Sorry if I wasn't clear: I was there, and Wikipedia wasn't. This was fifty years ago, before gyros was available here; and though it was basically the same thing, it wasn't called gyros, but doner ma pita.Travis B. wrote:Actually, to quote the wiki:And probably it was real lamb-- a lot of the inauthenticity problem is just bad local substitutions, and often the real stuff is available these days.
Wikipedia wrote: In Greece, it is normally made with pork[6] or sometimes with chicken, whilst beef and lamb are also used in other countries.
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I was in Greece about twelve years ago. IIRC they called it pita (I don't really remember) and the meat was lamb. I don't remember any pork variant (though I suppose there must have been one.)
Gyros is the cheapest, commonest kind of fast food in France. De call it grec (in ans around Paris) or kebab (in most other places.) Nobody knows what the meat is, though. Nobody really wants to know, either
Gyros is the cheapest, commonest kind of fast food in France. De call it grec (in ans around Paris) or kebab (in most other places.) Nobody knows what the meat is, though. Nobody really wants to know, either
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I assume its even easier to get authentic chinese cuisine in America given the number of food videos i've seen there. Doesn't change the fact immigrants adapted Chinese food to Anglo tastes in these countries.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:23 pmI've eaten bad Chinese food in China that was on a par with bad Chinese food in the USA. (I once walked out of a restaurant our tour guide had chosen for us for exactly this reason.) I've also had amazing Chinese food in both places--the main difference being that I paid considerably more for those dishes in the USA than I did in China. The striking difference to me between dining both places wasn't the quality but the selection: Naturally, the restaurants in China offered a slew of dishes which (for various reasons) you can't find in the USA.
And you're referring to exactly what i mean by American-Chinese cuisine.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:23 pmThat may be true in France. Here it depends what you like. I'm not a fan of traditional Cantonese-American food (which at this point is a century-and-a-half old--older than many "traditional" dishes served in China), but I have friends who are. They'd probably be disappointed with the food at your shouty-Mandarin restaurant.Ares Land wrote:Over here, a good Chinese restaurant is one where you don't understand the menu and the customers are shouting in Mandarin.
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oh the horror!foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 7:10 pmI assume its even easier to get authentic chinese cuisine in America given the number of food videos i've seen there. Doesn't change the fact immigrants adapted Chinese food to Anglo tastes in these countries.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:23 pmI've eaten bad Chinese food in China that was on a par with bad Chinese food in the USA. (I once walked out of a restaurant our tour guide had chosen for us for exactly this reason.) I've also had amazing Chinese food in both places--the main difference being that I paid considerably more for those dishes in the USA than I did in China. The striking difference to me between dining both places wasn't the quality but the selection: Naturally, the restaurants in China offered a slew of dishes which (for various reasons) you can't find in the USA.
though that makes your dislike of British food even more puzzling...unless you seem to think of British food like Satan corrupting any foods and cuisines it comes into contact with.
modified Cantonese food? gee, what do you think the Cantonese have been doing with all those Han and Mandarin (& Manchu etc) rulers over the centuries? why, modifying what the new lords brought into the Cantonese lands & modifying Cantonese foods to suit the tastebuds of their new lords.And you're referring to exactly what i mean by American-Chinese cuisine.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:23 pmThat may be true in France. Here it depends what you like. I'm not a fan of traditional Cantonese-American food (which at this point is a century-and-a-half old--older than many "traditional" dishes served in China), but I have friends who are. They'd probably be disappointed with the food at your shouty-Mandarin restaurant.Ares Land wrote:Over here, a good Chinese restaurant is one where you don't understand the menu and the customers are shouting in Mandarin.
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Somehow I can't help but roll my eyes at the insistence that people X's Y-X food is inauthentic (and thus implied to be inferior).
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
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I don't know if any participants in this discussion would say any food or cuisine is inferior...i think the closest any of us has come to actually defining the word "inauthentic" is this:
...which just requires us to know what "lacking expression" means.Not real cuisine equals unrefined or lacking expression
(i mean, i know parts of the skull can and oft do get eaten in a number of cuisines, but I never thought our food needed to display expressiveness)
though yes, i do hold myself as one of the guilty party who collectively and individually have not defined "inauthentic"...though for my own part, its because I think the only inauthentic food is the plastic stuff that is purely decorative to look like food.
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Now, some people do a damn good job at making plastic food!
