immigrant & ethnic food cultures, white ppl & appropriation, foodies

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (1486 of them)

hah that reminds me of when I was in beijing and our program coordinator promised to bring us to the 'best roast beijing duck place' in the city and took us to a place in a 5 star hotel where the duck was ... completely similar to every other beijing roast duck place in the city. but I guess this place had gotten 5 stars in lonely planet or something and the waiters would refill your water glass without you asking. and there were individual napkins and actual silverware.

chris paul george hill (dayo), Thursday, 7 June 2012 11:14 (eleven years ago) link

I guess the problem is that when people hear about the 'best [chinese, thai, indian, mexian] place in the city', the authenticity question is implicated? it would be nice that maybe if you were talking about that there was automatically an asterisk that said, in a footnote, the 'best [chinese, thai indian, mexican]-inspired place in the city' so everybody would understand, and wouldn't have to start talking about the little nice old vietnamese lady who makes your banh mi, when you are talking to other people about your banh mi

chris paul george hill (dayo), Thursday, 7 June 2012 11:17 (eleven years ago) link

and there were individual napkins and actual silverware.

Shared napkins at the other places?! "Don't use that corner please."

Trey Imaginary Songz (WmC), Thursday, 7 June 2012 12:55 (eleven years ago) link

Oh I meant the napkins you fold and put on your lap and stuff. most places in china don't actually give you any napkins or if they do they're paper thin and come from a box or are actually just toilet rolls

chris paul george hill (dayo), Thursday, 7 June 2012 13:01 (eleven years ago) link

other than mentioning pork buns i can't help but notice the wack dude doesn't mention one of the most famous resellers and reinventors of grandma's peasant food. he also doesn't mention all the people lined up to pay 200+ a head for sushi master cuisine. new york is weird and new york food life is unlike anywhere else in the country but one thing foodies are good at is hyping "traditional" places run by immigrants. that's what i don't get about that guy's argument. for every snobby white hotshot fusion chef in a million dollar restaurant (and this is really the whole thing - the hotshots get big money backing and thus can pay for PR and prime real estate) there are a zillion more humble places to go to where the food is appreciated. even the new york times is pretty good at covering bling bling hotshot places AND the out of the way noodle shop/taco/etc place. they give a lot of ink to those small grandma shops! street food is as beloved as le bernardin in new york. that guy just has an inferiority complex or something.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 13:48 (eleven years ago) link

you might even be able to singlehandedly blame david chang for hipster cuisine! people following their bliss and devoting their lives to the humble yet perfectly perfect cuban sandwich or whatever.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 13:54 (eleven years ago) link

only marginally related but aerosmith has hummus on our rider and we toured with an Israeli dude last year and the first thing he does is take a bite backstage and go "this is not hummus." he then proceeded to annihilate the whole tub of it, all the while saying "this is just shit, you've never even had hummus." over the course of the tour the quest to find a hummus that would satisfy the Israeli keyboardist became a thing, he swears he only knows of one place in all NY that gets it right, but we did find two other places over the course of a spring's work. One was in Columbus, Ohio, and was adjudged absolutely authentic, perfect stuff. The other, a close second, was north of LA in the valley. Go figure.

decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 June 2012 13:59 (eleven years ago) link

articles are tl;dr but the worst thing is American hipsters who say "That's not real _________"

liars - wkiw (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:09 (eleven years ago) link

That tour story is good. Reminds me of my Lebanese roommate on year in college, whose chef/caterer mother used to send him back with gallons of the most garlicky hummus I had ever imagined could exist.

how did I get here? why am I in the whiskey aisle? this is all so (Laurel), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:12 (eleven years ago) link

what are foods that "everyone" (i.e. "white people") agrees are better in their "white" versions than "real" versions?

i.e. at those "Brazilian" steakhouses they advertise in airline magazines do they serve sweetbreads?

Euler, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:16 (eleven years ago) link

articles are tl;dr

past a certain vintage "tl;dr" is a bad look unless it's being deployed for lols imo

decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:17 (eleven years ago) link

If aerosmith happens to tour Cleveland anytime soon I can tell you that the absolute best hummus around is at Nate's on W. 25th (open for lunch only) followed by Tommy's on Coventry in Cleveland Heights. xxxp

Julie Derpy (Phil D.), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:25 (eleven years ago) link

gotta go get me some humble kitchen. YELP:

Yum! Humble Kitchen is a new food trailer that's serving Vietnamese sandwiches, soups and salads in the Harmony Lot in downtown Brattleboro. I just went there for lunch and got the Grilled Tofu Banh Mi sandwich, plus a pear/ginger pudding. It's just out there in the parking lot, so I took the food home to eat. The grilled tofu was just right--not too thick, but not overcooked. The shredded daikon and cucumber were fresh and tasty. The sauce was good. The sandwich comes with mayo, but it wasn't overdone. The roll was a good solid sandwich roll. The pear/ginger pudding was a british-style pudding, so more like a really solid, moist cupcake than a cup full of goo. Very tasty.

