• hm_@lemmy.wtf
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    2 hours ago

    This is Funny if you think about it because Modern Pizza originates from the USA and Pasta from China

  • Kundas@lemmy.world
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    8 hours ago

    As someone who’s lived Italy, this does sound like something an Italian would say lmao

  • Lininop@lemmy.ca
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    7 hours ago

    This tracks, every Italian I’ve ever met has been a complete snob about food.

  • ThirdConsul@lemmy.ml
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    8 hours ago

    Tbh I find Italian culinary traditions underwhelming. Like they just gave up 10 minutes in, no work at all because it’s too hot.

    To be fair, the further from coastline, the better the Italian cuisine - more herbs, more variety, more complex recipes (e.g Ligurian braised rabbit)

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      8 hours ago

      I saw a really good documentary recently, hell if I can remember the name. It covered actual Italian historical dishes. They were explaining that most of the really old stuff was region specific. Like one dish in one area had nothing to do with the same dish in another area. They actually went through kind of a food reimagining or Renaissance after one of the wars. Basically they were saying that pizza as it is now is not that old. Prior to the rush into America they had flatbreads that kind of but didn’t really approximate pizza, and it wasn’t until the Italian Americans repatriated that they started honing what they consider they current concept of pizza.

  • gerryflap@feddit.nl
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    14 hours ago

    I’m Dutch and I think this map is completely unfair. It overrates our food significantly

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    14 hours ago

    u wot m8?

    We’ve got Greggs Sausage Rolls.

    All you’ve got is pasta and tomato sauce for every meal, and think different shaped pasta makes it a different dish!

    That’s like thinking beans on toast is different if you put it on different shaped bread.

    • rumba@lemmy.zip
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      8 hours ago

      You know what’s strange. I can buy French cuisine, Mexican cuisine, Canadian cuisine, I can even find elements of UK in Germany

      I’m not even aware that Spain has a cuisine. I just looked up the entry on Wikipedia and I’ve never seen any of those dishes really.

      • PeriodicallyPedantic@lemmy.ca
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        7 hours ago

        Chorizo, tapas, and paella are all pretty popular and well known.

        I should have included Greece on that list, it’s food is more well know in North America.

        • rumba@lemmy.zip
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          7 hours ago

          I assumed chorizo was Mexican, I’ve actually made that before.

          I’ve had paella but it was on a cruise ship in the Caribbean.

          I’ve heard of tapas but I’ve never actually seen it.

  • GissaMittJobb@lemmy.ml
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    1 day ago

    I wholeheartedly support culinarily disrespecting Italians, honestly.

    Dudes trying to convince us that they are presenting ancient traditions when their precious dishes are invented in like the 60s

  • whaleross@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I knew an Italian exchange student that kept whining that nothing tasted good and nothing tasted as it should up here in Scandinavia. Then another exchange student (from Thailand I think) got tired of him and told him ~“the rest of the world isn’t your mother” and it was a literal moment of realisation for this dude.

  • Dasus@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    I’m just under the line of “toxic” in Finland and you could drawn the line a bit further south.

    Finnish national dish? Traditional version? Here you go, the entire recipe;

    Pound of beef, cubed

    Pounds of pork, cubed

    Water

    A spoonful of salt.

    Put meat in pan with water.

    Take pan off heat after enough time.

    Done.

    That’s literally the Finnish national dish “Karelian stew”. Obviously nowadays it definitely includes black pepper as well and bunch of other things, because the traditional version is literally just a bunch of boiled meat without any spices.

    edit haha enjoyed that but yes, the formatting was off, although you could obviously used water cubes in a pan as long as you still put it on hot. Actually, it might be an interesting experiment to put a pot on a hot stove / flame with beef & pork & ice. Insofar that maybe a tiny bit of the meat would brown before the ice melts and becomes water idk. At least then there’d be browning resulting in some taste. The classical one has none.

    • Drusas@fedia.io
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      22 hours ago

      I made lohikeitto for the first time recently and that was pretty damn good. Almost like an American chowder, but thinner and with nice, tasty dill (I’m sure I don’t have to tell you that, but other readers might like to know).

      • Dasus@lemmy.world
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        22 hours ago

        Oh no, you don’t have to tell me.

        Some people make an excellent lohikeitto, and it’s damn fine.

        There’s a restaurant I go in my city for a good one.

        But I’ve been on a gluten and dairy free diet. I’m sure I could replace rye bread with decent alternatives and cream with a vegetable one, but lohikeitto has been hard for me to get right.

        Any fish foods actually. Fish is such delicate meat I find it hard to get a proper grasp on because it varies so much from fish to fish, especially when its different species of fish.

        Meat from large mammals is rather easy, usually uniform. Fish, just… I need to learn it better.

        Thank for reminding me though, I think I’ll learn to make lohikeitto next. I’ve been learning to cook a bit more, had porkchops today which I marinated myself with rum and garlic and lime and chili and rosemary etc, have made horse meatballs. Deer stew. Elk fry up. Reindeer ragu.

        Mmm.

        It was at least a decade, definitely a bit more since I made meatballs. But I think they turned out nice.

        Gluten fre spaghetti. I hate to have to have it, but Rummo brand has actually been pretty nice. I tried like a half dozen others before. So sad I can’t have real spaghetti anymore but this is a decent enough alternative, and I make up for the poor spaghetti by improving what goes with it.

        • Drusas@fedia.io
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          21 hours ago

          Denser fishes like salmon and cod are the easiest to cook. You can overcook them, especially salmon, but they’re both really delicious and generally easy to work with. I would recommend going with salmon for the extra flavor, but if you’re concerned about over cooking, maybe cod instead.

