Anonymous wrote:Troll fail.
Anonymous wrote:OP -- I'm a picky eater too, but part of being a picky eater is knowing how to make it work in the real world. What is it that you do for a living that you never have to deal with business lunches/dinners in fancy restaurants that do not feature roasted chicken and mashed potatoes?
I was feeling your pain until you mentioned the "exotic" foods that she flies in from other countries as being caprese salad, Indian, and Mexican. While all those may be "ethnic," they hardly qualify as ethnic and are pretty much mainstream now, esp in the big cities. I'm a picky eater too and I find that in order to not stand out in a bad way, I can only tell people 1 thing I absolutely won't eat and find a way to deal with everything else; for me that's sushi (which gets a ton of judgment), but if you say "I'm up for anything besides sushi, that leaves a LOT of different options." You cannot politely say "well I'm up for anything besides sushi, Indian, Mexican, Italian, Thai, or Chinese" because the host will be thinking WTF.
I'm someone who on my own would never order anything besides burgers, pizza, or pasta marinara. There are a LOT of things I don't like -- for me mostly having to do with sauces and cheeses -- I still think plain food w/o too much added on is best. Yet through years of eating out, I've grown to LOVE Turkish/Lebanese/Middle Eastern, and I like Chinese/Thai, Indian, and Mexican. Granted I tend to eat the simplest thing off of each of those menus, but I eat enough things to make it work (chicken shawrma (sp?); any kind of chicken/tofu with veggies; paneer tikka masala or a few other Indian vegetarian dishes; chicken or steak fajitas etc.)
It can be done and the reason it isn't working for you is because you are refusing to try stuff and going in with an "ew that looks like $hit" attitude. You have to try stuff on a repeated basis and your tastebuds start to figure it out. As for your aversion to spice, I'm sorry but that's just lack of exposure to anything besides bland chicken. So what if you ate Indian food and had to gulp water -- you eat it a few more times, you'll get used to it and not need water.
For this dinner, I'd decline. I'm sorry but it's embarrassing for a grown adult to go to a dinner and eat plain naan and water while everyone is chowing down on chicken tikka and whatever else. Of course your hostess comments -- it's REALLY obvious that you're not eating and don't like the food. It's not like you're a 4 yr old and your mom can say "oh Joey had a late snack, he must not be hungry." You're a grown woman who should understand that part of etiquette and socializing includes eating things you may not love, so as to take the focus off the food and to be able to socialize; you're not there for a meal, you're there to hang with your friends -- not much hanging out with happen if your friends are constantly saying "oh why aren't you eating, can I get you something else?"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, give us a rundown of your typical daily diet. I'm really curious. Have you traveled much in the U.S.? Ever been outside the country? I'm curious about people who've never learned to expand their palate. It's really weird, IMO.
I've traveled a bit through the US (though mostly each coast and little in the middle). I've been to Mexico and Canada once each.
For breakfast I'll eat yogurt (fruit on the bottom or a smoothie yogurt) and crackers, or scrambled eggs and a bagel, oatmeal with sliced banana, french toast, pancakes, etc.
Lunch: most often a chicken caesar salad (no dressing), matzoh ball soup, won ton soup, yogurt and a piece of toast
Dinner: a bunch of variations of chicken (marinated chicken breasts, chicken parm, baked eighths, fried, etc.), seafood, cheese ravioli or tortellini, variations of steak (flank, filet, etc.), pizza, lamb chops, chinese food
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, give us a rundown of your typical daily diet. I'm really curious. Have you traveled much in the U.S.? Ever been outside the country? I'm curious about people who've never learned to expand their palate. It's really weird, IMO.
I've traveled a bit through the US (though mostly each coast and little in the middle). I've been to Mexico and Canada once each.
For breakfast I'll eat yogurt (fruit on the bottom or a smoothie yogurt) and crackers, or scrambled eggs and a bagel, oatmeal with sliced banana, french toast, pancakes, etc.
Lunch: most often a chicken caesar salad (no dressing), matzoh ball soup, won ton soup, yogurt and a piece of toast
Dinner: a bunch of variations of chicken (marinated chicken breasts, chicken parm, baked eighths, fried, etc.), seafood, cheese ravioli or tortellini, variations of steak (flank, filet, etc.), pizza, lamb chops, chinese food
Anonymous wrote:OP, give us a rundown of your typical daily diet. I'm really curious. Have you traveled much in the U.S.? Ever been outside the country? I'm curious about people who've never learned to expand their palate. It's really weird, IMO.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I wonder if these people who are calling the OP unrefined and immature are the same who have kids or understanding for kids who have sensory issues. And, if so, if they think that all kids will just outgrow those issues one day. I don't know any adult person who is picky just because. I am and, if I had to choose, I would definitely make the pickiness go away. It would make my life easier, interactions easier and I wouldn't get judged all the time.
I agree that people are not required to make food specially for me and, because of that, I rarely go to other people's houses for dinner. And I'm okay with that. But the bitchiness and judgement is really unnecessary.
+1. Lay off, folks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wow, OP -- water and tortilla chips? You really couldn't bring yourself to try anything else on the menu?
Yours is more than a food preference or aversion, it's an illness. Adults learn to broaden their palette and try new things.
I HAVE tried new things. I just don't like a lot of them.The first time I ate strawberries with vinegar on them I (didn't know about the vinegar and) thought they'd gone horribly rotten. When I was in Mexico I tried chicken mole even though it looked like liquid shit on top of chicken. It tasted fine. I had an Indian roommate and tried her food numerous times and always wound up gulping tons of water. I was once given a complementary glass of OJ at a restaurant. When I took a sip it tasted wrong and mentioned it to the friend I was brunching with - she tasted it and laughed at me - it had champagne in it. I tried quinoa (didn't like it), some pasta dish my sister made (it would have been okay without the white sauce) - I try things regularly.
Anonymous wrote:I wonder if these people who are calling the OP unrefined and immature are the same who have kids or understanding for kids who have sensory issues. And, if so, if they think that all kids will just outgrow those issues one day. I don't know any adult person who is picky just because. I am and, if I had to choose, I would definitely make the pickiness go away. It would make my life easier, interactions easier and I wouldn't get judged all the time.
I agree that people are not required to make food specially for me and, because of that, I rarely go to other people's houses for dinner. And I'm okay with that. But the bitchiness and judgement is really unnecessary.