votes -
How Somali food in the diaspora holds the history of forced migration
4 votes -
Snow aged wagyu beef experience
2 votes -
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7 votes -
The last mustard maker in Dijon
7 votes -
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4 votes -
How Jell-O lost its spot as America's favorite dessert
5 votes -
How Japanese grow and eat $46,500 melons
4 votes -
Once a trading gateway to the world, Finland's ancient capital of Turku is carving out a new niche as a Nordic food hotspot
3 votes -
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11 votes -
Why Americans eat dessert for breakfast
7 votes -
How Cuban is Cuban bread?
4 votes -
Ceylon cinnamon has been produced in Sri Lanka for generations. But experienced peelers are now rare.
5 votes -
All that and a bag of chips: The history of Frito pie
2 votes -
On the small island of Heimaey, chef Matthías Auðunsson is at the helm of a food movement that honours Iceland's history while coaxing it into a new era of innovation
5 votes -
Understanding tea
7 votes -
The secret history of Angostura Bitters
7 votes -
A Finnish drink with a heroic past – in the 16th century, effervescent sima was more desired than beer and has since become the go-to beverage for ushering in spring
8 votes -
The overwhelmingly White image of beer culture erases a much longer, far-reaching narrative of Black brewing
20 votes -
The history of Jews, Chinese food, and Christmas, explained by a rabbi
11 votes -
Whale meat has seen an increase in sales this year in Norway – according to local whalers, demand has outstripped supply for the first time in half a decade
10 votes