Friday, July 19, 2024

The Most Unusual Meal



LUCY BURDETTE:  Years ago when a friend heard that John and I were going to France, she insisted we dine in Vezelay, a town outside Paris, famous for its Benedictine Abbey. The meal was eye-poppingly expensive with many courses. Our waiter spoke with a strong Italian accent that we had trouble understanding. He brought us an amuse-bouche a.k.a. appetizer and offered an explanation. The only thing we caught was “close your mouth“ aka “fermez la bouche.“ John bit into his square and learned why: it was full of piping hot liquid fois gras that squirted out over his tie, his dress shirt, and his jacket. This has always been our favorite bizarre restaurant story.



But in Stockholm recently, we may have eaten a meal that was equally memorable. The waitress told us “we work from themes, sometimes literature, sometimes music, space,  and so on. Tonight’s menu theme is based on E4, the highway that runs from the north to the south of Sweden.” A menu based on a highway? With each tiny course, the waiter recited an elaborate story related to this road. I should have written the descriptions down, but we were busy tasting. (The only thing we didn’t try was Reindeer Danger, aka reindeer tartar.)


How about you Reds? What is your most odd or memorable meal? (Can be from a restaurant or home-cooked.)


RHYS BOWEN: I’ve had my share of odd and memorable meals. I’ve dined at Michelin starred places where one course was one oyster with some kind of foam on top and truffle (?) shavings on top of that and caviar pearls on top etc. into a tower.  all I could think of was whether I’d get in trouble if I tipped the stuff off and just ate the oyster which I adore.


But home cooked? When I was a student in Germany my landlady invited me for a meal. It was a vol au vent. Absolutely delicious. “This is wonderful,” I said. “What’s in it?”

“Calf brains,” she replied

Suddenly it didn’t taste so good but I had to finish it. 


John will tell you his strangest was pig’s colon in Hong Kong. No. sorry . Never!


JENN McKINLAY: When I first moved to Arizona, I went on a road trip up to Sedona. My friend and I stopped at a roadside diner where they served rattlesnake. Tastes like chicken!


JULIA: Jenn, my favorite part of THE MATRIX is when they explain the AI didn’t bother to flavor less-popular meats, which is why everything “tastes like chicken.”


HALLIE EPHRON: I once ordered “cervelle de veau” … veal, right? Turned out to be calve’s brains. Jerry finished his main course AND mine. (We went to Vezelay… there’s a church there that dates back to 1100 that has fantastic relief carvings. That overshadowed whatever we ate.)


JULIA SPENCER-FLEMING: The most unusual meal I ever had was at The Three Chimneys on the Isle of Skye. Ross and I went to the Highlands for our honeymoon in August ‘87, and mostly stayed at B&Bs These were the days when you’d drive to your location, check the local accommodations office, ring up your potential hosts and strike the deal. Travel was a lot more seat-of-the-pants back then!


We wound up staying with a local sheep farmer, who suggested the new restaurant that had just opened two summers ago. It was close enough to walk, so we strolled over around seven - I don’t recall if Ross used the farmer’s phone to make a reservation - and were treated to one of the best meals I’ve ever had. Salmon (Ross) and lamb (me) to die for, exquisite gourmet versions of neep and tatties, something exotic with edible seaweed, and, since we had to try it, haggis as a starter. (Pro tip: if you like sausage, you’ll like haggis.)


We stayed late enough that the sun had set by the time we walked back to the farm, pleasantly buzzed on wonderful wine and a whiskey nightcap. No lights along the narrow road, just the farmhouse a half mile ahead and the stars in the sky. It remains the most cherished memories of our honeymoon, and I was delighted to discover, decades later, that The Three Chimneys, noticeably larger than it was in 1987, has become one of the world’s top destination restaurants.   


HANK PHILLIPPI RYAN:  Oh, what a great question! I’ll never forget a meal we had in Florence, at Enoteca Pinchiorri.  It’s a MIchelin three-star restaurant (!) and  supposedly it is one of the most expensive restaurants on the planet, I forgot how much it cost, but let’s say hundreds of dollars a person each. For lunch. And we went for dinner. 