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
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Inauthentic = Not whats made in your home countries. I'm pretty sure in the context of anglo countries authentic means made better given the examples i had (i need to try mexican tacos or real chinese cuisine tho) but maybe in say Korea there adaptations or Japanese and Chinese cuisines are just as goodkeenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 8:51 pmI don't know if any participants in this discussion would say any food or cuisine is inferior...i think the closest any of us has come to actually defining the word "inauthentic" is this:...which just requires us to know what "lacking expression" means.Not real cuisine equals unrefined or lacking expression
(i mean, i know parts of the skull can and oft do get eaten in a number of cuisines, but I never thought our food needed to display expressiveness)
though yes, i do hold myself as one of the guilty party who collectively and individually have not defined "inauthentic"...though for my own part, its because I think the only inauthentic food is the plastic stuff that is purely decorative to look like food.
Unrefined or Lacking Expression = Anything without significant modifications after the cultivation stage or cooked with basic techniques and say no sauce (like steamed salmon in an oven). Cultivation at the higher ends probably counts as "Expression" see japanese expensive fruits or coffee or tea made in different countries and anything like say prosciutto, cheese or wine is part of a countries cuisine but isn't handled in say the restaurant proper other than selection. And sourcing good quality ingredients is part of the skills of running a restaurant which can make or break certain dishes (avocado or anything with raw meat/fish) but i don't think the average tomato made in italy is grown with italian specific methods.
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Actually i think that's American cuisine (not that it doesn't apply to an extent to all anglo countries but it usually originates in the US). Though its not like British people haven't made versions of other peoples cuisine (fish and chips, britsh curry and tikka masala the third of which is actually quite nice).keenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 8:16 pmoh the horror!foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 7:10 pmI assume its even easier to get authentic chinese cuisine in America given the number of food videos i've seen there. Doesn't change the fact immigrants adapted Chinese food to Anglo tastes in these countries.Linguoboy wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 2:23 pm
I've eaten bad Chinese food in China that was on a par with bad Chinese food in the USA. (I once walked out of a restaurant our tour guide had chosen for us for exactly this reason.) I've also had amazing Chinese food in both places--the main difference being that I paid considerably more for those dishes in the USA than I did in China. The striking difference to me between dining both places wasn't the quality but the selection: Naturally, the restaurants in China offered a slew of dishes which (for various reasons) you can't find in the USA.
though that makes your dislike of British food even more puzzling...unless you seem to think of British food like Satan corrupting any foods and cuisines it comes into contact with.
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In essence you're saying that the only good food a country (or shall I say, an English-speaking country, from what you indicate here, which implies a lot) can make is that which they can stamp their own protected designation of origin (PDO) on - and which, in the case of places like the US, Canada, and Australia is not a whole lot, since much of the food in such places originally came from somewhere else.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pm Inauthentic = Not whats made in your home countries. I'm pretty sure in the context of anglo countries authentic means made better given the examples i had (i need to try mexican tacos or real chinese cuisine tho) but maybe in say Korea there adaptations or Japanese and Chinese cuisines are just as good
To me, PDO's can go straight to hell, every last one of them. They really are just a protectionist scheme that drives up prices and privileges the few who happen to own land in such-and-such place.
Umm you have just completely redefined "unrefined", which in reality is just a snooty derogatory term that privileged people use to look down on whatever they feel like.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pm Unrefined or Lacking Expression = Anything without significant modifications after the cultivation stage or cooked with basic techniques and say no sauce (like steamed salmon in an oven). Cultivation at the higher ends probably counts as "Expression" see japanese expensive fruits or coffee or tea made in different countries and anything like say prosciutto, cheese or wine is part of a countries cuisine but isn't handled in say the restaurant proper other than selection. And sourcing good quality ingredients is part of the skills of running a restaurant which can make or break certain dishes (avocado or anything with raw meat/fish) but i don't think the average tomato made in italy is grown with italian specific methods.
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
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I never said you can't get "authentic" cuisine outside of a given country. PDO doesn't exist outside the EU or UK but you can still get "Authentic" Italian food here (i dunno maybe there's some kinda giant conspiracy to convince everyone that a rogue grandma in Italy didn't invent the style of pizza Americans eat when not going to "Authentic" places) and maybe Pizza Prosciutto or Pizza Tartuffo wasn't invented in Italy but America in the 21st century but both use Italian ingredients like Prosciutto and Pancetta as opposed to Pizza Hawaiian or Vegorama and the former is generally made in a wood fired oven like in Naples. At least in Anglo countries different styles of cuisine are the result of different migrations the what is called "Authentic" here only started to emerge in the 21st century.Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:15 pmIn essence you're saying that the only good food a country (or shall I say, an English-speaking country, from what you indicate here, which implies a lot) can make is that which they can stamp their own protected designation of origin (PDO) on - and which, in the case of places like the US, Canada, and Australia is not a whole lot, since much of the food in such places originally came from somewhere else.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pm Inauthentic = Not whats made in your home countries. I'm pretty sure in the context of anglo countries authentic means made better given the examples i had (i need to try mexican tacos or real chinese cuisine tho) but maybe in say Korea there adaptations or Japanese and Chinese cuisines are just as good
To me, PDO's can go straight to hell, every last one of them. They really are just a protectionist scheme that drives up prices and privileges the few who happen to own land in such-and-such place.
