Anonymous wrote:I've spent years in Delhi and months at a time in Peru and I've only gotten a stomach bug once, in Mumbai, and it really wasn't that bad - no vomiting, just some trouble with digestion. In fact, I think the only time I got proper food poisoning was at Yosemite National Park back in the 90s -- so, there you go.
That said, there's a reason so many Indians AND Peruvians think home-cooked food is healthiest, and will scold you for eating too much at restaurants.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:That said, there's a reason so many Indians AND Peruvians think home-cooked food is healthiest, and will scold you for eating too much at restaurants.
That is really interesting observation. Do they get sick from restaurant food as well or do they think that the cooking standards are not the same as at home?
Anonymous wrote:Vegas - food poisoning from Chipotle that sent me to the ER
No issues in India, Europe, China, Taiwan, Singapore, Malaysia, etc, but I will never eat at Chipotle again.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've spent years in Delhi and months at a time in Peru and I've only gotten a stomach bug once, in Mumbai, and it really wasn't that bad - no vomiting, just some trouble with digestion. In fact, I think the only time I got proper food poisoning was at Yosemite National Park back in the 90s -- so, there you go.
That said, there's a reason so many Indians AND Peruvians think home-cooked food is healthiest, and will scold you for eating too much at restaurants.
What do the restaurant workers do differently at work than when they're at home? This makes no sense.
I haven't been myself, but the folks I know who have been to Peru, got sick as a dog while there. One guy passed da fuq out and barely remembers anything. He said the locals made him drink some kind of tea concoction to get better. That's intense.