Anyway, that’s not the point. So the place is actually absolutely gorgeous, as elegant as you can imagine – – all pale yellow walls and crisp white linens,  bright red plates, and glittering crystal,  and subtle burnished brass, and I don’t even know what. Incredible.

The menu, which I actually have somewhere that I could never find, was authentically, gorgeously, Italian gourmet. I don’t even remember. I do have a memory of a tiny appetizer of  lemon  infused pasta with caviar, so there you have it.  

But here’s the point. (I know, finally)

So we are sitting at  our table with our two friends, basking. And then walked  a family: father, mother, and two sullen teenage girls. SO “American.”  Very blonde, very ponytailed. Very petulant.  

The waiter comes to take their order, and the girls proceed to instruct the waiter about how they want their turbot.. I remember one of them, asking for it with no bones, with the sauce on the side, and no herbs, and no potatoes,  only green beans, and extra shrimp. You get the picture. Very very  demandingly specific. The other was the same. Except differently specific. 

The waiter nodded, listening, incredibly polite, and wrote everything down. 


Five minutes later, he came back to the table and said in perfect English with an Italian accent “My apologies, but the chef says he cannot cook for you, his food will arrive the way his food will arrive. But he says, not for you. And he asks you to please leave.“ (Can you imagine?) And they left. They were kicked out! Everyone in the restaurant (quietly) cheered.


DEBORAH CROMBIE: I have eaten frog’s legs and snails in France, haggis in Scotland, calf brains and sweetbreads made by my mom–all memorable, some I liked better than others. (I actually love sweetbreads, but no one else will eat them and I don’t even know where I would get them these days.) But for the most memorable meal I’ll go all veggie: the set dinner at Bubala in Soho in London. This little restaurant was my daughter’s top pick of places to eat on our first post-pandemic trip to London, and it was astounding. Who would think you would drool over hummus with burnt butter or grilled cauliflower or skewered oyster mushrooms? I still think about that dinner longingly on a regular basis.


Reds, tell us about your most unusual meal ever!


If you're interested in reading more about the Scandinavian adventure, my hub John Brady wrote a wonderful post on his Topretirements blog.


https://www.topretirements.com/blog/bucket-list-trip-to-the-fjords-and-cities-of-scandinavia/



106 comments:

  1. A meal based on a highway? That's sounds so unusual, Lucy [and now I'm trying to imagine what the space meals might be like] . . . .
    The most memorable meal we've enjoyed? A Hawaiian luau . . . amazing [except for the poi, which we did not care for, but the taro rolls were delicious] . . . .

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  2. One sign that I was an eclectic, adventurous foodie. I took a road trip with my parents from Toronto to Montreal in the summer of 1980. I was 14 years old.

    We stayed at a Howard Johnson's hotel. Do you remember that hotel chain? Now, you wouldn't expect great food at a hotel restaurant. But this is rural Quebec. All the menus were written in French & the staff spoke little English...this was during the Separatist movement days. I had learned some French in school from grades 4-8, so I was my parents' translator.

    Well, I ate escargots swimming in garlic butter as an appetizer and grilled frog legs (cuisses de grenouille) for my main course. My parents were aghast. They both ate hamburgers & fries. That was the tastiest & most memorable dinner I ate during that road trip.

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    1. Wow Grace, you were born to be an adventurous eater! I remember HoJo's for their fried clams and peppermint ice cream!

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    2. Hmmm, I would have eaten fried clams. Good seafood was hard to find in suburban Toronto.
      And of course, I ate frog legs in Paris a few years later on my solo European trek.

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    3. My grandfather invited two families to Mother's Day lunch one year, and saw frog's legs on the menu. He dared any of us to eat it. I did, just because and also knew it would disgust my cousin. Delicious but not much meat.
      Off on the 50/50 pick-up. Hot & muggy. Can't find my wallet - you know, drivers license, credit card... Back about 3...

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    4. Well, I don't think Quebec frogs are very large, so it was like eating mini drumettes. Same in Paris.

