Anonymous wrote:I made Butter Chicken in my Instant Pot. Came out great! But now my house, my clothes, my hair smells like curry. How do I get the smell out. I even changed my clothes and I still smell it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I made Butter Chicken in my Instant Pot. Came out great! But now my house, my clothes, my hair smells like curry. How do I get the smell out. I even changed my clothes and I still smell it.
I mean, what do you do when you cook onions or garlic or another strong smelling food? Open the windows and air your house out. Put your clothes in the laundry and if you have long hair, take a shower and wash your hair or spray some perfume. It's not hard.
Nailed it. OP is trolling.
Anonymous wrote:It’s no secret that some foods and the way the language is used with them are used as slurs or stereotypes against non- white people.
Why not just be sensitive to that, does it harm you in some way to do so? Just like seemingly to you harmless statements with regard to black people and watermelon can be a cause for feelings to be hurt or offended, same with Indians and saying ‘smells like curry’. Like the smell of Indian food is inherently bad. Food that has been part of their culture for millennia. It creates a stigma.
It’s fine to say you’ve got strong food odors you’re trying to get out or just hey, it smells like butter chicken. Or it smells like turmeric. But what people are trying to convey is that ‘smells like curry’ has been used as a common slur and used to discriminate against too, so maybe choose less offensive language.
Anonymous wrote:I don't do Indian restaurants for this reason , though I must add the food isn't really appealing to me . But, the overpowering smell of the spice(s) is something I find repulsive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone explain to me what ‘curry’ spice is? I’m of Indian origin and never heard of it. I cook with chillie powder, cumin, coriander, cardomom, ginger, garlic etc. What is ‘curry spice’ that Americans talk about?
Go to the Whole Foods spice aisle or Penzeys. You will see one or two bottles labeled “Curry Powder.”
Indians don’t cook with that. We don’t use anything called “curry.”
Anonymous wrote:I don't do Indian restaurants for this reason , though I must add the food isn't really appealing to me . But, the overpowering smell of the spice(s) is something I find repulsive.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Using "curry" to describe Indian food is offensive, FYI.
Don’t bother. There were several posts yesterday that stated it’s a common slur but they were deleted. I even sent a comment over with the report button about the posters that were offended were getting deleted but apparently that’s how it works here.
Maybe he thinks we’re ‘too sensitive’. Whatever. Pretty much every Indian kid growing up in America has had to deal with “smell like curry” comments, and it’s hurtful.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I made Butter Chicken in my Instant Pot. Came out great! But now my house, my clothes, my hair smells like curry. How do I get the smell out. I even changed my clothes and I still smell it.
I mean, what do you do when you cook onions or garlic or another strong smelling food? Open the windows and air your house out. Put your clothes in the laundry and if you have long hair, take a shower and wash your hair or spray some perfume. It's not hard.
Anonymous wrote:I think if Indian people are saying it's offensive, we need to take their word for it and find another way to state things. Why is this so hard?
That's been been my "go to" and it's worked out well so far -- if someone says they find a word or term offensive, I don't try to tell them why they shouldn't be offended, I just don't say it.