Assuming these guys succeed in this location, I will be visiting pretty regularly. I recommend that you check it out if you like Vietnamese food. If you're not a vegetarian, don't panic--they have chicken and pork options as well.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:28 (eleven years ago) link

Reminds me, I've been meaning to make blackeyed pea hummus, maybe today. Authentic Mississippi blackeyed pea hummus.

Trey Imaginary Songz (WmC), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:28 (eleven years ago) link

i mean come on brattleboro. i think its cool. i love brattleboro.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:29 (eleven years ago) link

my favorite story about stuff like this is how fish and chips is exactly the same thing as tempura, one brought to england by sephardic marranos, the other to japan by portuguese jesuits (who may have been conversos?). the whole earth likes a fish fry.

everything kind of moves around and 'globalization' is pretty ancient at this point.

goole, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:29 (eleven years ago) link

The stars aligned to have me in Brattleboro at lunchtime on Friday, and I had exactly enough cash on hand for the last available pork banh mi of the day ($7 + tip). I can't speak to its authenticity as I've never had banh mi before, but I can say without hyperbole that it was the best damn sandwich I've ever had. It was a lot more food than a woman my age needs, but I ate the whole delicious thing and then skipped dinner.

Look forward to trying their pho, and wish them all success.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:30 (eleven years ago) link

or tomatoes! thank you, conquistadores. 'marinara' = 'sailor sauce'

goole, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:31 (eleven years ago) link

i LOVE when the stars align to have me in brattleboro. cuz it means i'm buying records.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:32 (eleven years ago) link

ewww, sailor sauce...

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:32 (eleven years ago) link

A huge part of the reason I opened Baohaus is because everyone thought Momofuku pork buns were the original and it pissed me off. I’d been eating them since I was a kid, I knew they were from Taiwan and no one stuck up for us so I did. If you don’t defend the things that matter to you, no one will.

An important bit of context is that this is also a guy who started a $15 all-you-can-drink Four Loko deal at one of his restaurants, publishes recaps of Girls, and is generally known as more of a food-world personality than chef.

I DIED, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:32 (eleven years ago) link

past a certain vintage "tl;dr" is a bad look unless it's being deployed for lols imo

― decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, June 7, 2012 10:17 AM (14 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

tl;dr

liars - wkiw (Whiney G. Weingarten), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:33 (eleven years ago) link

knew that was coming, lol'd anyway

decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:38 (eleven years ago) link

140 Characters in Search of A Short Attention Span

indian rope trick (remy bean), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:39 (eleven years ago) link

past the obvious annoyance of publishing your gchat exchange as an article, i don't think anyone in the second one says anything particularly wrong. or even particularly dogmatic: eddie doesn't say whiteppl shouldn't be allowed to make food or even market as they wish, just that it would be nice if the general discourse surrounding these things always framed it with "of course, this is at (x) levels of remove from the real thing, so to call it the best (y) food is kind of silly". it would be nice if.

thomp, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:41 (eleven years ago) link

before that started happening, i was more than happy to try super-spicy and hot food (esp. curries) and would still be if such food didn't tie my digestive tract in knots. so if i like watered-down and mild variants of whatever ethnic treat, it's not just b/c i'm a wussy meatloaf-loving American philistine!

i always kinda forget how chilis (the peppers, not the theme restaurants) didn't arrive in asia until 500 yrs ago or so. for some reason i think of those levels of heat in curries etc as being something that has just about always been a feature of foods in that part of the globe

dell (del), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:42 (eleven years ago) link

How do food carts and their increasingly putrid preciousness figure in to all this

Dreaming in Infrared (kingfish), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:43 (eleven years ago) link

when people hate on food carts I'm like "cool, you stay out of the line, if they have good chow that is literally the only thing I give a shit about"

decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:44 (eleven years ago) link

yeah i will admit to liking that food-personality dude's resentful voice in the second piece. he's obviously being hyperbolic all over the place, but he does cover the stuff said upthread about how first generation immigrant food shops are sometimes lackluster and often the classed-up, well-trained chef versions are better, he's just offering an analysis of why that's the case. his resentment does get in the way of the accuracy of his observations sometimes, but i don't think he's saying what some of the people in this thread think he's saying.