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    5. Your parents must have wondered about this alien child, Grace! So funny. What a great memory of the beginning of your many gastronomic adventures.

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    6. KAREN: They already thought I was weird, lol. Too bad I don't have any photos of that meal. My dad had the camera.

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    7. I think, no I know, Jacques Pepin worked for Howard.Johnsons. He talks about it often on his different TV series.

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    8. Pepin worked for HoJo? Cool. I never knew that!

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  3. All these experiences seem rather wonderful…even in strange ways. Mine is very humble from my own kitchen, during graduate school. All that was in “cupboard”: eggs and peanut butter. The peanut butter omelet was an epic messy sticky hard to clean the pan fail. Elisabeth

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    1. If only you'd added sugar and flour, you'd have had pb cookies!

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    2. Graduate school budget did not include flour and sugar! Lol. Elisabeth

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  4. Replies
    1. Was that in New Orleans, DRU? I also ate alligator + kangaroo, rattlesnake & ostrich at the Buckhorn Exchange in Denver CO. It was a grilled meat platter. I remember asking my B&B host for a restaurant recommendation. I wanted to eat something other than beef!

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    2. How was it Dru? Grace you take the foodie gold medal for sure

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    3. Grace, I too have eaten those with the exception of kangaroo. Cooked emu for a supper party - as I remember all were delicious. What surprised me the most was how much I loved smoked eel. Now I am gone...

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    4. Should have mentioned all the mounted animal heads watching us as we were dining at the Buckhorn Exchange. Very dated decor...it is the oldest restaurant in Denver, opened in 1893.

      I love eating smoked or BBQ eel many times in Japan and Vancouver.

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    5. Dru, the alligator tail I've had tasted very metallic to me. Did you find it that way?

      That sounds very adventurous for you!

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    6. Grace I dined with mounted animal heads at my aunt and uncle’s farm in Iowa. I believe theirs are elk.

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    7. ANON: I found this photo of the Buckhorn Exchange interior. Looks like not much has changed since I was last there!
      https://www.tripadvisor.com/LocationPhotoDirectLink-g33388-d379575-i158302205-Buckhorn_Exchange-Denver_Colorado.html

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  5. What great (and astonishing) restaurant experiences! In sixth grade on a week-long school trip to Baja California, the school we were visiting did a goat roast for us, and I remember loving it. Have never been able to recreate the experience with goat meat since.

    Like Grace, I ate escargot in my teens. Mr. Grindell, our French teacher, took French Club to a French restaurant somewhere in the greater Pasadena area (no idea where it was). I was fifteen or sixteen. I liked them, but haven't had them since.

    I had some sublime meals in Japan when I lived there, although I learned never to order raw squid. If it's perfectly fresh, it's soft and delicious. If it's not, you'll gag on it.

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    1. One more: on my very first day with my exchange family in southern Brazil, they bought a watermelon from someone on the side of the road on our way from the airport to their home. They cut it open and it had yellow flesh, although it was sweet and juicy and tasted like usual. I thought, okay, watermelons are yellow in Brazil. Then they said they'd never seen one like it before!

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    2. I ate an octopus carpaccio (raw) in San Diego last year. Not a huge fan of raw squid but I will gladly eat a whole plate of perfectly fried calamari!

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    3. Octopus is delicious on sushi, but again, only if perfectly fresh.

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    4. I've had yellow watermelon from my CSA share. -- Mary

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  6. Dru, I tried alligator too. In South Florida. It did NOT taste like chicken.
    It was good, kind of like nuggets of pork.
    Also had ant larvae while on a tequila (work) trip in Mexico. It was surprisingly easy to eat - and now I understand how part of the world gets their protein through insects.

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    1. Hank Phillippi RyanJuly 19, 2024 at 8:38 AM

      Nope nope nope. :-) xxxx

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    2. I ate dried crickets as a snack. Not bad. But no main meal with insects...yet!

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  7. I did mention eating zarusoba noodles during hot summers in Japan in a previous JRW post.
    Here is a short video showing how to catch the somen or soba noodles floating down cold flowing water in a bamboo tube. So much fun!
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wto9-9N-o3g

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  8. So many meals, so many memories!
    Lucy, I cannot think how food is like a highway, but there are talented, imaginative people who create art in every medium, so, I believe it's possible.

