i pretty much eat bread by itself all the time. you can either pick a "white people be like" image or a series of screencaps from nisemonogatari to accompany this post
i pretty much eat bread by itself all the time. you can either pick a "white people be like" image or a series of screencaps from nisemonogatari to accompany this post
Y'know I wanted to put down some sort of Chinese cuisine but (1) I can't think of any particular dish I like a lot and (2) none of the dishes have cheese. (Except so-called "crab rangoons" but they don't count.)
Edit: Actually, wait. There's pan-fried semi-crispy noodles with strips of pork. Usually also contains such things as Chinese chives, black mushrooms, and such. The biggest draw here, though, is the fact that the noodles are prepared in such a way that some of them are crispy and some of them are soaked in the flavorful juices of the dish.
Pair this with rice porridge containing pork and slices of preserved duck eggs.
Fried taro dumplings are also good too. As are shrimp balls that are coated with fried noodles. As are dumplings containing shrimp and Chinese chives.
Oh, and there's roast duck. And roast pork (not to be confused with BBQ pork). And crispy roast chicken.
And there are like dish after dish after dish after dish of leafy greens, prepared with some oil and garlic. Simple but very, very delicious.
I can't tell what type of sauce that is, but it appears to be mushrooms on breaded fried chicken. As far as I know, breaded/flour-covered fried chicken isn't really a thing in China (though apparently flour-covered fried fish is).
It often uses a white sauce made of milk and cornflour, though I prefer that brownish one (that I can't find a recipe for). The mushroom are optional, generally I see it using tomato, onion and lettuce, though with mushrooms it seems even more delicious.
Y'know I wanted to put down some sort of Chinese cuisine but (1) I can't think of any particular dish I like a lot and (2) none of the dishes have cheese. (Except so-called "crab rangoons" but they don't count.)
I basically eat the same thing at every Chinese restaurant, with the exception of the special one where I can eat anything with no reprisals. Namely, veggie lo mein, vegetable fried rice and the best tofu dish they have.
Y'know I wanted to put down some sort of Chinese cuisine but (1) I can't think of any particular dish I like a lot and (2) none of the dishes have cheese. (Except so-called "crab rangoons" but they don't count.)
I basically eat the same thing at every Chinese restaurant, with the exception of the special one where I can eat anything with no reprisals. Namely, veggie lo mein, vegetable fried rice and the best tofu dish they have.
Is "lo mein" or "chow mein" the one that actually has noodles?
Because the funny thing about these "American Chinese" restaurants is that one of them doesn't actually have noodles but is basically just stir-fried veggies. I think the no-noodles one is "chow mein".
This, despite the fact that "mein" means noodles, "lo mein" means "mixed noodles" (as in noodles mixed with other things), and "chow mein" means "pan-fried noodles".
Also "lo mein" in American Chinese cuisine almost always involves this distinctive kind of thick noodles, despite the fact that there are a ton of other kinds of noodles out there.
Also, stuffed dumplings from various countries (pierogies, jiaozi, baozi, gyoza, etc). Can't forget those. If I could subsist entirely on jiaozi/baozi, I would. Also, shrimp and andouille with grits.
Y'know I wanted to put down some sort of Chinese cuisine but (1) I can't think of any particular dish I like a lot and (2) none of the dishes have cheese. (Except so-called "crab rangoons" but they don't count.)
I basically eat the same thing at every Chinese restaurant, with the exception of the special one where I can eat anything with no reprisals. Namely, veggie lo mein, vegetable fried rice and the best tofu dish they have.
Speaking of Tofu, Agedashi Tofu is one of my favorite foods. Tofu that's dusted with potato or cornstarch and then deep-fried. The only way it could get more southern is if they found a way to add MSG and sausage gravy to it (not that I would want it with sausage gravy).
Not really a fan of Japanese food since it kinda feels fancy-but-overpriced. But I do appreciate eel on rice.
It's pricey because it costs a lot to make. Everything has to be extremely fresh, which outside of a deep-water port city is going to cost you a fair bit. But I was a spoiled youngin' indeed, so this didn't faze me. Now it torments me. u~u;
Not really a fan of Japanese food since it kinda feels fancy-but-overpriced. But I do appreciate eel on rice.
It's pricey because it costs a lot to make. Everything has to be extremely fresh, which outside of a deep-water port city is going to cost you a fair bit. But I was a spoiled youngin' indeed, so this didn't faze me. Now it torments me. u~u;
That said, Chinese eel soup is great, too.
