Moderators: Jenise, Robin Garr, David M. Bueker
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Jenise wrote: Ali, an Egyptian/American chef, pointing at a plateful of traditional Alexandrian food in his Queens restaurant.
Paul Winalski
Wok Wielder
8494
Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:16 pm
Merrimack, New Hampshire
Paul Winalski wrote:Oh, jeez! Spare me the effing liberal angst politics.
So now your average family dines on what used to be reserved for the nobility, and the rich who can afford it seek out and rhapsodize on what used to be peasant food.
-Paul W.
Paul Winalski
Wok Wielder
8494
Wed Mar 22, 2006 9:16 pm
Merrimack, New Hampshire
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
celia wrote:The other thing I find cute is the word "ethnic food". I grew up in a Chinese household, where the oven was used to store plates, and everything was cooked in a hot wok, or a steamer, or a slow cooker. And that was while being raised in Australia! So to me, ethnic food really is the stuff my anglo husband grew up on - roasts, cakes, cold cereal with milk. I can't tell you how appalled I was the first time I tried rice pudding - ugh.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
Paul Winalski wrote:Oh, jeez! Spare me the effing liberal angst politics.
Nearly all of what haute cuisine calls "delicacies" was originally peasant food created out of sheer desperation.
Jenise wrote:In the U.S., "ethnic food" isn't a put-down at all, I hope it doesn't come across that way. Rather, it's an admiring term for the food of a single cultural group, be that race or country of origin, that is very specifically their personal cuisine, which is very different and to be envied vs. the unspecific mutt or 'white' food as you put it most of us of dubious mixed European heritage grew up on. I'm probably quite typical in that I'm a plain white mutt. No idea who my ancestors were or where we came from, and with no food heritage or tradition beyond whatever my mother learned to cook along the way because her parents were meat and potatoes farm people. Or to put it another way, ethnic = better than what I came from and it's the food I and many people like me (the former white majority) seek out when we go out to eat. I have no cultural food heritage, there is no cuisine that my family considers our own. That's got to be about as bad as it gets. So when I use the term "ethnic cuisine", it doesn't mean "what's not white" but any cuisine with a rich and long history. Yes, Chinese would be one of those, but so would Polish and Russian.
I certainly didn't mean any offence by the "white food" comment - apologies if anyone took umbrage.
Mike Filigenzi
Known for his fashionable hair
8187
Mon Mar 20, 2006 4:43 pm
Sacramento, CA
Stuart Yaniger wrote:I certainly didn't mean any offence by the "white food" comment - apologies if anyone took umbrage.
Isn't umbrage the opposite of white?
celia wrote: I grew up in a Chinese household, where the oven was used to store plates, and everything was cooked in a hot wok, or a steamer, or a slow cooker.
Jenise
FLDG Dishwasher
43589
Tue Mar 21, 2006 2:45 pm
The Pacific Northest Westest
celia wrote:Oh, I didn't mean it as a bad thing, and I certainly didn't mean any offence by the "white food" comment - apologies if anyone took umbrage. What I was amused by was the definer "ethnic" - I see anglosaxon food as a very specific cuisine, so to me
Mike Filigenzi
Known for his fashionable hair
8187
Mon Mar 20, 2006 4:43 pm
Sacramento, CA
Jenise wrote:Aren't you sweet. But I'm serious about the white mutt part: I'm green with envy of people like John Tomasso who grew up in a strong Italian New York family and Ines who was actually born in Germany and you who are Chinese--all of you have inherited a culture, a set of traditions culinarily speaking based on who your parents were and where they were from. Me? Zip. Nada. I only consider myself lucky to have grown up in a large city where some of the foods of other cultures became everyday foods for our family.
Dave R wrote:celia wrote: I grew up in a Chinese household, where the oven was used to store plates, and everything was cooked in a hot wok, or a steamer, or a slow cooker.
That must have been some tasty birthday cake that was made in a wok, steamer or slow cooker.
Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7035
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
Mike Filigenzi wrote:Stuart Yaniger wrote:I certainly didn't mean any offence by the "white food" comment - apologies if anyone took umbrage.
Isn't umbrage the opposite of white?
Would that be "Burnt Umbrage"?
Larry Greenly
Resident Chile Head
7035
Sun Mar 26, 2006 11:37 am
Albuquerque, NM
Bill Spohn
He put the 'bar' in 'barrister'
9971
Tue Mar 21, 2006 7:31 pm
Vancouver BC
celia wrote:I can't tell you how appalled I was the first time I tried rice pudding - ugh.
Bill Spohn wrote:I can take or leave chicken feet and there is a bland pudding-like item (might be Lo Bak Goh) that leaves me shaking my head.
Bob Henrick
Kamado Kommander
3919
Thu Mar 23, 2006 7:35 pm
Lexington, Ky.
celia wrote:Yep, you and BobH and my husband Pete - can't do the chicken's feet. I guess it's something you grow up with - I love them! When you grow up with something, you either love it and crave it for life, or you're so sick of it that you can't stand it. Pete grew up with stews made from cheap (but I think delicious) cuts of meat like lamb neck chops. To this day, he won't eat what he calls "mystery meat stews".
PS. I remember one of the Grumbles (either Bobby or Winger, I think) telling me chickens spend all their time walking in crap, and that I should remember that next time I eat chicken's feet. Now that thought put me off for a few weeks...
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