    When we met, we lived in a condo complex in another suburb of Hartford. My grandmother was coming to visit and Irwin's parents were coming, too, so I decided to make lobsters 🦞. (We were just reminiscing about this the other day.) I had an enormous pot exactly for this meal. My parents must have been coming over, too. I went to the grocery store and bought 7 lobsters. Then, my best friend from high school who lives in Rhode Island called from her father's house to say she was in town. We went back to the store for 2 more lobsters.

    The rest of the memory is a blur. Irwin's folks had never eaten lobster before but there were plenty of experienced hands around the table. I have no idea what I served with it. I just remember a very crowded dining room table with noisy laughter and that triumphant feeling you get when you know your guests had a great time!

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    1. Catching the noodle La in the fluke looks like fun, Grace!

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    2. Oops so much went wrong with that reply. Catching the noodles in the flume looks like fun!

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    3. BRENDA: I can easily make zarusoba at home (recipe is so easy). But catching and eating the noodles at an outdoor restaurant was memorable! Both sets of grandparents lived in homes without A/C. I was wilting in the summer humidity so I begged them to take me there more than once. We ate there 3 times in 6 weeks.

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  9. Calves brains, in France. Delicious until I realized what I was eating. Never had them since. I was not yet 18, on my gap year between high school and university, out for dinner as the guest of the chef of the restaurant above which I was living. He ordered the meal and I did my best. The memory remains so vivid.

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    1. This comment has been removed by the author.

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    2. So many (negative) experiences eating calves brains. You, Rhys and Hallie!
      I never got to eat this while in France.

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    3. Hank Phillippi RyanJuly 19, 2024 at 8:39 AM

      Again: nope nope nope. :-) xxx

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  10. The hot dog buffet at Dat Dog in New Orleans: alligator, crawfish, various bratwursts. A Cincinnati specialty is brats boiled in beer.

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  11. A meal I remember to this day was a simple breakfast. I was on a train in Alaska traveling between Anchorage and Fairbanks and ordered pancakes with a side of fruit. Well, I was expecting the little silver dollar pancakes and instead received an enormous pancake that dwarfed the plate it was on. It was so fluffy and had just a taste of sweetness that it could have passed for pastry if I closed my eyes. My side of fruit turned out to be a large bowl of fruit. They really don't skimp on portion sizes in Alaska. Add to that the wilderness scenery in all its glory and it is easily the most memorable meal I've ever enjoyed. -- Victoria

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    1. that sounds so lovely Victoria! it's wonderful when food and place twine together...

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  12. Memories: You opened a culinary door in my head Lucy. In the '60's eating at The Tea House of the August Moon in Okinawa. Totally for tourists, and still very authentic. My first taste of sashimi might have been fugu. In the 70's exploring California cuisine and loving a date milkshake. Every move brought new adventures to the table. Thank goodness for PBS food shows. Without Julia, and Martin Yan, there would have been many more disasters. Speaking of which, my mind took off with the meal themed on a highway. Would the main course be 'road kill venison'? The dessert ice cream on a bed of asphalt? I sincerely hope not.

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    1. FUGU? You were brave to eat that!

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    2. Wasn't brave as much as very naive. I remember a translucent fish sliced and presented in the shape of a heron. Most of the meal is lost in memory or in translation.

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    3. Date milkshakes, from a little stand on the way to Joshua Tree! SO creamy and good.

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    4. Yes! Why don't we see them anywhere else - or make them ourselves?

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    5. Ha ha Coralee, that restaurant needs you to help plan menus!

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  13. I don't think I've ever been in a position to eat anything exotic. Even when I spent my six months in the Caribbean, I wouldn't have considered any of the local dishes I had "exotic." It was basically fish or chicken with rice - and lots of different flavors. No calf brains or anything like that.

    But The Hubby and I did have a memorable dinner at the Three Sisters in New Orleans when we were there for Bouchercon 2016. Not because of the food, but the atmosphere. We ate in the courtyard under a magnolia tree that was well over 100 years old, full of flows and strung with lights. Magical.