          Edit: I used this recipe, but with less dill because that’s a crazy amount.

          https://skinnyspatula.com/salmon-soup-lohikeitto/#mv-creation-223-jtr

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            21 hours ago

            Yeah salmon isnt’ too hard and cod goes pretty easy in fishsticks basically, but I don’t know how to optimise it. I don’t get the feel for the meat like I do with when I cook, for example, steaks and want them rare. I mean yeah I do use a digital thermometer with steaks to get them optimal, but my point is I wouldn’t even know with fish what the optimal is.

            Like salmon and cod, yeah, easy enough and you find things at the store. But once I tried making soup out of this pike we caught and it was just… way overcooked. I messed it up, totally.

            So I’d like to get that sort of intuitive feel and understanding I have for mammalian meat to fish meat as well. Like I understand with mammalian meat if it’s fattier it’ll cook differently, if it’s this or that it’ll affect it this way or that, but I don’t know shit about fish, you know? Like if I was a millionaire, I’d hire a high-grade sushi chef to teach me about fish or something.

            • Drusas@fedia.io
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              21 hours ago

              A sushi chef would be a poor choice to teach you about cooking fish!

              But I understand. It really just takes practice.

              Try a handful of different recipes with the same fish and you will start to get a feel for it. Then try a handful of recipes with a different fish. Etc. After getting the hang of a few of them, you’ll be more comfortable with judging how and how long to cook the fish based on the filet or steak that you’re working with–how thick or delicate the meat is.

              For me, I was wary about chicken for the longest time when I first started cooking, afraid that I would undercook it. Same thing. It all just takes experience.

              • Dasus@lemmy.world
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                21 hours ago

                A sushi chef would be poor in teaching me about cooking fish, yes, but I believe I know cooking more than fish, and a sushi chef would be very good to teach me about fish.

                You see? I can’t communicate how amusing it is for me to stay "you see? " to you but I will try; you are Drusas, who one commented about my chosen nickname, as it was similar to yours.

                The reason this amused me, or is ironic, is that my name is “Jussi”, which sounds sort of like “you see”. And the thing I like to do is mansplain. So… you see?

                Nominative determinism.

                • Drusas@fedia.io
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                  21 hours ago

                  I do always have a bit of a double-take when I see your username. It makes me think you have good taste, even though I don’t know its origin.

                  But you’re right that a sushi chef should be well acquainted with a variety of fish.

        • Dasus@lemmy.world
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          1 day ago

          Haha it’s a formatting error.

          I only used one line shift on Sync and formatted it wrong. I’m sorry.

          But that’s hilarious though because I genuinely can’t tell if people can’t tell

        • ChaoticNeutralCzech@feddit.org
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          1 day ago

          I mean, if it’s the most traditional form you’re aiming for, the Finns in certain regions/seasons might have historically had more access to ice than fresh water

          • Dasus@lemmy.world
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            1 day ago

            I mean, you usually have both. Because while lakes freeze over, ice fishing is very much a thing.

            Also, streaming water doesn’t freeze.

            I would say there’s sometimes (often, even) a lot more snow than there is water. So idk, do you count snow as ice? I guess technically, because it is ice crystals.

            And especially before the industrial revolution, you could just grab a bucketful of snow and put it on the stove if you’re too tired to walk to the extra 10 steps to the well. You still don’t have to go far into the woods and the snow would probably be more or less edible (it definitely is, but like per regulations idk), but especially before the industrial revolution it would’ve been ultraclean.

            And also if you’re taking it from pine branches you’ll get a nice piney sort of hint of a taste. (I ate snow from the trees as a kid, just don’t eat yellow snow)

  • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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    1 day ago

    Funny seeing this, especially from an iberian perpective, because local culinary is mostly the same as theirs. With the slight difference we actually have the balls to spice our food.

    • ZeffSyde@lemmy.world
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      12 hours ago

      I have yet to sample an Italian arrabiata sauce that I would remotely call ‘spicy’. Though, to be fair, I’m an American that over spices everything I cook, so my palate is probably blown out at this point.

      • qyron@sopuli.xyz
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        11 hours ago

        I’ve read you guys have a too sweet baseline for flavours, due to the overwhelming presence of corn syrup in everything.

        Iberian cuisine, as in Portuguese and Spanish (fuck those guys; they can’t make proper bread even if you teach them!), can be spicy but adding heat to a dish serves to accentuate the underlying flavours.

        Off the top of my head, I can think of a simple roasted chicken with lemon and mussels.

        The chicken is just prepared by seasoning the chicken with coarse salt and stuffing it with a whole lemon, with the ends cut, and roasting in the oven. With the chicken ready, you just take the lemon from inside the bird and squeeze it over. Base flavours are lemon and salt, with the chicken fat binding everything together. You should complain the meat is a bit under salted; it means you are actually tasting it.

        The mussels are prepared with white wine, salt and garlic. The garlic is chopped and slightly fried, just until fragrant, in olive oil. The mussels are thrown in, lightly salted, tossed in the base, over high heat, then the wine added and the pot covered to steam the mussels until all are open. Or can just sprinkle salt over the mussels on your plate. You want to taste the mussel.

        These are basic dishes any child can eat. Not too extreme flavours. Adding a chopped chilli to the mussels base and a chilli inside the chicken will add a sligh note of heat to the dishes, embolden the overall flavours, but you will still be getting the base flavours after swallowing, lingering in your mouth.

        Food should leave a memory. It’s supposed to be flavourful, not painful.