Anonymous wrote:Soft shell crabs! -lifelong Marylander
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beets. Every year I’m tempted to buy them because they’re such a pretty color. And then I cook them and remember they taste like dirt.
Also natto. If it smells rotten, I cannot put it in my mouth, I’m sorry.
Like cilantro, beets have a genetic component. They taste great to some people and literally like dirt to others, and it’s not a matter of taste, it is actually how the brain receives it. Like cilantro literally tastes like soap for people who are genetically predisposed to taste it that way.
This explains things. I have had people go on and on about how great beets are, so I have tried to like them and just can’t.
I do like cilantro.
Ah lightbulb moment! Beets taste like dirt PP here. I am intensely dislike cilantro although I don’t think I have the soap gene because it doesn’t taste like soap to me, it just tastes bad. What do beets taste like if you don’t have the dirt gene? I’m now super curious. I always assumed people just like the pink dirt flavour.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beets. Every year I’m tempted to buy them because they’re such a pretty color. And then I cook them and remember they taste like dirt.
Also natto. If it smells rotten, I cannot put it in my mouth, I’m sorry.
Like cilantro, beets have a genetic component. They taste great to some people and literally like dirt to others, and it’s not a matter of taste, it is actually how the brain receives it. Like cilantro literally tastes like soap for people who are genetically predisposed to taste it that way.
This explains things. I have had people go on and on about how great beets are, so I have tried to like them and just can’t.
I do like cilantro.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m also vegetarian and while I don’t find it weird that people (or other carnivores) eat meat, I do find it strange that little kids are taught to think of farm animals as cute cuddly creatures but not give a thought to the fact that they are mostly being raised for slaughter.
Lol. My parents live on a farm, and my kids grew up visiting them several times a year. We were always very open and forthright about the destiny of those animals, but I still remember the light bulb going off in toddler DC's head one night at dinner. We're having chicken for dinner ... I fed the chickens this morning ... they're the same thing???!?
Don’t forget there’s also chicken, grapes and tarragon. People used to think it fancy. Different times.Anonymous wrote:Waldorf salad- celery, apples, mayonnaise and sugar
Anonymous wrote:I’m also vegetarian and while I don’t find it weird that people (or other carnivores) eat meat, I do find it strange that little kids are taught to think of farm animals as cute cuddly creatures but not give a thought to the fact that they are mostly being raised for slaughter.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Beets. Every year I’m tempted to buy them because they’re such a pretty color. And then I cook them and remember they taste like dirt.
Also natto. If it smells rotten, I cannot put it in my mouth, I’m sorry.
Like cilantro, beets have a genetic component. They taste great to some people and literally like dirt to others, and it’s not a matter of taste, it is actually how the brain receives it. Like cilantro literally tastes like soap for people who are genetically predisposed to taste it that way.