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  14. Love your story Hank! We learned that lesson while in France. If your order a steak well done, you will get your steak the way the chef decides! You may not order coffee before the meal is over. "C'est impossible!"

    And at our favorite dining experience the waiter was shocked to see that the three of us were tasting each others meal choices. He thought we didn't like the food for some strange reason, but we explained we absolutely loved each of our meals and wanted to share with each other.

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  15. So many fun stories. Lucy, your highway-related meal is fun, but I abhor this recent trend of making food precious. And outrageously expensive. When we were in Greece a couple months ago the kids "took" us to the restaurant across the street from their apartment in Athens (I paid. Through the nose.) Seven course of one-to-three-bite dishes, each more precious than the last, each accompanies with a different wine. I suspected that half the cost went to the poor dishwasher who had to deal with all the glassware.

    Our most memorable meals both happened in Africa. On our last day of safari in Tanzania the tour guide operator and her partner hosted us in the interim between being in the bush and heading to our evening flight. We went to a traditional restaurant, and we were the only white guests. There were lots of families, seated outdoors around tables, including newly confirmed children, etc.

    Our hostess ordered for us: piles of roasted goat meat, beef, and chicken on paper tablecovers, served with sides of potatoes and bread, and washed down with Tanzanian beer. We ate with our hands, after washing them tableside via the bowl of water the waiter took around the table to each of us, along with a towel to dry them. Delicious, even the goat.

    The other truly memorable meal was Christmas dinner on safari at Saruni Samburu Lodge. All but two of the 18 guests were American, and they catered a bit to our palates, but it was a Feast. Usually, our meals were either served per order, or we would have bush meals packed by our guide, but this was set out buffet-style, with traditional dishes of roast beef, turkey, lamb, and other meats, alongside traditional Kenyan dishes, plus the lodge's specialty Italian options (the owner at the time was Milanese). The senior staff broke protocol to sit with guests, and the lodge manager sat next to me. She kept urging us to try various delicacies. Eaten under a star-studded equatorial sky.

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    1. KAREN: The Tanzania and Kenya meals sound wonderful but very meat-focused. Besides the potatoes & bread, did you eat vegetable side dishes?

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    2. Not at that meal. But every dinner we had on safari began with a different kind of vegetable soup, usually pureed. It's dicey to eat salads, because of water contamination, but we did have cooked vegetables most days. Lots and lots of fruit, including wonderful tiny bananas.

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    3. The Christmas meal had LOTS of vegetable side dishes. I just don't remember details about them. The last time we were in Kenya, after Christmas on safari, we went to the beach for a couple nights, to a resort in Mombasa where, out of thousands of guests, we were five out of maybe a dozen white people. They catered to a broad variety of international palates, including many different African countries, plus Asian, including Indian cuisine. It was impossible to choose, sometimes. But loads of dishes for vegetarians in the variety. Their buffets were arranged around two side of THREE different areas, with to-order dishes cooked in front of you. We could almost literally choose just about anything we could dream of, included in the price of our room. Except... bottled water, which we insisted on, was extra.

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    4. What a night Karen, you'll remember that forever!

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  16. Just to add to Hank's experience in Florence, Italy. It may have been in Italy in an Italian restaurant but it must have been a French chef!! :)

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  17. I am not an adventurous eater, but watching my guys and eat squid ink pasta in Burano, Italy was very memorable!
    Another memorable meal was at Stella’s Diner in Des Moines, Iowa where you hold the cup on your head while they pour your shake into it.

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  18. I have eaten some oddities I'd probably not have now, for sentimental not culinary reasons, octopus, rabbit, frog's legs, even beaver stew (served to cast at Ren. Faire) and reindeer sausage on the Alaska RR. I've enjoyed some excellent meals on cruises, but two memorable meals rise higher, from a trip to Europe in 1970, dinner on a Bateaux Mouches in Paris (mouches means fly, a bit of irony?) and an excellent Paella in Brussels. One that trip, we also risked an angry chef by requesting sauerbraten mid-afternoon on the Rhine. After much shouting, the waitress must have made the case for us, and he even came out to share his recipe and tell about cooking for American officers in WWII.

