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Title: | How to Make them Goodies |
Notice: | Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.* |
Moderator: | FUTURE::DDESMAISONS ec.com::winalski |
|
Created: | Tue Feb 18 1986 |
Last Modified: | Thu Jun 05 1997 |
Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
Number of topics: | 4127 |
Total number of notes: | 31160 |
3926.0. "Characteristics of cuisine." by SUBURB::MCDONALDA (Shockwave Rider) Thu Apr 07 1994 09:59
What characterises the food of a region or country?
This is something I've often thought about (especially when attempting
to decide what to cook; I normally start by asking my wife and I what
country do we want). In some cases there is no doubt that a dish or
style of cooking can be directly attributed to a given country or
region, in other instances the demarcations are blurred partly due to
countries bordering each other and partly due to mass migration. But
what, for instance, identifies Mexican food from Spanish from French
from Italian? The base ingredients are pretty much the same: Tomatoes,
Onions, 'Garlic'. Is is purely the herbs and spices? Can it boil down
to one spice or herb or ingredient e.g. Cumin for Mexican;
Oregano/Basil for Italian; Soy for chinese; many spices/herbs for
Indian? Or are we talking 'total' package and presentation? or a
combination of the lot? There are gross differences, but what about the
smaller, more subtle ones. What are the characteristics that allow you to
differentiate between, say, Chinese, Japanese and Thai cuisine?
Here, off the top of my head, are what the cuisines of certain
countries evoke in my mind..
Italian cuisine conjours flavours of Oregano, Basil, Olive oil, Pizza,
Pasta, Garlic, rich creamy cheeses.
Chinese cuisine conjours flavours of Soy, Garlic, Ginger, 5-spice,
colourful dishes, rice, noodles, stir fried vegetables, quick cooked,
juicy meat dishes, etc.
America equates (unjustifiably) to Ham/Beefburgers, barbarqued steaks.
Mexican tomatos, tortillas, sour cream, refried beans, salsa, onions,
Cumin.
Cajun/Creole oil, roux, Gumbo, Okra.
France I'm still not sure about; complex cream sauces on the one hand,
on the other basic bacon flavoured dishes, apples, beans, French bread,
croissants, etc. Tarragon I always associate with France.
Spain I'm struggling with: a base of onions and tomatoes fried in olive
oil with added meat or fish and some vegetables e.g. sweet peppers.
Uncerain of herbs/spices.
Britain (unfairly) yields images of chips, sausages, fried fish,
stodge, etc.
Germany/Austria seems based on meats (salamis, sausages, wursts, etc),
sourkraut, and beer. Oh and Black Forest gateaux.
Indian food has all those spices with the resulting and unmistakable
aroma of curry, Naan bread and poppadoms.
Scandanavian countries only conjours salmon with dill.
Greek food I only have images of yoghurt, lamb, pitta bread and kebabs.
While Thai yields aniseed flavoured dishes.
But what about Africa, Australia, New Zealand, South America, Middle
east, Russia, Korea, Malaysia, Pacific islands, Canada, etc?
Angus
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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3926.1 | some impressions that come to mind | BASEX::GEOFFREY | Blueberries are our friends | Thu Apr 07 1994 10:21 | 16 |
|
Sverige (Sweden) - Open face sandwiches, boiled potatoes every day,
pickled herring, Aquavit, Korv & mus (hot dogs
and mashed potatoes, you have to be there),
meatballs.
Canada - (my impression will be tainted by my French Canadian
upbringing). Toutier (sp? pork pie), pigs feet stew,
French fries and gravy, fish.
Australia - When I was there I was very surprised at how much fish
I ate. I expected to eat more beef and lamb. Vegemite,
chooks (chicken), very much like the English cuisine.
|
3926.2 | HAVE YOU EVER TRIED TURKISH FOOD? | ISTWI1::ERHAN | | Thu Apr 07 1994 11:00 | 9 |
|
Hi from Turkey!
Here are some examples of turkish specialities; shish kebap, ayran (a
drink made mixing yoghurt with some water), halva, raki (the famous
alcoholic drink), baklava!
Arzu
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3926.3 | Power to the regions.... | GALVIA::HELSOM | | Thu Apr 07 1994 12:28 | 25 |
| I'm sure the base noter gets the grand characteristics of some national cuisines
right (though I would have said cilantro rather than cumin for Mexico...). But
some national cuisines are actually conglomerations and interactions of the
cuisines of the nations or regions that make them up.
The obvious example in the list is France, where the classical (Parisian and
court, I suppose) cuisine has little in common with Norman, Breton or Midi
cuisine. India is another obvious example. And even English food looks better
when you go into the regional variations (though none of it is low fat).
I'd add the following from limited but enjoyable experience:
Belgium: fried potatoes (how do they make them so good?), moules et
frites, pork dishes, apple dishes (both like but not like the Normand
cuisine but often much grander). Oh, and chocolate.
Russia: sour cream, dark grains in all permutations and forms. (blinis
with sour cream is the classic), Baltic-style fish (lots of dill
flavourings). And vodka out of the freezer or off the window-ledge.
(Forget chicken kiev, incidentally. It's Ukrainian's attempt to make
like French haut cuisine.) Of course, Russia has it's own regions as
well. I'm sure the central Asian Russion republics, or the far eastern
republics, have their own very different cuisines.