What do you think Unrefined means in the context of iron or coal? I don't care about pretentious usages of words.Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:15 pmUmm you have just completely redefined "unrefined", which in reality is just a snooty derogatory term that privileged people use to look down on whatever they feel like.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pm Unrefined or Lacking Expression = Anything without significant modifications after the cultivation stage or cooked with basic techniques and say no sauce (like steamed salmon in an oven). Cultivation at the higher ends probably counts as "Expression" see japanese expensive fruits or coffee or tea made in different countries and anything like say prosciutto, cheese or wine is part of a countries cuisine but isn't handled in say the restaurant proper other than selection. And sourcing good quality ingredients is part of the skills of running a restaurant which can make or break certain dishes (avocado or anything with raw meat/fish) but i don't think the average tomato made in italy is grown with italian specific methods.
Last edited by foxcatdog on Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:59 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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ah, so you'd be willing to eat pawpaws and Three Sisters if I send it to you? its authentic in my country, to use your definition; and you say you only like authentic food.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pmInauthentic = Not whats made in your home countries.keenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 8:51 pmI don't know if any participants in this discussion would say any food or cuisine is inferior...i think the closest any of us has come to actually defining the word "inauthentic" is this:...which just requires us to know what "lacking expression" means.Not real cuisine equals unrefined or lacking expression
(i mean, i know parts of the skull can and oft do get eaten in a number of cuisines, but I never thought our food needed to display expressiveness)
though yes, i do hold myself as one of the guilty party who collectively and individually have not defined "inauthentic"...though for my own part, its because I think the only inauthentic food is the plastic stuff that is purely decorative to look like food.
dear gods, do you think its as simple as that? the type of smoke you use, imparts a lot of different flavors...as well as whatever you prepare the salmon with (with or without stuffing it or scoring it & putting things in the cuts) before steaming it.Unrefined or Lacking Expression = Anything without significant modifications after the cultivation stage or cooked with basic techniques and say no sauce (like steamed salmon in an oven).
I'd wager an Italian farmer would argue otherwise. heck, a farmer in Naples would be insulted that you think theres no difference between him and a farmer in Milan.but i don't think the average tomato made in italy is grown with italian specific methods.
ps: I sincerely do hope I'm mistaken in thinking I'm starting to sniff a whiff of Orientalism...basically, Anglo and English is bad, exotic lands make their own foods best, importing ingredients is sinful.
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O.Ofoxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:41 pm I never said you can't get "authentic" cuisine outside of a given country. PDO doesn't exist outside the EU or UK but you can still get "Authentic" Italian food here (i dunno maybe there's some kinda giant conspiracy to convince everyone that a rogue grandma in Italy didn't invent the style of pizza Americans eat when not going to "Authentic" places) and maybe Pizza Prosciutto or Pizza Tartuffo wasn't invented in Italy but America in the 21st century but both use Italian ingredients like Prosciutto and Pancetta as opposed to Pizza Hawaiian or Vegorama and is generally made in a wood fired oven like in Naples.
Are you shiteing me? (pardon my french).......have you ever actually been inside a pizza restaurant like Little Caesars, Papa Johns, Dominos, or just about anybody else? Hawaiian Pizza is most definately on their menus, and none of them have wood fired ovens.
and as Methos says, "And you adopt it as a lifestyle because it was trendy when you were a kid." read: its certainly important to you, however recent you say it is.At least in Anglo countries different styles of cuisine are the result of different migrations the what is called "Authentic" here only started to emerge in the 21st century.
nobody said anything about pretentious useages...you were just called a pretentious person. I'm pretty sure there's a difference...maybe.What do you think Unrefined means in the context of iron or coal? I don't care about pretentious usages of words.Travis B. wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:15 pmUmm you have just completely redefined "unrefined", which in reality is just a snooty derogatory term that privileged people use to look down on whatever they feel like.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pm Unrefined or Lacking Expression = Anything without significant modifications after the cultivation stage or cooked with basic techniques and say no sauce (like steamed salmon in an oven). Cultivation at the higher ends probably counts as "Expression" see japanese expensive fruits or coffee or tea made in different countries and anything like say prosciutto, cheese or wine is part of a countries cuisine but isn't handled in say the restaurant proper other than selection. And sourcing good quality ingredients is part of the skills of running a restaurant which can make or break certain dishes (avocado or anything with raw meat/fish) but i don't think the average tomato made in italy is grown with italian specific methods.
