Posted on 11/17/2012 7:18:11 AM PST by Pharmboy
"Mommy, what's that???"
For anyone reading this, it shouldnt come as a big surprise that Dutch food has yet to sweep the globe. Although pockets of the Dutch can be found scattering the world, delectable Dutch cuisine never seemed to have caught on. Fancy I pick up some Dutch food on the way home from work? or Wow, you have got to try this new Dutch restaurant in SoHo! are phrases you will never hear uttered.
Isnt it odd that a nation of traveling, colonizing, patriotic, emigrating folk never managed to sow their own culinary seeds? Cmon, who are we kidding?? Even those emigrated Dutch settlers were thrilled to have found tastier grub! Sure, New York was more than happy to take the Dutch names of Brooklyn (Breukelen), Harlem (Haarlem), Coney Island (from Konijneneiland) and Staten Island but when it came to Dutch cuisine, they left it at the door (apart from the cheese)!
Dutch people have 3 very specific ways of preparing food/vegetables. Dutch people like to either:
a) mash the hell out of something,
b) boil the shit out of something, or
c) deep-fry the life out of something
(Excerpt) Read more at stuffdutchpeoplelike.com ...
Was grandmama’s people Dutch or from northern Germany? Or from ??
I apologize for letting that slip...I would have edited that out, but missed it.
I know what you mean, I think we need to start reminding each other.
One of my co-workers with a German background recommended trying something like stamppot, with the kraut in the potatoes accompanying pork.
As for deep-frying the life out of food, I thought THAT was purely Midwestern. Maybe we are more Dutch than we realize, way back.
They might like toad in the hole as well.
If the contents of the bottle is single malt from the land of the Scots, is it labeled "Scotch whiskey" or is it just Scots whisky? Or is Scotch just tail-end leavings blended for the Engs?
(laughingly)
Great post! I read a lot of the comments on the source site, (about 50%), and decided I must have some Hollander in me (I know there's a lot of Deutsch) because here is what I invented for myself years ago, not knowing of Dutch/Deutsch stuff before:
20-minute hot potato salad for a bachelor
Ingredients:
Potato flakes
water
butter
salt
milk
bag of shredded country lettuce salad
sweet onion
(olive) oil vinegar
honey
Directions:
(1) Make "mashed" potatos with 1 to 1 1/2 cups of flakes, according to instructions on the flakes box.
(2) Throw a couple handfuls of crisp bag salad onto potatoes.
(3) Cut off some diced chips from the onion into the pot also.
(4) Pour on about 2 tablespoons each of oil, vinegar, and honey from the bottles.
(5) Stir everything together.
(6) Eat soon before lettuce, etc. stop being crispy in the hot potatoes.
(6) Say "Mmmmmmm!"
Is that sort of like "stamppot" or what?
(Crumbled crispy bacon shreds in the above is nice, but extra.) (Saves time on boiling potatoes, and eat quick; from the pot when alone. Washup is quick, too - just the measuring cup, the pot, the knife, & the fork. Also, I found out if you want them, that steaming cut-up peeled potatoes takes no longer than boiling, and they mash OK and taste better than boiled.)
Probably not better than Lake Erie wall-eye around Cleveland, betcha!
As you indicate, "Pennsylvania Dutch" is German. My people. Harder to get along with than Hollanders.
That said, I discovered that mashed turnips with a little horseradish, treated like mashed potatoes otherwise (butter) are quite good, to my astonishment.
We called rutabagas "turnips" too, and I really like them. But add one peeled small/medium potato when boiling cut-up rutabaga makes it very mashable and tempers the flavor. I'll try the horseradish, sounds very good!
You might be right. I’m sad right now because one of my favorite restaurants closed down last month. They had a great wall-eye and american fries fish dinner. Love that wall-eye.
Never ate much in there. Couldn’t afford it. I was a lowly-paid spook over at NRL and the Old Town apartment ate up most of what I had. Saved the rest for “liquid” type lunches and dinners. My favorite two hang outs were Murphy’s and the Piano Bar down nearer the river. Ah, to be young and single and 32 again!
I quaffed a few at Murphy’s. Actually found the Scotland Yard to be one of the more affordable places in Old Town. The atmosphere was the best. Even when the place was full, you could still have a cozy, intimate meal, and the Christmas decor around this time of year was right out of the 19th Century.
Yeah! Wall-eye is really just a super-sized perch. I've been in England, Cleveland, M'waukee, fished Wisconsin River from Eagle River to Rhinelander (not a bite); lived on Cayuga Lake NY) where bass were dying of old age (smile); stuffed myself with bluegill, perch, and bass filets there for a few years; had sashimi in Tokyo & Burbank; swordfish steak at Allen's Clamhouse in Westport CT (gone now); Shark steak in La Jolla; salmon in Coleraine Ireland; etc.
Wall-eye (= yellow pike on the menu) -- the best!
Dutch raw herring -- ugh!
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