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Friday List: Foods I Won’t Touch with a Ten-Foot Pole

June 29, 2012

All right, let me start this off by saying….if I was hungry enough, I would eat any of the foods on this list.  I realize that people’s food choices are sometimes based on availability.  This is not meant to be derogatory. Besides, many of these foods are considered delicacies, haute cuisine. That’s my disclaimer!

1. Raw onions

This should come as no surprise to those of you who are regular readers of my blog.  I have never, never, never, never liked raw onions.  Ever.  Got that?  The smell (I mean, I can get past it when I am cutting them, but beyond that…no).  The taste…burning, lasting, never leaving.  The texture-that crunch.  Please make it stop.  I’ve tried.  You have to believe me.  I can do it in salsa, guacamole, etc….as long as it’s chopped up finely enough.  Beyond that no.  Emphatically, no.  I don’t even like to eat a slice of tomato or a lettuce leaf on my sandwich that has touched a raw onion.  I honestly can’t think of any other vegetables I just won’t touch, though.  Fruits, either (except maybe durian, a famously smelly Asian fruit, but then I’ve never even seen one of those in person, so I’m not too concerned…..).

2. Offal

That is, organ meats.  Brains.  Liver.  Etc.  When I was a child, my grandmother would cook chicken livers.  And I would eat them.  Then one day, I guess I learned what a “liver” was.  That put an end to my chicken liver eating.  Sorry.  They might taste wonderful, but there is just something about an internal organ that I just. Can’t. Do.  Philip likes to eat the (cooked) turkey heart at Thanksgiving.  I can’t even watch.  It makes me shiver just thinking about it…..

3. Wine

So it isn’t a food.  Close enough, though.  I’ve said this before…I realize that I totally blow my foodie street cred by proclaiming on my blog that I don’t like wine.  But I just don’t.  I’ve tried, I have.  I just can’t do it.  It’s too sour, too bitter.  Don’t try to make recommendations about what kind of wine I might like.  I won’t.  It’s unnecessary, and I am okay with my lowered foodie status.  I will, however, continue to freely open the bottle when it comes to cooking.

4. Escargots

Snails.  Escargot is French for snail.  They are served on a platter in their little shells.  I’ve heard they are delicious, more or less swimming in garlic butter, but again, no.  They’re snails.

5. Canned ham.  Or potted meat.  Or anything of that nature.

Why, why, why??????  What is so wrong with ham that you need to chop it up and put it in a little can so that it can be spread on a cracker or bread or whatever?  The color is so off-putting, even if it is pretty much the same color as ham.  It’s spreadable ham.  It’s cold.  It just grosses me out.  I used to eat Spam.  Man, I used to love Spam.  Until I realized that I didn’t know what Spam was.  Game over.  There is just something about canned meat.  Canned chopped meat.

6. Generic mayonnaise

When I was a kid, my cousins would always have JFG (my dad called it “junk food groceries”) mayonnaise at their house.  I realize that JFG is technically a brand, but to me it always seemed “generic”.  Anyway, my mom always bought Kraft.  I could always tell the difference.  JFG just tasted off.  I would much rather eat a dry sandwich.  Now, I’ll happily eat some Hellman’s (my sister won’t-it’s Kraft or nothing), and you know I like to make my own, but store-brand?  Not even willing to try.  Oh, I don’t eat Miracle Whip either.  My grandfather used to eat that mess all the time.  Thank God my grandmother liked Kraft mayo or I would have been in trouble.  I remember my aunt making me a sandwich at my grandparents’ house and putting Miracle Whip on it.  I refused to eat it.  She argued with me that it was the same as mayonnaise.  It is not.  Not at all.

7.  Canned potatoes

Have you ever tried them?  The taste is just so bad.  Philip has a great story about canned potatoes.  When he was a kid, he had a babysitter who tried to make him eat canned potatoes.  He flatly refused.  She told him he couldn’t leave the table until he ate the potatoes.  He sat at the table until his mom got there.  I married well.

8.  Bugs

This is one of those biggies that hits me when I watch Bizarre Foods.  Eating bugs is fairly common in other cultures, and I am sure that if I lived in any of those other cultures I would be fine with it.  But I don’t.  So I’m not.  Shows like Fear Factor send me into a tailspin.  Watching people stuff live praying mantises (or whatever) into their mouth really freaks me out.  For the record, I love the show Bizarre Foods but would never watch Fear Factor of my own accord.  I just don’t do reality TV.

9. Any Pepper Hotter than a Jalapeno

I’m a total pansy.  If my food’s too spicy I won’t eat it.  I just can’t.

10. Grit (not grits)

Okay, again…not a food; grit, however, is frequently in food.  I wash my leeks to excess.  I once nearly burst into tears when I bit into a California roll in a restaurant and there was grit in it.  I’ve only eaten clam chowder once, and I won’t do it again because while it tasted fine, it was gritty.  I’m too afraid of the grit.  Like sand between your teeth.  For that matter, I can’t listen to other people chew grit.  I once had a kid in my class who thought it was funny to eat the sand from the sandbox.  I nearly died.  Shopping at the farmers market has made me acutely aware of how carefully I wash my veggies.  Because they are often picked almost immediately before being sold, and because farmers don’t have time to sterilize the food, it’s dirty.  Which I appreciate, because I think we’ve come to expect too much sterility from our food system…but I don’t want to eat grit, so I have become very good friends with my salad spinner.

