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Started by Tracey, March 07, 2011, 09:05:00 PM
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Quote from: Felix on April 26, 2012, 02:51:00 AMI've learned to eat other white sauces and sour cream and stuff, but mayonnaise still makes my skin crawl. In fact I think it's the only food I'm sure I don't like.When I'm hungry, though, nothing is off the table completely.
Quote from: Jamie D on April 26, 2012, 07:20:57 PM
Quote from: Lyric on April 26, 2012, 10:08:52 PMI'm not a vegetarian, but I haven't eaten beef or pork in over a decade (yes, this includes burgers). The decision was partly due to things I'd heard about chemicals fed to the animals, but also because a realized I'd never really liked them anyway. I eat lots of chicken, but also turkey, fish and shrimp. I do have entirely meatless days every week, though.~ Lyric ~
Quote from: Alexis on April 26, 2012, 09:50:00 PMI love brussels sprouts! I know, I'm weirdAs far as trying things, I'll try anything at least once, found some really fun foods that way. Things I avoid though after trying them tend to be more of a textural thing, not flavor, like Uni (I love the taste but I really can't get past the texture). The only thing that I've had that I can say I truly hated was Casu Marzu, but I think I just couldn't get used to the idea of it and was too grossed out.
Quote from: Alexis on April 26, 2012, 09:50:00 PMI love brussels sprouts! I know, I'm weird
Quote from: Jamie D on April 27, 2012, 03:56:29 AMAlthough I don't eat it, sea urchin (uni) is big business in the offshore areas of southern California. Every now and again we lose a urchin diver to a great white.
Quote from: Sephirah on April 27, 2012, 04:04:38 AMSprouts are yummy if they're cooked well (ie not boiled into oblivion so they taste of slightly firm wallpaper paste).Aside from chocolate, the only thing I really, really hate is garlic. Ick!Lol, the only foodstuff other than hedgehog or porcupine which comes with it's own tooth picks.
Quote from: Cindy James on April 27, 2012, 04:02:40 AMI'll second that. But the idea of first clear your maggots brings a bit of a smile. Do you want Port and Maggot with Cheese after dinner?Abalone is big over here but I've never liked it. But the Big Whites like the abalone divers as well
Quote from: Cindy James on April 27, 2012, 04:15:03 AM I think the boiling thingy got me. I was raised in Liverpool UK and cooking consisted of boil it to death then serve. To this day I cannot face brussel sprouts or cabbage. I have a friend who has an 8-9 yr old girl. She saw brussel sprouts on a TV cook show and asked for them. Mum cooked them as on the TV show and she (girl) loved them, they are now her favourite vegie, to a point were it is can we have sprouts tonight please Mum?One of the positives of the plethora of cooking shows is children are more willing to try something they see people are enjoying eating.
Quote from: Jamie D on April 27, 2012, 04:20:45 AMWhen I was younger, I used to dive for abalone. It was plentiful off of the Palos Verdes peninsula, where I lived, and the Santa Barbara Channel Islands. But the mainland areas were "over-fished" and a disease decimated the local islands. Severals types of abalones are protected now. I can get farm-raised abalone from up the coast, but it is just not the same as collecting and pounding your own.I just now recalled that I used to bring the smaller shells home that I would find on the beach, and my mom would use them as ashtrays on the patio.Bittersweet memory.
Quote from: Jamie D on April 27, 2012, 04:26:08 AMI'm with you on that. Can't stand the smell of cooked cabbage.Funny thing is, I like sauerkraut and coleslaw. It must be textural.
Quote from: Cindy James on April 27, 2012, 04:28:37 AM I remember the abalone ashtrays, and I understand the bitter sweet memories.Our abalone are highly protected but people still collect them illegally to sell to the Asian market. Big fines and long prison terms are in place. I think you can collect a couple for home consumption, but I'm not sure. I do remember diving and collecting my first lobster, showed it to my wife who said what is that? I said a lobster, she said No its the wrong colour.Mmmm
Quote from: Sephirah on April 27, 2012, 04:40:12 AMHave you ever tried it in a stir-fry? Really, it's delish. I think Cindy's right, old-school cooking methods have a lot to answer for. The veggies in and of themselves can be really tasty and healthy, it depends on what flavours accompany them and how they're prepared.One thing I remember from being brought up that gave me chills was liver. It was always over-cooked to the point where if you dropped it on the floor it would bounce, and usually accompanied by hideously overboiled cauliflower and onions.