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So I'm not the only one who has gotten this very impression...
Yaaludinuya siima d'at yiseka wohadetafa gaare.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
Ennadinut'a gaare d'ate eetatadi siiman.
T'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa t'awraa.
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Cuisine of primitive peoples or even what ordinary people eat in premodern times or when impoverished is never mentioned i don't think Papua New Guineaneans who subsist of sugarcane (which tastes like sugar on it's own) or taro/yams is any good. Or that Nenets reindeer is good eating. Maybe Akutaq (and it also meets the minimun requirements for Refinement) tastes good but i don't think plain seal blubber would be any good. And Pumpkin is usually the best stuff you serve in a traditional roast here though i still don't eat it.keenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:46 pmah, so you'd be willing to eat pawpaws and Three Sisters if I send it to you? its authentic in my country, to use your definition; and you say you only like authentic food.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 9:55 pmInauthentic = Not whats made in your home countries.keenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 8:51 pm I don't know if any participants in this discussion would say any food or cuisine is inferior...i think the closest any of us has come to actually defining the word "inauthentic" is this:
...which just requires us to know what "lacking expression" means.
(i mean, i know parts of the skull can and oft do get eaten in a number of cuisines, but I never thought our food needed to display expressiveness)
though yes, i do hold myself as one of the guilty party who collectively and individually have not defined "inauthentic"...though for my own part, its because I think the only inauthentic food is the plastic stuff that is purely decorative to look like food.
None of which anyone considers outside of high end restaurants or protected designations. My oven doesn't have settings for different kinds of smoke (nor does it even apply when steaming). Also i would consider Smoked Salmon a refined product.
Well i'll just have to try tomatoes in italy vs spain vs france when i go there.
Frankly i've also set out to prove only Anglo cuisine (or perhaps Anglo and Continental Germanic) is bad and that other white countries have fine cuisine.
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wow, and now you go from orientalism to colonialism, insulting the lowly non-ordinary peoples who need to be rescued from their worse-than-British diets.foxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 11:40 pmCuisine of primitive peoples[ or even what ordinary people
never mentioned by whom? I can find lots of videos about what people ate in pre-modern and improvished times, as well as books.eat in premodern times or when impoverished is never mentioned
so the homeland of bananas doesn't have any good food, even with all the pigs they raise?i don't think Papua New Guineaneans who subsist of sugarcane (which tastes like sugar on it's own) or taro/yams is any good.
if that was your attempt to answer my question about Three Sisters, you still haven't answered it.And Pumpkin is usually the best stuff you serve in a traditional roast here though i still don't eat it.
None of which anyone considers outside of high end restaurants or protected designations.[/quote[
'high end restaurants'? are you referring to smoking causing flavors, or are you talking about scoring a salmon?
I'm seriously trying not to laugh here. Have you seriously never had BBQ? with that (and I don't doubt a number of other cuisines around the world), the flavor of the smoked food changes depending on what kind of wood you use.My oven doesn't have settings for different kinds of smoke (nor does it even apply when steaming).
and yes, that includes pizza.
I did say that. though I didn't think you'd use a word so mild as "bad".Frankly i've also set out to prove only Anglo cuisine (or perhaps Anglo and Continental Germanic) is bad
because you consider them foreign and exotic and not supposed to import spices or flavors or anything else from elsewhere. thats what impression I'm getting.and that other white countries have fine cuisine.
Last edited by keenir on Tue Aug 23, 2022 12:03 am, edited 1 time in total.
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I reworded it to clarifykeenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:51 pmO.Ofoxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:41 pm I never said you can't get "authentic" cuisine outside of a given country. PDO doesn't exist outside the EU or UK but you can still get "Authentic" Italian food here (i dunno maybe there's some kinda giant conspiracy to convince everyone that a rogue grandma in Italy didn't invent the style of pizza Americans eat when not going to "Authentic" places) and maybe Pizza Prosciutto or Pizza Tartuffo wasn't invented in Italy but America in the 21st century but both use Italian ingredients like Prosciutto and Pancetta as opposed to Pizza Hawaiian or Vegorama and is generally made in a wood fired oven like in Naples.