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    1. and curried goat and saltfish and akee when I taught in Jamaica, and fresh coconuts to drink.

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  19. From Diana: So many meals, so many memories, Lucy! I am trying to remember if I ever had anything unusual on my travels.

    In Hawaii, I was about ten years old. I remember drinking Seven Up and it tasted like saltwater. I added many sugar packets before it tasted more like the drink I remembered. I was not an adventurous eater at that age. However we went to a luau and ate Pig! It was yummy! It tasted different from bacon, though,

    When I was a child, sometimes we had fondue dinners at home. I rarely hear about fondue these days. Last time I saw fondue cheese and fondue chocolate was in 2006 when I visited Switzerland.

    During my University years, we travelled to Scandinavia and I remember having “brown cheese”, which was novel to me. In Scotland, the “chicken salad” was actually a chicken leg in a salad instead of the children salad that I was familiar with - chopped chicken pieces mixed with other vegetables in a chicken salad. In England, “Yorkshire pudding” was actually some kind of bread?
    And I remember seeing Baked Potato stands where you could buy a baked potato and you could pick any toppings you wanted. That was years before food trucks became popular here in the states.

    In the mid 2000’s decade, we travelled to Europe. I remember having Rosti, which is similar to the American hash browns but the Rosti was really wonderful. That was from a tiny shack near the train stop at the end of our Swiss Alps trek. Another tiny shack had long hot dogs. I had both. In France, I had Kir Royale, which is unusual. Never found that anywhere else. In Italy, I remember the yummy flatbread pizzas and gelato.

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    1. I think my hub's favorite food memory would be rosti...

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    2. Kir royale is one of my favorites, Diana. It's syrup de cassis (blackcurrent) with champagne.

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  20. Most memorable meal happened here, at home. Mom and I were invited to a wedding of a Eritrean wedding.. The wedding ceremony was traditional but in the Episcopal church. The Eritrean community did have a church building yet. The bishop, while to the guests, wagged his finger at everyone and said something very sternly. Our friend translated later that he said with size of the community, they should be building their own church. The church was packed.

    Anyway this is supposed to be about food. The wedding is in the morning. The reception was in the evening. They rented an exhibit hall at the fairgrounds. There was another presentation, with swords and dancing. The meal was an Eritrean buffet. These families had cooked for days in preparation. My mother was NOT an person to experiment with food so at the fried chicken and some kind of vegeables. I fell in love with the bread. We were sitting with strangers who explained the food. There were forks and knives for those of who didn't eat with their hands (Mom). I don't remember anything horrible. Our temporary food translators guided us away from the very spicy food. It was just a marvelous meal.

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    1. I love Ethiopian/Eritrean food! Njira is the stretchy sourdough pancake that they use for an eating utensil. We served takeout Ethiopian food for my older son's wedding welcome dinner the night before, eaten at an outdoor patio at the venue, which we had for the weekend. Lots of vegetarian options.

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    2. I adore Ethiopian food as well! Ross and i used to go to the Red Sea in the Adams-Morgan neighborhood of DC - amazing cuisine (I love the njira, Edith) and it suited the budgets of two students. I just checked, and apparently it's still in business almost 40 years later, and has become quite upscale!

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    3. I had Ethiopian food once in Halifax, and loved the Njira. Years later, we read a book in Book Club, the title of which escapes me, where the author who was a doctor and grew up in Ethiopia talked of growing up, and then the sensation of finding real Ethiopian food in the US, and my mouth drooled as I remembered those flavours and the texture of the wrap.

