yes- I grew up asian in MOCO and I clearly remember when the "International aisle" at Giant had italian seasonings and italian food stocked there in the mid-80s. You couldn't buy fresh ginger or garlic either, the garlic came pre-minced and the ginger was powder! We had to go to Maxim's in SS to buy pretty much everything. I remember when American s discovered 'cilantro' and jalapeños, it was game changing to be able to run out and grab those instead of trecking to rockville pike. |
It’s pretty ignorant to accuse cuisines of being “bland.” They have different taste profiles based on the culture and availability of ingredients. |
Yes that’s right … it’s easy to forget if you live in a city with Asian population centers that the US Asian population is small and was suppressed for a long time. |
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A lot of the cost of any restaurant is not related to the food itself. Clearly, a little hole in the wall Chinese takeout in a suburban shop centre has a totally different cost base than a fancy fine dining restaurant in an exclusive destination. People go to the little Chinese place for tasty and cheap food to go. People go to a fine dining establishment for an entirely different experience.
Sure there are techniques involved in Asian cooking but it’s not all rocket science. Loads of Asian cooking is pretty simple. I make stir fries all the time. I’ve also made Thai chilli paste. It’s not hard. |
| All these cuisines have different tiers...there's cheap and expensive in all of them. |
Interestingly I read that lunch buffets (like Indian Buffets) are a way to introduce people in an area to a new cuisine because they can taste a bunch of items from a cuisine that is new to them without having to spend a lot to try the new items. |
It's funny, because I just went to Thailand and visited the Museum of Siam in Bangkok. They had a room on Thai cuisine with a figure on the wall describing how to make massaman curry:
It's crazy how many ingredients and prep go into a 'simple' dish like massaman curry, yet go to any Thai restaurant and most are selling it below $18. Meanwhile, go to an Italian place and they're trying to sell you cacio e pepe for $20+, which is just pasta, pepper, butter, and some cheese. |
| You pay for location. |
Stir frying is harder than boiling boxed pasta, adding olive oil, minced garlic, white wine and some seafood, then charging $35 for fruitti de mare. The act of stir frying may be easy, but doing it well can be difficult, especially if you are working with noodles that can tear easily or clump. Getting the right amount of char and controlling temperature isn’t that straight forward. |
I wonder if science will ever find a cure for this genetic defect. |
NP. Sure, and the prices are higher. What are the prices for the main courses at the places you mentioned (I looked at what I could find online, but I'd like your take on it)? |
Srsly? |
I’ll let you in on a secret - the cheap Thai place is buying jarred curry. |
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WaPo ran articles on this a few years back. The term 'cheap eats' is offensive, because everyone knows you're talking about immigrant foods 95% of the time.
There's simply less premium placed on other cultures' (i.e. outside of Europe) foods due to ingrained ethnocentrism. https://www.washingtonpost.com/goingoutguide/restaurants/my-columns-name-does-a-disservice-to-the-immigrants-whose-food-i-celebrate-so-im-dropping-it/2018/12/31/101a28de-07c8-11e9-85b6-41c0fe0c5b8f_story.html https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/wonk/wp/2016/04/22/the-great-ethnic-food-lie/ |
And that still takes more prep than cacio e pepe, lol. I just looked up an Italian restaurant in the area for fun....$17 for linguini with olive oil and nothing else. It's a ridiculously stupid premium just because it is Italian food. |