Are you shiteing me? (pardon my french).......have you ever actually been inside a pizza restaurant like Little Caesars, Papa Johns, Dominos, or just about anybody else? Hawaiian Pizza is most definately on their menus, and none of them have wood fired ovens.
Besides "Pretentiousness" Anglo countries are much fatter than say France or Italy and i think the difference is partly due to cuisine.keenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:51 pmand as Methos says, "And you adopt it as a lifestyle because it was trendy when you were a kid." read: its certainly important to you, however recent you say it is.At least in Anglo countries different styles of cuisine are the result of different migrations the what is called "Authentic" here only started to emerge in the 21st century.
nobody said anything about pretentious useages...you were just called a pretentious person. I'm pretty sure there's a difference...maybe.What do you think Unrefined means in the context of iron or coal? I don't care about pretentious usages of words.
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*i goes to look*foxcatdog wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 12:14 amI reworded it to clarifykeenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:51 pmO.Ofoxcatdog wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:41 pm I never said you can't get "authentic" cuisine outside of a given country. PDO doesn't exist outside the EU or UK but you can still get "Authentic" Italian food here (i dunno maybe there's some kinda giant conspiracy to convince everyone that a rogue grandma in Italy didn't invent the style of pizza Americans eat when not going to "Authentic" places) and maybe Pizza Prosciutto or Pizza Tartuffo wasn't invented in Italy but America in the 21st century but both use Italian ingredients like Prosciutto and Pancetta as opposed to Pizza Hawaiian or Vegorama and is generally made in a wood fired oven like in Naples.
Are you shiteing me? (pardon my french).......have you ever actually been inside a pizza restaurant like Little Caesars, Papa Johns, Dominos, or just about anybody else? Hawaiian Pizza is most definately on their menus, and none of them have wood fired ovens.
nope, it doesn't improve your case any when you say
"migrations"?? My Welsh ancestors would love to drop you in a mine sometime and see how well you enjoy their authentic daily grind, food included in that.At least in Anglo countries different styles of cuisine are the result of different migrations the what is called "Authentic" here only started to emerge in the 21st century.
so now you're saying you're not only pretentous, but you're also a chunky individual? that doesn't actually reduce the severity of your comments of the orientalism and colonialism flavors.Besides "Pretentiousness" Anglo countries are much fatter than say France or Italy and i think the difference is partly due to cuisine.keenir wrote: ↑Mon Aug 22, 2022 10:51 pmand as Methos says, "And you adopt it as a lifestyle because it was trendy when you were a kid." read: its certainly important to you, however recent you say it is.At least in Anglo countries different styles of cuisine are the result of different migrations the what is called "Authentic" here only started to emerge in the 21st century.nobody said anything about pretentious useages...you were just called a pretentious person. I'm pretty sure there's a difference...maybe.What do you think Unrefined means in the context of iron or coal? I don't care about pretentious usages of words.
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Maybe salmon or deer with american berries is nicer than most british cuisine. I suspect it is and which is why i think nordic cuisine would be better than it and german cuisine.
Premodern agriculturalists have access to less variety of foods than modern ones do and premodern hunter gatherers don't have access to the same consistency of ingredients.
Banana is nice i do admit but one of the worse things i ever remember having was a "pancake" in oceania which was to oil and only vaguely flavourful.
I do not like sweetcorn and maize fills the same role as any other grain tho i prefer rice. I have never tried climbing beans. I did answer your question partially and relevantly.
Which is not relevant in steaming and no i have never eaten bbq.
I never said Anglos couldn't cook just that the cuisine they have been given is bad.
Premodern agriculturalists have access to less variety of foods than modern ones do and premodern hunter gatherers don't have access to the same consistency of ingredients.
Banana is nice i do admit but one of the worse things i ever remember having was a "pancake" in oceania which was to oil and only vaguely flavourful.
I do not like sweetcorn and maize fills the same role as any other grain tho i prefer rice. I have never tried climbing beans. I did answer your question partially and relevantly.
Which is not relevant in steaming and no i have never eaten bbq.
I never said Anglos couldn't cook just that the cuisine they have been given is bad.
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Besides saying that i literally didn't mean what you insinuated.
Did Americans eat "Authentic" Italian food before 21st century foodie culture?
I'm thin as a stick but statistics show anglo countries are amongst the fattest in the world.
Did Americans eat "Authentic" Italian food before 21st century foodie culture?
I'm thin as a stick but statistics show anglo countries are amongst the fattest in the world.