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Thread: Chinese food?
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25th January 2011 #1
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Chinese food?
I love my food, and have never been afraid to try wierd and wonderful dishes, I love really hot and spicy food and could never be a vegetarian.
I love Asian food - Indian, Thai, Japanese, Filipino, Indonesian, Malay, but I''ve always disliked Chinese food. Over the years I've been to hundreds of Chinese restaurants in the UK, Europe, USA, even in Hong Kong and Singapore, but I still really dislike it.
What food do you really like and dislike?
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25th January 2011 #2
i love japanese food and western food..and chinese food too since being in a chinese clan, it was forced on us since i can remember..
i love siomai and dumplings..filipino food of course!
but what i don't want to try is indian food..i can only eat pratta and some sauce they dip it in when i was in SG before..but that's it. maybe disliking curry is one reason for that and indian food has lots of curry from what i can smell and see..
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26th January 2011 #3
Curry - YUMMY
Spicy - YUMMY
Hot - YUMMY
Chinese - YUMMY
Rayna - YUMMYKeith Driscoll - Administrator
Managing Director, Win2Win Limited
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27th January 2011 #4
anything non English I like, our food is so rubbish
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27th January 2011 #5
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27th January 2011 #6
I eat most foods that is well cooked,well garnished and i've been able to pronounce the ingredients lol..
what I stay away is most processed foods which is in high majority here in the UK ,ready to eat canned foods with lots of sodium,frozen/ processed meats,fish sticks,frozen dinners, snacks,boxed cakes and cookies,..
what's good is I have a passion for cooking ,so I tend to cook what i desire than eat ready made foods.''Don't be serious..Be Sincere''
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27th January 2011 #7
has to be mexican food for me jalepeno, salsa, chillies anything spicy
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27th January 2011 #8
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Asian in order of preference Chinese, Malay, Pinoy & Indo joint. I don't like Thai or Indian. Like stevie c I'm a bit of a Mexican fan
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27th January 2011 #9
i will try most things but the problem is i am never that hungry when it appears
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27th January 2011 #10
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27th January 2011 #11
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Thinking about it, I like all food - Asian, European, British, American, Mexican, Indian ...etc, it's just chinese food i have a real problem with
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31st January 2011 #12
Thai , Malay , etc etc just cooked some Kung Po chicken for lunch and its Masrap !!
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31st January 2011 #13
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I'm really not a fussy eater. Anything tasty and freshly cooked. Luckily Carina is a great cook.
Had some fantastic meals in Japan.
My fav would be anything from the ocean.
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31st January 2011 #14
Used to enjoy going to Chinese Restaurants - British style - but, having sampled the many [other] *delights of 15 days' holiday in China itself five years ago, I cannot honestly say that the actual cuisine of the World's 2nd-largest nation was one of *them.
Two weeks of never being entirely sure what was served-up ... even in the "poshest" of their hotels ... proved too much of a challenge for my palate
... and I made a point of consuming as many as three helpings of the English buffet-style breakfasts on offer each morning - in case I didn't fancy the fare being dished up on the carousel tables at lunchtimes.
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31st January 2011 #15
There's quite a substantial difference between "OUR" Oriental-style food and theirs you know, believe me!
Here, for instance, the rest of the ingredients (most of which we've gradually become familiar with) are placed on a bed of [usually] long-grain rice ... whereas (in China, at least) it's the other way round, and the bowl of rice served afterwards, tends to be more akin to pudding rice - thicker-grained, sticky ... and full of starch.
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31st January 2011 #16
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I lived in an industrial area of China for 4 months. (work related) A small town of 1 million people. I think I was the only westerner. Got stared at and avoided every day.
Some of the worst food I EVER had. Both in terms of smell and tatse. Not a single place for western style food
As you say Arthur, no way to ever really know what your eating.
You can try to guess........ but best not to
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31st January 2011 #17
First time ever in china I got an alien travel permit as some areas were off-limits,visited some great places but ate some odd food,I remember munching on Yak when on the tibetan plateau only an hour after I saw it getting its throat cut,also had a 10 course meal in Kashgar every course of which was fried in batter including the watermelon desert
Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on.
The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair. The beauty of a woman is seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. True beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It's the passion that she shows to the outside world.
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31st January 2011 #18
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Same as me Arthur, I've been very surprised by the offerings in Hong Kong and Singapore, as much as I love travelling, I also love sampling the local foods on offer when on my travels. A bowl of pig ear or pig organ soup, fat and gristle or boiled pig trotters in a watery oily liquid doesnt count as food in my book
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31st January 2011 #19
Some great food in Honkers,you just have to know where to look,huge chasm of difference between chinese food in HK and chinese food in Xinjiang for example,its a big country with lots of influences,I heard a turkish dialect spoken in Kashgar as its on the old silk road route.The foods edible
Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on.
The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair. The beauty of a woman is seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. True beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It's the passion that she shows to the outside world.
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31st January 2011 #20
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The only redeeming thing about chinese food is crispy duck
I love it, forget the spring rolls and spring onions, give me a plate of duck on its own and I'll lick the plate clean
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31st January 2011 #21
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31st January 2011 #22siopao
I also found a load of rat skins in a gutter downtown cebu,remember star meat
Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on.
The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair. The beauty of a woman is seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. True beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It's the passion that she shows to the outside world.
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31st January 2011 #23
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5th February 2011 #24
Pinoy cuisine at its finest,sorry for the poor quality of the pics but taken on a mobile-phone camera,its a halo or monitor lizard,caught in a whip-snare near Davao international airport,eaten with gusto
I have seen its larger brethren on Komodo and Rinca in indo,wouldnt fancy trying to snare one of those however
Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on.
The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair. The beauty of a woman is seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. True beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It's the passion that she shows to the outside world.
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5th February 2011 #25
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How did it taste Tawi, yeah right I don't fancy getting too close to a Komodo either
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5th February 2011 #26
ARE Komodo's even edable?
They kill their prey by a small bite and their saliva is so bacterially violent, the prey die from infection. Would you really want to eat one ??
If you want your dreams to come true ...... first you have to wake up
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5th February 2011 #27
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As long as it costs less than a pound and I've cooked it, and washed what I'm going to eat it with, I'm happy.
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5th February 2011 #28
Komodo bacteria is in their mouths and I would be eating it,not giving it the kiss of life
When I went it was when visitors were still abkle to buy a live goat and "Feed" them,glad the guides had those long forked branches,I didnt realise why they were carrying them as we walked along the track leading the bleating goat till several popped out alerted by their "Feeding bell"
It was ok english,eaten a few of them in the past,they are edible and better than nowtI will see if I can find some pics later of the Yak in Tibet
Sometimes you're flush and sometimes you're bust, and when you're up, it's never as good as it seems, and when you're down, you never think you'll be up again. But life goes on.
The beauty of a woman is not in the clothes she wears, the figure that she carries, or the way she combs her hair. The beauty of a woman is seen in her eyes, because that is the doorway to her heart, the place where love resides. True beauty in a woman is reflected in her soul. It's the passion that she shows to the outside world.
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