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I watch several shows on the Food Network, and I'm currently enjoying a PBS offering--No Passport Required. It's kind of a stateside version of No Reservations, with chef Marcus Samuelsson, in which he explores immigrant neighborhoods, food, and culture. So far, this season, they've featured Korean and Armenian cuisine. Talk about mouth-watering. I never get tired of learning about the foods of different countries, and I would be happy to spend my life sampling my way around the world--without the necessity of travel.
Without the necessity of travel and I would add, the preparation of each dish. One needs so many more and different ingredients than the basic NA menu requires.
That said, I am having a lot of fun exploring different balsamic vinegars from Modena. So far, my favourites are cranberry-pear and Mission fig. Black cherry is good as well. A little Saba added to lightly salted homemade tomato juice makes an amazing soup.
My DH is currently massively into Asian street food--the kind they do literally on the street! I think the combination of complexity/simplicity fascinates him. When I went to Japan recently, he really wanted me to go on a tour of the areas of town where they make street food, but I'm not a foodie, and I don't appreciate it as much as he would.
I do enjoy Food Network shows, but more for the personalities and the contest (i.e. Top Chef, Chopped) than the cuisine. When I watch Kitchen Nightmare or Restaurant Impossible, I'm usually more interested in how they redecorate the place than how they change the menu.
From a social and cultural perspective, food is a fascinating topic, though. I can appreciate that.
No Passport Required.
I was very pleased to hear there would be a second season of this show. I greatly enjoyed the first season. Samuelsson gets a bit theatric for my taste, but he's an excellent chef and easily approaches the question of "what is ethnic food" in many aspects. I need to start streaming the new season.
Marcus has a very interesting biography that you might find at the library, Yes Chef: A Memoir. He also has an interesting website: https://marcussamuelsson.com/
Marcus has a very interesting biography that you might find at the library, Yes Chef: A Memoir. He also has an interesting website: https://marcussamuelsson.com/
His recipes are complicated and enormous in volume. How many is he feeding?
SteveinMN
1-23-20, 10:41pm
His recipes are complicated and enormous in volume. How many is he feeding?
Well, he does run several restaurants. :) I'd cook big complicated recipes if I had a commercial kitchen full of people behind me.
When Samuelsson was running an instance of Aquavit in Minneapolis, I got there as often as my budget would allow. I was very sad to see that restaurant close. Guess Minnesota wasn't yet ready for high-end Scandinavian-informed cuisine. (Still isn't; for as many people of Scandinavian heritage live here, restaurants featuring that cuisine can be counted on the fingers of one hand...)
catherine
1-23-20, 10:46pm
I went on his website and his stuff looks delicious!! I would savor any of the dishes on the home page of his website, and I'd definitely enjoy a Charlie Parker or Springthyme!
I like Rick Bayless and his PBS shows on authentic Mexican cooking. I’ve sampled a couple of his recipes from his web site, but the preparations and ingredients get complicated. It’s a good visual feast to see regardless.
I was very pleased to hear there would be a second season of this show. I greatly enjoyed the first season. Samuelsson gets a bit theatric for my taste, but he's an excellent chef and easily approaches the question of "what is ethnic food" in many aspects. I need to start streaming the new season.
I need to binge-watch the first season. I agree with you about Samuelsson's theatricality "I LOVE THAT!" (He puts together some fab costumes, though.)
I read his book; he has a pretty interesting backstory.
I also like Andrew Zimmern's Delicious Destinations. Like Catherine's husband, I'd love to experience pan-Asian street food in all its glory.
Street food sounds interesting but I have often wondered how safe it is. We have inspections, cooling and temp standards for most of our local food preparation facilities of all kinds. In the hot temperatures of some countries, how is street food kept safe and free from contamination?
I've eaten tamales con elote sitting on a curb in Tijuana, and that never crossed my mind.
I'm of the opinion that exposure to different pathogens is helpful to the microbiome/immune system, and since people aren't dropping like flies from eating street food wherever, I'll go with that. I appreciate our food prep regulations, however.
There are pretty standard rules to follow in foreign countries. And my opinion is that it can be safer and easier to chose what to eat from street vendors than in restaurants where the kitchen is "hidden". In Thailand, they have an organization that reviews restaurants and allows them to put a logo on their signs to indicate quality standards are met.
I actually did not want to know about food prep while in India in 1991 because it was primitive. But we did not get sick and were there 33 days. But we became vegetarians when I could not identify the animal bones on my plate and ate less and less as we found out how the basic ingredients were handled.
rosarugosa
1-24-20, 1:10pm
There are pretty standard rules to follow in foreign countries. And my opinion is that it can be safer and easier to chose what to eat from street vendors than in restaurants where the kitchen is "hidden". In Thailand, they have an organization that reviews restaurants and allows them to put a logo on their signs to indicate quality standards are met.
I actually did not want to know about food prep while in India in 1991 because it was primitive. But we did not get sick and were there 33 days. But we became vegetarians when I could not identify the animal bones on my plate and ate less and less as we found out how the basic ingredients were handled.
Okay, that sounds downright scary!
iris lilies
1-24-20, 3:05pm
I've eaten tamales con elote sitting on a curb in Tijuana, and that never crossed my mind.
I'm of the opinion that exposure to different pathogens is helpful to the microbiome/immune system, and since people aren't dropping like flies from eating street food wherever, I'll go with that. I appreciate our food prep regulations, however.
Dropping dead from food poisoning doesn’t happen often but when you have it you sometimes wish you were dead. I can assure you that traveling overseas we’re having food poisoning it’s awful and no one wants to take that risk.
Experiencing food poisoning is awful. But when you can be exposed to E. coli just by opening a bag of raw spinach, one wonders just how far one has to go to be safe.
Actually, in all the traveling we've done, I've avoided food poisoning after eating sushi at Tokyo's old Tsukiji fish market, conch fritters from the back of a truck in Bermuda, food at hawkers' stalls in Singapore, currywurst at random Schnellimbisse in Germany, berries from farmstands across America, and corn dogs at the State Fair.
I've twice eaten raw oysters and suffered dire GI symptoms afterwards so I don't eat those any more. But either I've been really lucky or eating a lifetime of weird food from all kinds of places has inoculated me.
Experiencing food poisoning is awful. But when you can be exposed to E. coli just by opening a bag of raw spinach, one wonders just how far one has to go to be safe. ...
That's my take on it. I did experience a brief bout of turista in Mexico City, but really--that was to be expected. And I torpedoed myself with some pork past its prime a few months ago (which was totally my fault), but all in all, I haven't had any problems with food poisoning and it's nothing I worry about.
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