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  21. A memorable meal at the end of a memorable day: I was 21, living in Stockholm for a year, and staying a few days in Gothenberg on the west coast. On a public bus moving slowly through the city, I sat next to a good-looking man (maybe 27 or 28) who worked at Volvo. We chatted for about fifteen minutes, and then he asked me if I'd ever been to Copenhagen, which I hadn't. So he invited me to spend the next day with him there. He was going to leave at 6 a.m., drive into Denmark and to Copenhagen, pick up a painting that he'd bought in a gallery, and drive back in the evening. I agreed to go with him and gave him the address of where I was staying, where he'd pick me up the next morning just after 6. Today, I can't believe I agreed to anything so risky, but I went off with him, and we had a fabulous day. He treated me to an extraordinary lunch at a famous open-faced sandwich place called Oskar Davidsen's (I didn't know it was famous then), picked up his painting, and then we spent the afternoon at a museum of modern art near Copenhagen called Louisiana. Now comes the meal! On the way home, we stopped to have dinner with his aunt, who lived in a cottage in the woods, and she had made a pot of nettle soup from the nettles growing in the woods around her. She served the soup in big wooden bowls with homemade bread, and the three of us talked, and talked. It was a wonderful evening. Afterward, my companion drove me back to the hostel where I was staying, kissed me on the cheek, and we never saw each other again!

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    1. What a great story, Kim! We were so trusting and risk-taking at that age - I was too.

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    2. I know, Edith. And most of the time, thank goodness, our instincts were guiding us right.

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    3. Kim, what an adventure! I love that story! I did things like that when I was young and single, too. Now thinking of some of those flights of fancy with a big grin on my face.

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    4. Kim, the mother in me was saying, “No, don’t go with that stranger, Kim!” Or maybe it’s the mystery reader who was talking? Either way, I am very grateful that you lived to (literally) tell the tale! — Pat S

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    5. Kim, what an enchanting story. And it's good to be young and a bit daring. One of the best days I spent in Rome involved a Finnish university student I happened to meet in a museum!

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    6. KIM: That was a memorable adventure in more innocent times! After missing from my flight to Toronto from Gatwick (on that solo 2-month European trek at age 20), I had to go to Travelers Aid since I had broke with no credit card or travelers cheques. The grandmotherly soul (Shirley English) who worked there took me to her East Sussex home after work & gave me dinner & a comfy bed. She then fed me breakfast & brought me back to Gatwick the next morning to catch another flight home. We kept in touch for another decade after that fateful encounter.

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  22. LOL, Julia! I’d forgotten about that bit in The Matrix! Too funny!

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  23. Oh, I'm drooling! Jenn, the rattlesnake I ate tasted more like zucchini. It was fried sticks, which probably explains it.

    Strangest meal - the first time I was in Jamaica I was invited to dine with family who served ackee and peas. Yank that I was, I'd never heard of ackee, but I knew peas meant little beans. I loved the dish and asked about ackee. Found out it grows on trees, and if it's not picked at precisely the correct moment - it's poisonous. I remember my mind freezing while I tried to school my expression and remember if she served the dish to her family or just the American guest.

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    1. Ooh, there's a mystery novel right there, or at least a short story!

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  24. My siblings and nieces and nephews accuse me of eating “weird” foods. They need to read today’s blog post, and then come and apologize to me!!

    I don’t have stories like any of these. The closest to a “strange” experience that I had was the food I ate at a party hosted by someone from the Phillipines. The food was absolutely delicious, and I had second helpings of almost everything! I asked the hostess what we were eating, and she responded “if I tell you, you’ll never
    want to eat here again!”

    DebRo

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    1. Don't you still wonder what in the world it was?!

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  25. I was trying to think of some exotic food memories and, coming up empty, asked my husband if he could remember any unique dining experience since we have been together. He said, “Well, there was that meal at The Hacienda with my mother. I still remember that!” I looked at him and said, “I don’t. Remind me what happened.” “Oh, you weren’t there.” Then how is that a shared dining experience for ME?! (Hand to forehead emoji goes here.) — Pat S

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    1. Pat, I laughed out loud at this. My husband used to do this as well, God love him. "Remember when we saw this movie?" "No." "Oh, I guess I was with someone else..."

      I was never sure if it was a compliment that he inserted me into his memories, or insulting, because he didn't know if I was there or not!