Yeah, I get why it's expensive, though for me, personally, I don't particularly care for the raw fish part of it, so I get a lot less bang for my buck.
I've never had Chinese eel soup. In fact I've never had eel outside of eel on rice.
Is there an alternate spelling of "korma"? Because this seems vaguely familiar as a name. Like, something on a menu next to lamb shawarma.
And yes, it's delicious.
When I was an undergrad, there was a food truck on campus that sold boxes of rice, veggies and lamb/chicken, for noticeably less than what it'd cost to get lunch elsewhere. It was $3.25, when the standard lunch for me cost about $4.50-$5 at another food truck, and upwards of $6 at an "official" on-campus eatery.
And it was delicious too.
Some people reported getting sick on their food but it never happened to me. So I kept going back. I miss it.
I also miss the Chinese food truck on the other side of campus that served similar box lunches for $4.25 to $5, and also served scallion pancakes.
Comments
or more accurately, a dish of rice, beans, and other stuff, e.g. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Casado
I got Siri to flip a coin for me. She picked the burger.
☭ B̤̺͍̰͕̺̠̕u҉̖͙̝̮͕̲ͅm̟̼̦̠̹̙p͡s̹͖ ̻T́h̗̫͈̙̩r̮e̴̩̺̖̠̭̜ͅa̛̪̟͍̣͎͖̺d͉̦͠s͕̞͚̲͍ ̲̬̹̤Y̻̤̱o̭͠u̥͉̥̜͡ ̴̥̪D̳̲̳̤o̴͙̘͓̤̟̗͇n̰̗̞̼̳͙͖͢'҉͖t̳͓̣͍̗̰ ͉W̝̳͓̼͜a̗͉̳͖̘̮n͕ͅt͚̟͚ ̸̺T̜̖̖̺͎̱ͅo̭̪̰̼̥̜ ̼͍̟̝R̝̹̮̭ͅͅe̡̗͇a͍̘̤͉͘d̼̜ ⚢
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
Edit: Actually, wait. There's pan-fried semi-crispy noodles with strips of pork. Usually also contains such things as Chinese chives, black mushrooms, and such. The biggest draw here, though, is the fact that the noodles are prepared in such a way that some of them are crispy and some of them are soaked in the flavorful juices of the dish.
Pair this with rice porridge containing pork and slices of preserved duck eggs.
Fried taro dumplings are also good too. As are shrimp balls that are coated with fried noodles. As are dumplings containing shrimp and Chinese chives.
Oh, and there's roast duck. And roast pork (not to be confused with BBQ pork). And crispy roast chicken.
And there are like dish after dish after dish after dish of leafy greens, prepared with some oil and garlic. Simple but very, very delicious.
Man, now I'm hungry.
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
In terms of desserts: Crème brûlée. The Häagen Dazs flavour will do in a pinch.
Because the funny thing about these "American Chinese" restaurants is that one of them doesn't actually have noodles but is basically just stir-fried veggies. I think the no-noodles one is "chow mein".
This, despite the fact that "mein" means noodles, "lo mein" means "mixed noodles" (as in noodles mixed with other things), and "chow mein" means "pan-fried noodles".
Also "lo mein" in American Chinese cuisine almost always involves this distinctive kind of thick noodles, despite the fact that there are a ton of other kinds of noodles out there.
Assassin poems, Poems that shoot
guns. Poems that wrestle cops into alleys
and take their weapons leaving them dead
favorite fish: catfish, eel, pompano
incidentally all are no-scales
That said, Chinese eel soup is great, too.
Yeah, I get why it's expensive, though for me, personally, I don't particularly care for the raw fish part of it, so I get a lot less bang for my buck.
I've never had Chinese eel soup. In fact I've never had eel outside of eel on rice.
And yes, it's delicious.
When I was an undergrad, there was a food truck on campus that sold boxes of rice, veggies and lamb/chicken, for noticeably less than what it'd cost to get lunch elsewhere. It was $3.25, when the standard lunch for me cost about $4.50-$5 at another food truck, and upwards of $6 at an "official" on-campus eatery.
And it was delicious too.
Some people reported getting sick on their food but it never happened to me. So I kept going back. I miss it.
I also miss the Chinese food truck on the other side of campus that served similar box lunches for $4.25 to $5, and also served scallion pancakes.