Posted on 08/19/2004 7:01:22 AM PDT by Pokey78
My American friends in England never stop complaining about the food here. Its all gloopy, they say, and they bitch about the warm beer, grey curries and unidentifiable soups. Sometimes their longing for US comfort food beefburgers, hotdogs, cookies, tacos and dairy queen ice cream becomes so strong that some of them even resort to a company called the Food Ferry, a British Internet site that delivers Skippy Peanut Butter, beef jerky and Oreo cookies.
My solution is a little different. I tell them that American food is overrated, unhealthy and revolting, and the sooner they wean themselves off it, the better they will feel.
American food seems pretty impressive at first sight, but during a four-year stint in the US I realised that it is basically a con trick: bigger isnt necessarily better; brighter colours dont mean more intense flavours; sugar tastes good, but leaves you feeling depressed, sick and still hungry.
British cuisine may be considered bland but at least, by and large, you know what youre putting in your mouth. One of Americas bestselling snacks is a cheese dip designed to be scooped up with nacho chips. Its runny, its orange, it tastes like cheese, but a label on the jar says that its a non-dairy product. Then there are Twinkies small yellow sponge cakes found in the lunchboxes of most US children. Twinkies are made of such mysterious stuff that they dont have a best-before date and are subjected to scientific tests. A Twinkie was left on a window ledge for four days, says one Internet report, during which time many flies were observed crawling across the Twinkies surface but, contrary to our hypothesis, birds even pigeons avoided this potential source of sustenance.
Even the food thats made of food is a challenge. A pastrami sandwich comes with a good six inches of meat in the middle how do you get your mouth around something thats nearly as big as your head? After a few attempts, any appetite you might once have had is gone. Have you ever tried an American apple? They look perfect enormous, red and shiny but have the consistency of cotton wool. Its the same with the meat: huge, juicy-looking steaks, and chops, perfectly grilled, pink inside, but tasting of wet paper.
The Cheesecake Factory is one of the most popular family food chains in the US and for me the most grotesque example of American food. A single slice of cheesecake is as big as a brick and would more than suffice for a meal. An entire cheesecake could quite easily put a small child into hyperglycaemic shock. It must put a strain on family life, having to watch your nearest and dearest eating this gunk. The cheesecake is just one of the factory specials whose metal menu lists hundreds of other dishes, like the Tons of Fun burger: Yes, Its True! Double Patties, Double Cheese, Triple Sesame-Seed Bun with Lettuce, Tomato, Red Onion, Pickles and Secret Sauce. Served with Fries and the Mile-High Meatloaf Sandwich Topped with Mashed Potatoes, Crispy Onions and Barbeque Au Jus. Served Open-Faced on Extra Thick Egg Bread.
The labelling of dishes in American restaurants provides an interesting challenge to both menu-writer and reader. Ordering from the food encyclopaedias of restaurants like The Cheesecake Factory is rather like resitting ones SAT tests. There is a full page dedicated to every beast, bread and starch as well as every national cuisine; also fusion dishes. Whatever I chose, I was always left worrying whether Id made the wrong decision. And despite the bewildering variety of foodstuffs on offer, any attempt to veer from the menu is greeted with blank incomprehension:
Just the turkey, please.
The dish comes that way.
But I only want the turkey, thanks.
Im sorry, miss, thats not possible.
But I know youve got grilled turkey it says so right here.
Thats our Grilled Turkey Sandwich, miss. Our Grilled Turkeys on our dinner menu.
But surely you can just remove the bread?
No Im sorry. Like I told you before, the Grilled Turkey Sandwich comes with the bread.
You make it sound like its born with the bread.
So you decide to eat in, but this involves a trip to the supermarket and hours spent trying to spot the microscopic differences between thousands of identical brands. Whereas in England we would have an aisle of grains and jams and cereals, Americans will dedicate an area the size of a tennis court just to varieties of bread: loafs of every shape and shade, bagels and buns, waffle mix. Often, in desperation, Id just go for the most adventurous option. Coconut-sprinkled sweet potatoes made one appearance in my flat, but only one.
Half the problem, I think, is that food isnt just food in the States its an obsession. Not only does Adams Peanut Butter Cup Fudge Ripple Cheesecake exist, it can be gawped at online. The Krispy Kreme website features a five-minute video with a jaunty electronic soundtrack showing rows of little doughnuts browning slowly on a conveyor belt, before being lovingly glazed, bought and eaten. Food even provides whole states with a sense of history and identity Midwestern towns fight over titles like home of the peanut, birthplace of the corndog, Krispy Kreme Kountry.
