I pulled this from Melissa's post so you can get the gest:
". . . {I have} create{d} a list of food bloggers' top picks for things you've eaten and think that everyone should eat at least once before they die. Think of it as kind of a global food guide, which can enrich and inform our travels and perhaps even clue us into things closer to home that we've somehow overlooked. And although it will probably be too long for any one person to dream of completing, I hope it will give us all some small inkling of how many more edible treasures there still are out there, and how much there still is to experience.This is harder than you think. I thought it would be a breeze until I actually sat down and tried to list only five things that I crave at any given moment. There are so many favorites in my smorgasborg of good eats, I don't even know where to begin. But I will, and, as usual, they are in no particular order . . .
Here are my general guidelines. I'm restricting contributions to five items per blogger, which is hard, I know! But this will keep the list semi-manageable in length and will force you to really think hard about what your absolute top picks would be. You're welcome to be as general or as pin-sharp as you like, referring to specific dishes, restaurants, ingredients, products or preparations (although I think entire cuisines are a bit too general...), but they should definitely be things you know and love and couldn't imagine not having tasted. A sentence or two about your history with this food and why it means so much to you would also be great, and an item or two that is local to you, your cuisine or a place you have lived will help maintain a nice geographical diversity. Oh, and although I really welcome contributions from bloggers all over the world, I'm asking for all contributions to be in English to keep the list coherent. I'm envisioning the contribution process to be passed along like a normal meme, which is why I'm tagging five people to start, but feel free to participate even if you haven't yet been tagged. And if you want to participate but don't feel like devoting an entire post to it, you're welcome to do that too - just whatever you do, drop me an email (my address is in the 'about' section in the sidebar) or a comment on this post with your five foods or your permalink and I'll add your choices to a (hopefully) ever-growing list as they come in. I've also added a link to this post in the top right-hand corner, so you can easily come back and check on new additions!"
- A piece of chocolate (creme--any flavor) from Wittamer's in Brussels, Belgium.
- A Masala Dosa. This is an Indian crepe, so to speak, filled with potatoes and onions and served with chutneys to dip with. The dosa is made from ground lentils which make it soft yet crispy cooked on a griddle.
Later on in my years, our next door neighbors were from Pakistan. They were so delighted that I loved their food, they would bring plates of it over whenever they had a family gathering. I especially loved their basmati rice. I could smell them cooking and would just hope they would bring me a plate later!
In high school, my then boyfriend introduced me to Indian foods, particularly vegetarian dishes. There was a wonderful little mom-and-pop carry out on R Street in DC that had the best Masala Dosas on earth. We would normally order a masala dosa, an aloo paratha (a wheat flour flat bread filled with potatoes), a side of dahl (a lentil soup) and eat to our heart's content.
To this day, when I find an Indian restaurant with masala dosas on the menu, I am the happiest person around. I have found that the vegetarian restaurants serve better ones for some reason.
- Crepes Suzette ala Raphael
- Peking Duck. A roasted duck sliced at your table and served with pancakes, onions and hoison sauce.
Hmmmm, ok, I'm beginning to see a pattern here because my last entry is . . . .
- Dim Sum. "Little token," small dumplings, usually steamed, and filled with all types of meats. Basically, it's a Chinese smorgasborg brought to your table by steaming carts.
Now, phew, glad that's over! I will now tag:
Mr. English (of course!) -- aka Mark of Gullible's Travels (England)
Suanne & Ben over at Chow Times (Canada)
Ann from Warm Butter Review (I'm trying to gently coax her out of blog retirement.) (NYC)
Tara of Paris Parfait (Paris, but of course.)
Robyn who is Driving Miss Robyn (Australia)
Up to you if you want to play. No pressure, of course.
9 comments:
ok, I am way behind on memes, hell, I can't even remember which ones I was tagged for. so I will try to do this. I am not really that good at memes. xoxoxo
Thanks for doing this meme! It's great to see that you love so many different things. Very interesting indeed...
All sounded mouth watering delicious!
Fun meme!
Wow...I've never tasted anything like the exotic things you listed...I'm a beans and 'taters and cornbread gal...lmbo!!
I will check out what the others say though because it is very interesting!!
:-D
All mine would have to be:
French vanilla ice cream
Choc. covered cherry ice cream
strawberry ice cream
chocolate almond ice cream
coffee ice cream
That's all!
Lol still laughing at Shelley's comment! This was very interesting and what a wide assortment of tastes you have...I could sure go for the Crepe Suzette..never had that before but sure sounds yummy! I did have Dim Sum when I was in Vancouver back in 1986...it was a bit too exotic for me. I'm afraid my tastes are for good old fashion Canadian food! lol Hugs xox
Wow, what interesting food blogs. I have a whole new folder started on my desktop.
I love chinese food so much that I think I could eat it every day. My husband isn't that much of a fan so I don't eat it very often. I don't know if I could make a list of my five favorite foods. The same thing with books and movies--it sort of depends on my mood.
Rosa
I consider myself tagged. Have three/four, still working on the last two/one (I used to be indecisive but now I'm not so sure).
Mark McL (aka Mr English)
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