horseshoe, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:44 (eleven years ago) link

that was an xxp to thomp

horseshoe, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:45 (eleven years ago) link

"oh no I don't like the tattoos on the person serving me this delicious chow & the name of the cart is too cutesy, 4.5 worst new food cart!" fuckin whatever it's a sandwich

decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:45 (eleven years ago) link

yeah, if you look at that food cart and think "putrid preciousness" and not "i could go for a banh mi" you probably have grown to accustomed to your lifestyle and should be exiled to texarcana or rapid city or stoke-on-trent or something

& yeah, i totally agree, i don't understand how a couple of posts hereare any kind of reply to what the guy actually says, rather than a cartoon of a related position someone else may have once held at some point in time

thomp, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:46 (eleven years ago) link

i've never encountered food cart hate. but there aren't a lot in boston, b/c of zoning/weather/licensing, and the ones in seattle/los angeles were pretty old school and benign. i'm under the perception that they exist and are managed and engineered more by hobbyists/starting chefs than wealthy restauranteur types.

indian rope trick (remy bean), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:47 (eleven years ago) link

also would read his girls recaps tbh

horseshoe, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:47 (eleven years ago) link

http://thepopchef.blogspot.co.uk/

thomp, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:50 (eleven years ago) link

feel like the GIRLS connection was what was missing from original post that really could take this to clusterfuck summary territory, maybe now if someone argues that he has some kind of illness misrepresented in the drm-iv we can break ilx

thomp, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:51 (eleven years ago) link

other than mentioning pork buns i can't help but notice the wack dude doesn't mention one of the most famous resellers and reinventors of grandma's peasant food. he also doesn't mention all the people lined up to pay 200+ a head for sushi master cuisine. new york is weird and new york food life is unlike anywhere else in the country but one thing foodies are good at is hyping "traditional" places run by immigrants. that's what i don't get about that guy's argument. for every snobby white hotshot fusion chef in a million dollar restaurant (and this is really the whole thing - the hotshots get big money backing and thus can pay for PR and prime real estate) there are a zillion more humble places to go to where the food is appreciated. even the new york times is pretty good at covering bling bling hotshot places AND the out of the way noodle shop/taco/etc place. they give a lot of ink to those small grandma shops! street food is as beloved as le bernardin in new york. that guy just has an inferiority complex or something.

well he's not really angry about the white hotshot fusion chef, he's angry about the white traditional Thai chef who's getting keys to the upper echelon of the world of fine dining that aren't being given to the Thai chefs

chris paul george hill (dayo), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:53 (eleven years ago) link

he is just mad at white people. i get it; it's made me say some really dumb stuff in my life, probably will continue to. there's something kind of exhilarating about reading it. possibly this is all bad for him and me and we should take care to moderate our tone, but i did enjoy reading it.

horseshoe, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:54 (eleven years ago) link

maybe i just don't get what the hip-hop chef wants. other than respect for immigrants. which is fine. i respect that. or maybe i just don't get the axe he's grinding. he sounds kinda jealous.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:57 (eleven years ago) link

i think the food cart hate like most of the general antipathy towards extremes of foodies culture is due more to the breathless blogging and overhyping of that shit and not so much the thing in itself. like ppl talking how the new korean tacos with a twist down the street are the absolute soaring heights of human cultural achievement and pleasurable experiences

dell (del), Thursday, 7 June 2012 14:58 (eleven years ago) link

there are a lot of asian fine dining chefs, no?? i mean, yeah, some people might be better at marketing themselves or know the lay of the land better. there are definite advantages to being from here. and obviously benefits to being white/connected/school chums with investment brokers/etc. but asian chefs are also brought here from asia all the time to cook in fancy restaurants. or maybe i'm wrong.

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:01 (eleven years ago) link

when people hate on food carts I'm like "cool, you stay out of the line, if they have good chow that is literally the only thing I give a shit about"

― decrepit but free (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, June 7, 2012 10:44 AM (15 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

^^^ OTM

Cleveland has really embraced food carts/trucks and we're a lot better off for it. Every Wednesday during the summer they block off part of a downtown side street at lunchtime, bring in a ton of food trucks, have live music, etc. It's awesome.