And with the excesses of American food comes a national fixation on dieting: as Eric Schlosser reports, McDonalds has attempted to cash in on this with a McLean burger for dieters. We may not go to the gym so often in Britain, but our food doesnt demand that we do. I flew back from America looking forward to shepherds pie and pints of beer only to be confronted by an upsurge in American fast food in London not enough to keep my US friends happy, but still worrying. Perhaps we and the Americans should pay more attention to global gastronomy. We could form a food think tank to wean the US off sugar and on to snails, squid and sushi. It would make us all healthier and happier.
What a goober. No pun intended of course
You'll find though that certain types of beer are always chilled, such as lagers.
Regards, Ivan
We visited England in April.
I was curious to see what was on TV. The very first thing I saw on British television was a commercial for KFC.
Then, there were the MacDonalds, Burger King ads.
After that, I watched Scooby Doo.
It was pretty embarassing. I told anyone who would listen that they're NOT getting the true picture of American cuisine.
After all, we have the world's best pizza right here in the NY Metro area!
(I'm waiting for Chicago to check in...)
Waitress: Well, there's egg and bacon; egg, sausage and bacon; egg and spam; egg, bacon and spam; egg, bacon, sausage and spam; spam, bacon, sausage and spam; spam, egg, spam, spam, bacon and spam; spam, sausage, etc...
It sounds like this twit is clamoring for socialism's food shortages, lack of choice, and soup lines.
Yeah, but what a way to go, yummm.
BLACK PUDDING FROM SCRATCH (ENGLISH) Recipe By : Serving Size : 6 Preparation Time :0:00 Categories : Pork
Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method -------- ------------ -------------------------------- 1 1/4 qt Fresh pig's blood 8 7/8 oz Bread cut into cubes 1 1/4 qt Skim milk 1 lb Cooked barley 1 lb Fresh beef suet 8 oz Fine oatmeal 1 t Salt 2 ts Ground black pepper 2 ts Dried and crumbled mint
Put the bread cubes to soak in the milk in a warm oven. Do not heat the milk beyond blood temperature! Have the blood ready in a large bowl, and pour the warm milk and bread into it. Stir in the cooked barley. Grate the beef suet into the mixture and stir it up with the oatmeal. Season with the salt, pepper and mint.
Have ready 2 or three large roasting pans. Divide the mixture between them ~- they should not be more than 3/4 full. Bake in a moderate oven -- 350 F ~- for about an hour or until the pudding is well cooked through. This makes a beautifully light pudding which will keep well in a cold larder.>
Cut into squared and fry till heated through and the outside is crisp, in bacon fat or butter. Delicious for breakfast, or for supper with fried apples and mashed potato.
In 1981 I spent two weeks in Britain. After two days of eating Fish and Chips, I began to seek out Chinese food restaurants. I have to thank the enterprising Chinese for being everywhere to save the white man from the tasteless swill that came out of Old Mother England.
As they say in Boston, ain't that a pissah? The last time I was in London (July of 2001) I was pretty stunned that Budweiser was being marketed to the young twenty-somethings as a fine American Import. Not Sam Adams, not Anchor Steam, not even freakin' Rolling Rock -- but Bud.
And this broad is clucking US under our chins for our pedestrian tastes. Yeesh.
No doubt the English have good beer, but when you've been in the hot Texas sun all day where its 90 to 105 degrees, cold beer like Coors Light or Bud Light are what the doctor ordered NOT a Boddingtons.
Ya, and steak and kidney pie, too.
I'll never forget biting down on that nice spongy chunk of kidney.
True enough. I homebrew, and have never made lagers, which are even brewed in refrigeration. All my ales have been served chilled, as per my 'merkan nature. ;-)
Thanks for the quick reply!
Probably due to not having a wealth of things to choose from like we do.
When dining out, one never expects the Spanish Inquisition.
I almost understood her point till she said "squid, sushi, and snails..." Ugh. I'm not a seafood fan.
My wife and I make decent meals all the time. What's so f--king complicated?
" No doubt the English have good beer, but when you've been in the hot Texas sun all day where its 90 to 105 degrees, cold beer like Coors Light or Bud Light are what the doctor ordered NOT a Boddingtons. "
Of course a lager hits the spot on certain occasions , but Bud / Coors LIGHT ain't the way to go . Try a Kirin Lager or Labatts or ...
Regards, Ivan
They're right and I do the same thing (except I usually drink hot chocolate instead of tea). It sounds counter-intuitive but its true - a small amount of a hot beverage when its hot seems to trick your body into feeling cooler in hot weather.
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