Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:indian, ethiopian, and cambodian food
I think the problem is you.
NP but why would you feel compelled to say something like that? Taste is entirely subjective.
I agree with PP. The PPP has bad taste.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:American...
That's fast food. Which you can get in many countries.
It isn't traditional American food.
Anonymous wrote:English food is the most unimaginative and tasteless cuisine.
Even Brits would generally agree.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have a well-traveled crowd here, so please answer: which country has the worst food? I know England is traditionally perceived as having bad food, but you can get a nice roast beef and yorkshire pudding, fish and chips and mushy peas, and savory pies. Similarly German food is generally pretty bad, but with some nice pickled cabbage, sauerbraten, potato salads, and good breads. Where is the food unremittingly bad?
This is completely subjective. To me it is India, because I don't car for Indian food. The next poster will probably think I am nuts because they love Indian food.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:indian, ethiopian, and cambodian food
I think the problem is you.
NP but why would you feel compelled to say something like that? Taste is entirely subjective.
Anonymous wrote:Very adventurous eater here. Agree with Filipino, Czech and Scottish here.
Even Jonathan Gold, the nation's only Pulitzer Prize winning food critic agrees that Filipino food is bad. As another reader said, the surrounding cuisine is so good there is really no excuse.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:indian, ethiopian, and cambodian food
I think the problem is you.
Anonymous wrote:indian, ethiopian, and cambodian food
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:One of the food critics--Todd Kliman I think--once wrote about this and pointed out that there are bazillions of Filipinos in the US yet nearly no restaurants serving Filipino food. He blamed it on a cuisine that was very unpalatable to Westerners.
Yes, filipino food is really terrible. I remember when I first arrived in Manila and was served some boiled rice, a fried egg, and a bottle of tomato ketchup. It is strange as all the surrounding cuisines - Chinese, Vietnamese, Malay and Indonesian - are excellent. They do some adobo stuff which is pretty good, but generally speaking you eat very badly there.
Anonymous wrote:We have a well-traveled crowd here, so please answer: which country has the worst food? I know England is traditionally perceived as having bad food, but you can get a nice roast beef and yorkshire pudding, fish and chips and mushy peas, and savory pies. Similarly German food is generally pretty bad, but with some nice pickled cabbage, sauerbraten, potato salads, and good breads. Where is the food unremittingly bad?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scotland. How many Scottish restaurants do you see around here?
~grandkid of two Scottish immigrants
+1 Horror on a plate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really like UK food and spent a substantial time in France and do not like very traditional French foods. So I think all stereotypes go out the window given personal taste.
That being said, I do not like seafood in any form and so Asian and Scandinavian countries would get my thumbs-down for cuisine (I would visit with an open mind but would have to find alternatives!)
There are some fermented fish items that the Swedish and Norwegians are very fond of: Lutefisk and Surströmming and probably a few others. I can't image that these are appealing to any human that was not raised on it since infancy.