Julie Derpy (Phil D.), Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:01 (eleven years ago) link

the empanada resentment wing of the black bloc is going to be turning over food carts during this summer's protests

dell (del), Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:01 (eleven years ago) link

yeah, it's sort of a weird thing if you live in a place (like madison) where it's just a given that you get lunch at a cart a lot of the time, some of them are yummy, some of them are crappy, but there's no particular cultural value (pos or neg) attached to being the kind of person who patronizes food carts or has opinions about which food carts are better than others.

Guayaquil (eephus!), Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:02 (eleven years ago) link

susanna foo was the talk of the town when i moved to philly years ago. not white. very influential to a lot of people. people forget about these people. they've been here for decades. have more respect for pioneers! they said a chef from Mongolia would never make it in the land of the cheesesteak!

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:04 (eleven years ago) link

(not to mention a chef opening a restaurant in philly in the 80's that blended french and chinese)

scott seward, Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:06 (eleven years ago) link

yeah, i think that's one of the realities that that dude's bluster obscures, for sure. and i'm sure you're right that his anger is partly jealousy/wishing he had a higher profile/whatever. i don't know enough about the restaurant business to know if he's right about anything, to be honest, but i found his discussion of the dynamics of the immigrant-owned restaurant + the immigrant community compelling. mostly it is a relief to me when other people sound as resentful as i sometimes sound.

horseshoe, Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:07 (eleven years ago) link

(not to mention a chef opening a restaurant in philly in the 80's that blended french and chinese)

did this person end up independently inventing vietnamese food because that would be kind of amazing

thomp, Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:09 (eleven years ago) link

like, the thing he said about food being all chinese-americans have in this country; as you rightly point out, scott, that's not true! but i get how it could feel true! i have heard myself get weirdly culturally nationalistic when indian food gets brought up in conversation and been like, what is this about???

horseshoe, Thursday, 7 June 2012 15:10 (eleven years ago) link

Seems like someone really likes cooking but really hates food. If I wasn’t vegan I would devour that though.

Exactly! Why would you devote a couple of hours to cooking, then make something that looks like it was scraped off a toilet at a Taco Bell?

Mazzy Tsar (PBKR), Sunday, 25 August 2019 16:16 (four years ago) link

Using pretty much all processed foods. I mean it's trash through and through, but why not spend an extra half hour or so and make your own BBQ sauce you lazy prick? Kraft's got enough of your money already, I'm sure.

Mazzy Tsar (PBKR), Sunday, 25 August 2019 16:20 (four years ago) link

On twitter it was outed those vidz are produced by internz looking for clix/viewz (ergo jobz).

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Sunday, 25 August 2019 16:53 (four years ago) link

in that case they did a good jobz

Today he dances jazz, but tomorrow he will sell his homeland (seandalai), Sunday, 25 August 2019 17:21 (four years ago) link

i thought it was real until it got to the pepperoni ...

sarahell, Sunday, 25 August 2019 18:33 (four years ago) link

It is pretty much that SNL Taco Town commercial.

― Yerac, Sunday, August 25, 2019 10:38 AM (two hours ago) bookmarkflaglink

this was exactly my thought

Carisis LaVerted (m bison), Sunday, 25 August 2019 18:35 (four years ago) link

On twitter it was outed those vidz are produced by internz looking for clix/viewz (ergo jobz).

― Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Sunday, August 25, 2019 12:53 PM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

this was obvious on the face of it. i have no idea why ppl even bother reacting to this shit.

call all destroyer, Sunday, 25 August 2019 18:44 (four years ago) link

the food of my people is being exploited for clicks

untuned mass damper (mh), Sunday, 25 August 2019 19:44 (four years ago) link

[Aimless inserts video clip of Marlon Brando's lips in extreme close up, whispering, "the horror! the horror!"]

A is for (Aimless), Sunday, 25 August 2019 19:55 (four years ago) link

On twitter it was outed those vidz are produced by internz looking for clix/viewz (ergo jobz).

― Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Sunday, August 25, 2019 12:53 PM (one hour ago) bookmarkflaglink

this was obvious on the face of it. i have no idea why ppl even bother reacting to this shit.

― call all destroyer, Sunday, August 25, 2019 2:44 PM (three hours ago)

Because the difference between the intern produced "content" and "real" "content" is like the thinest slice of prosciutto ever.

Mazzy Tsar (PBKR), Sunday, 25 August 2019 22:32 (four years ago) link

ftr I would eat the shit outta this

k3vin k., Monday, 26 August 2019 00:27 (four years ago) link

I’ve just watched a Japanese version of this on tv here.