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  26. So interesting to me to read these memories. I am the furthest thing from an adventurous eater. I ate haggis in Scotland. That's the extent of my daring. If I go out to a restaurant, which we do rarely, I order something familiar (that I don't cook at home). However my husband eats everything from every culture, with gusto. He was sometimes a bit dubious on trips to China but he gamely ate every unusual specialty offered by his hosts.

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    1. Oh, that was me, Selden.

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    2. I don't think I'd eat everything in China, knowing some of the things they cook... insects, dog....?

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  27. I love these memories. So fun. Thank you all for sharing. I did not eat them but was at a Texas restaurant that offered Mountain Oysters. No Thank You

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  28. My mother and I had two great meals in Vezelay in 2022 but happily no foie gras was involved!

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  29. Fermented shark in Iceland quickly followed by a high powered alcohol shot. Reindeer meat in both Alaska and Finland. Alligator in Louisiana. My husband had dog in South Korea! Alicia Kullas

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    1. I've heard alligator is actually quite tasty, Alicia. Usually meat-eaters don't make good meat-providers, but I guess if you're predating on fish, that makes it okay!

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  30. When my husband was stationed at the Pentagon and the kids and I went to visit, one of our favorite restaurants was Uno's Pizza in Union Station. We loved their pizza. It's also where I learned that a Long Island Ice Tea was not your momma's ice tea. But, one time my daughter and I decided to try the restaurant on the first floor that was out in the open (don't know if it's even there anymore and can't think of the name of it). We wanted something different, something new. My daughter is always up for trying new food. Well, I ordered a salad, which said something about octopus being in it. I wasn't too sure about that, but I was trying to be adventurous. When the salad arrived, I sat and stared at it in disbelief. There were tiny little, whole octopuses (3 plurals for octopus are octopi, octopuses, and octopodes) in the salad, baby octopuses with tentacles and heads. This was just a bridge too far for me. Ashley tried hers, but she didn't like it much. Next trip to Union Station was back to Uno's.

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    1. Kathy, it was in DC that I first had a Long Island Ice Tea - it was the well drink special and my friends didn't tell me what was in it... hoo, boy! I usually walked home from Georgetown, but I had to cab it that night!

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    2. Yeah, nobody warned me either, and I think my daughter knew. At least she was there with me to ride the Metro back to Arlington.

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    3. Oh no Kathy, that would have finished me off too!

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    4. Since I've read about the incredible intelligence of octopus I've changed my mind about eating them, Kathy

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  31. Best meals – not – tripe. Enough said, But I later had it in Vietnamese pho and it was delicious, so I will add, if someone cooks it for me – maybe.
    Great – pretty much any full English that we had in a trip through Britain.
    Duck – yup, anywhere, any time.
    Most memorable – believe it or not, steak and eggs. I was 21 and flying home from Regina, Saskatchewan to Halifax through the US by numerous little airlines. The cost was $50 total for any amount of flying in 1 month, but it had to be on the small airlines and standby. Often it was a case of you can’t get there from here, so there was a lot of back-tracking and poor flight times. It might have been from Louisiana to Florida, and quite possibly took more than 12 hours so that when I landed, I was more than famished. I stopped in a café, and basically said feed me, and the cook asked “steak and eggs”? Sure, says I having never had it before. Steak was rare and juicy and probably off the cheapest part of the cow, the eggs were perfectly runny and the hash browns were superb. Best meal ever!

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  32. When I was a kid, I was a somewhat fussy eater, but my dad was a "try it, you'll like it" guy. By my teens, I was trying most everything, at home or on my trips. I've tried most of things mentioned.

    Many of my co-workers at the PA Bureau of Forestry were hunters so we had bear, venison, elk, partridge, and maybe squirrel at our holiday potlucks. I'd already eaten venison, elk, and bison on my trips. I'm not a fan of raw fish or meat, though.

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  33. A very close friend and I lived in Eastern France in the country for 6 months in a converted barn. My cousin and wife were arriving (both cousins and wives arrived!) We worked all day on a fabulous meal with minimal implements. They were enjoying the meal when cousin asked what it was. Rabbit. He ate no more. It was delicious.

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    1. I do love rabbit. It was a staple when I was young after the war.

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