Helen
|
3926.4 | Thai | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Thu Apr 07 1994 12:55 | 35 |
| Thai, like most other "national" cuisines is actually an agglomeration
of regional and local specialties.
It is unique in being a true cross between Indian and Chinese. They
use the Indian spices, herbs, and coconut milk (of course, being a
sub(?)-tropical country) but use Chinese cooking techniques including
lots of noodles. I'd be hard put to characterize the spices, but they
do tend to the fresh rather than dried. Lemon grass is common, as is
the ubiquitous fish sauce. (see prior note)
Most typically in Bangkok, people eat very soupy "curries" with lots of
fragrant Thai rice. No bread. They happily adopted the use of forks
for the solids and soup spoons for the liquids mixed with rice. The
food is *HOT*.
They eat anything that flies and isn't an airplane, anything that goes
through the sea and isn't a submarine. (local joke) Oh, and every
part of animal bodies. Nothing to waste.
A popular northern dish is Thai barbecued meat. Also, sticky rice, a
special variety steamed in bamboo containers. Its fun to roll it into
little marbles between your fingers.
Lots of seafood in the south, naturally, where Thailand forms a long,
thin penninsula.
Lots of varieties of snack foods sold on the streets, all prepared
fresh by vendors, nearly all very good. Probably most common is Pad
Thai - stir-fried rice noodles.
Thai Singha beer, whiskey and soda with ice, coca cola, Thai iced tea
(very sweet and light), are most common meal beverages, for adults at
any rate.
L
|
3926.5 | | PATE::MACNEAL | ruck `n' roll | Thu Apr 07 1994 13:01 | 8 |
| Pick up a copy of the Frugal Gourmet's "Immigrant Ancestors" cookbook.
A chapter is devoted to the cuisine of each country that has
significantly contributed to the American melting pot. This will give
you a very good idea of characteristic dishes of food prepared
throughout the world.
Also, Mexican cuisine is as well represented by the taco and burrito as
Italian cuisine is represented by the pizza.
|
3926.6 | safflower and garlic | NUBOAT::HEBERT | Captain Bligh | Thu Apr 07 1994 14:22 | 23 |
| Portuguese food - as experienced in Southeastern Mass and Rhode Island:
Bread made with a dozen eggs and pound of sugar (masa svada fait im casa)
Olive oil
Hot peppers
Chouri�o cooked with eggs
onions
peppers
chicken
beef
pork
fish
shellfish
Chicken cooked with sausage, pork cooked with clams, beef cooked in
chicken broth, mashed potato soup (sopa verde), baccala, malasadas...
...yum.
Art
|
3926.7 | don't trust the frug | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Thu Apr 07 1994 14:23 | 17 |
| I was astonished to hear the Frug tell viewers to add chicken fat to a
noodle kugel (casserole) made with cheese, to achieve what he considers
a real authentic, Jewish, high-fat dish.
A fundamental rule of kashrut is to not mix milk (or cheese) and meat
(including chicken fat). AND there's no requirement that traditional
Jewish food be high in fat. It's just a fairly common phenomenon
shared by many other regional foods. Deliberately adding fat is
nonsense.
I was so amazed at this major faux-pas (and the guy is supposedly a
Protestant minister, right?) that I checked in his cookbook and found
the same thing!
Whoa.
L
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3926.8 | English diplomacy | GALVIA::HELSOM | | Tue Apr 12 1994 09:10 | 19 |
| re: -1.
The chicken fat is usually a substitute for the cheese at a meat meal. I suppose
his excuse would be that comparatively few American Jews keep kosher. But it's a
feeble one, given how much the kashrut influences the cuisine in all its
varieties.
Nearly irrelevently, my old college had the following main course the night
someone had an Israeli colleague as a guest:
Filet of Pork with prawns in cream sauce
The embarassed host asked his guest if he minded that they were serving pork.
The guest replied: "Filet is fine--there isn't too much fat on it."
Helen
PS What's the etymology of kugel? It's the German for "ball" or "sphere", which
would do for a number of edibles but seems odd for a casserole.
|
3926.9 | too late to be serious | CUPMK::STEINHART | | Wed Apr 13 1994 00:37 | 14 |
| Why would anyone in their right mind want to use chicken fat as a
spread when there's perfectly tasty kosher margarine?
I know you can buy kosher chicken fat in American markets, but I can't
believe they sell very much. And since the Frug wants us to believe he
speaks for American cuisine, his lack of homework on this one was
glaring. Makes me not trust him on other ethnic cuisines.
Root for kugel - (facetiously) well you can always grab a handful and
mold it into a ball to lob in a food fight.
(Ducking out of the way.)
L
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3926.10 | great balls of noodles | GALVIA::HELSOM | | Wed Apr 13 1994 04:59 | 14 |
| re: .-1, kugel.
Yes, that's probably it. I'm sure chicken fat makes it stick together better
than margarine, though.
My Jewish friends in England (though none of them keep kosher) don't use
margarine much at all, and use chicken fat for fat in traditional dishes where
appropriate (not in baking, obviously). In fact, my girlfriend from college
won't have margarine in the house. She buys bagels and other breads from her
local deli. Maybe it's different there from the US.
Or maybe it's because stork isn't allowed by the kashrut....
Helen
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