Take one paella pan, cover it in red pasta sauce, add one kilo of fried chicken, French fries , grilled zucchini, spaghetti and a hollowed our loaf of bread containing cheese fondue.

American Fear of Pranksterism (Ed), Monday, 26 August 2019 10:06 (four years ago) link

what did I just watch pic.twitter.com/hkPWdRCOkC

— Angie Treasure (@snark_tank) August 24, 2019

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Monday, 26 August 2019 16:38 (four years ago) link

Food train wreck videos have crept into this thread like a hermit crab moving into a discarded tin can.

A is for (Aimless), Monday, 26 August 2019 16:41 (four years ago) link

two months pass...

Thought this was a good read heading into 2020:

What happens when years of migration cause treasured family traditions to vanish?

https://www.sfchronicle.com/food/article/Death-migration-and-the-loss-of-traditions-14572327.php

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Thursday, 31 October 2019 16:34 (four years ago) link

seven months pass...

a couple of threads prompted by the annual NYT piece on how shitty durian is (now with added mangosteen and rambutan!):

In international journalism, I am willing to say the single most tired Southeast Asian reporting cliche is that of DURIAN, THE FREAK SHOW FRUIT. In this @nytimes piece, “occasional disappointment” turns out to be a meta remark about the article, not the fruit. Thread: pic.twitter.com/60ZY1kBDCL

— Amirul Ruslan (@amirulruslan) June 25, 2020

The recent @nytimes "article" slagging SE Asian fruit — starring the durian — is especially bewildering because it's not new. They does it so often, even other foreign correspondents joked "the biennial durian piece has dropped". I used my NYT sub to find out how true that is. pic.twitter.com/OKsuTdfBDb

— Amirul Ruslan (@amirulruslan) June 26, 2020

lol:

Writing about US food the way the NYT covers Asian fruit: In a nation torn by racial conflict, one unlikely food unites. To those accustomed to chopsticks, the greasy parcel known as a 'burger', a sort of split bao, is crude and messy. Yet it encapsulates a nation's violent past.

— Soon-Tzu Speechley 孫子 (@speechleyish) June 25, 2020

Roz, Friday, 26 June 2020 03:34 (three years ago) link

I love that last one

Joey Corona (Euler), Friday, 26 June 2020 13:05 (three years ago) link

Last year there was one about 'the soul of the nation bound up in the flavors of the durian... acrid and off-putting to the naive and foreign, but rich and rewarding for the (journalist), the educated, and the noble native." Always reminds me of the schoolbus bit in Altman's 'Nashville.'

remy bean, Friday, 26 June 2020 14:50 (three years ago) link

I love durian and this is totally tangentially related but last weekend I bought a (frozen, but pricy) jackfruit and holy shit it was a fucking chore to uh... dissemble/extract. I was youtubing hacks and it still took the better part of 90 minutes.

Recommended if you have a passion for extracting pomegranate and pomelo fruit I guess?

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Friday, 26 June 2020 15:59 (three years ago) link

mangosteen and rambutan are some of the tastiest shit ever. still have not found a way to enjoy durian. this has been kevin k from white man reports, ILX. signing off

k3vin k., Sunday, 28 June 2020 15:34 (three years ago) link

i love all of these fruits, but i was raised by people who were into food culture and am married to someone with a broad knowledge of Asian cuisine (he's Chinese), so i am always baffled by these articles, and also baffled by how insular and boring most Americans' tastes are.

blue light or electric light (the table is the table), Sunday, 28 June 2020 17:03 (three years ago) link

one month passes...

Horrible to contemplate what "Chris" has to eat at home:

https://slate.com/human-interest/2020/08/parenting-indian-food-bubble-covid-families-judgement.html

rob, Tuesday, 11 August 2020 16:54 (three years ago) link

ahaha, wtf, I was at least expecting that to be about a toddler. my small children love mildly spiced dhal etc.

am now dreaming of being invited to a home-cooked Indian food feast...

kinder, Tuesday, 11 August 2020 17:05 (three years ago) link

people can be horrible about what they think their kids should eat

I remember when friends of my parents were shocked that we let our kids eat olives.

Joey Corona (Euler), Tuesday, 11 August 2020 17:17 (three years ago) link

do we have a rolling "these people are horrible" thread for horrible people that aren't politicians or celebrities?

Stab Delimited (sarahell), Tuesday, 11 August 2020 17:22 (three years ago) link

I think that thread is called reddit.com

rob, Tuesday, 11 August 2020 18:03 (three years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.