I guess my list isn’t as long as I thought it was.  I recently conquered one of my food fears, sardines.  Maybe one of these days I’ll overcome some more of these on the list.  Raw onions and wine probably won’t be among them, though.

What are your “under (almost) no circumstances” foods?

 

Filed Under: Chattavore Chats Tagged With: lists, writing By Mary // Chattavore 22 Comments

Friday List: Food World Trends That Annoy Me

June 22, 2012

1.  Every celebrity is also a chef.

I’m not talking about “celebrity chefs” here (i.e. the Altons, Emerils, and Bobby Flays of the world).  They went to culinary school, they are clearly good with a television audience, and they have built their success in the food world on that.  I am also not talking about non-chefs like Rachael Ray or Paula Deen, who built their food celebrity on a niche (Ray started off cooking and teaching cooking classes in grocery stores and hosting a local cooking show; Deen owns a very successful restaurant in Savannah, GA…well, in many other places now as well…) or food bloggers like Pioneer Woman.  Nay nay, my friends.  I am talking about people who are already famous and suddenly they have a cookbook.  I mean, Gwyneth Paltrow has a cookbook.  Eva Longoria has a cookbook.  Some chick (celebrity status questionable, and I’m not talking about Bethenny Frankel, who does have a culinary background) from one of the Real Housewives shows has a cookbook (maybe even two?).  I’ve even seen cookbooks from siblings and parents of celebrities.  WHAT. GIVES?  Jealousy?  Sure.  I won’t lie.  I’d love for someone to give me a publishing deal to write a cookbook.  But you know what?  I’ve spent a lot of time and energy on food….not to say that these celebrities haven’t, or that they aren’t good cooks…..but it’s just not cool that they get the cookbook deals just because they’re famous (don’t get me started on actors and actress who are meh singers releasing albums-soap box!!!).

2.  Bakery cupcakes must have at least 5.2 inches of icing.  Selling items other than cupcakes optional.

I have nothing against a good cupcake.  Nothing.  And I’ll give you this: the current trend of cupcakes with towering mounds of icing is quite beautiful to look at.  However, I don’t really like having to work for my treats (and neatly scraping off 2/3 of the icing from a gigantic cupcake is indeed work) and when so much effort is put into presentation (icing colors, swirls, a different “look” for each cupcake), the flavor and texture of both the cupcake and the icing suffer.  It’s true.  I’d much rather go to my favorite Federal Bake Shop, where the cupcakes are white or chocolate with white (almond-flavored) or chocolate icing.  Belle’s Cupcakes (sold at Market Street Tavern) are also nice…jumbo cupcakes (perfect for two) with a reasonable amount of icing.  And you know, sometimes when I go to a bakery I’d rather get something else….so the “cupcake bakery” trend annoys me a bit too….but seems to be dying off, if slowly.

3.  Apparently, anything goes on a slider bun.

Don’t get me wrong.  I love sliders.  I mean, I do live in the city where Krystal originated….so I’ve been eating sliders my entire life.  I’ll admit to thinking the slider trend was cool when it first happened, and I’ll even admit that I occasionally order sliders at restaurants-and even cook them at home.  However, to me a slider must be a burger.  My slider annoyance comes in the fact that restaurants will put anything on a slider roll.  Buffalo chicken.  Crab cakes (seriously?).  Pimento cheese.  Yep, you read that right.  One casual dining chain had a pimento cheese slider for a time.  I tried it-I had to.  It was terrible.  Terrible.  Leave the sliders to the burgers, guys.  Please.

4.  Diet Trends

Michael Pollan says it best: Eat food.  Not too much.  Mostly plants.

Extreme diet trends have been around for years.  Cabbage soup diet.  Self-prescribed liquid diets.  Atkins.  These days, gluten-free diets are trendy even for those without medically diagnosed gluten intolerances or sensitivities.  I fully believe people have every right to follow these diets…so what really drives me nuts is when they get all militant about it.  I don’t want people to bug me about it and tell me 100,000 reasons why I shouldn’t eat meat, or gluten, or cheese, or sugar.  I am an everything in moderation type of girl.  I recently saw a whole foods blogger get firebombed with comments from people who believe that gluten is the root of many of our health problems.  Their opinion (based on a book they had all read).  She thanked them for their comments but explained that she and her family had chosen to eat grains in moderation and that they felt it was part of a healthy diet.  These people persisted in their criticism of her choices.  That bugs me, people.  I’ll eat what I want, you eat what you want.  It’s a free country. I have pretty strong opinions about food, but I don’t bombard other people with them unless they choose to read my blog.   If you’d like to share your own opinions…..start your own blog.

5.  Communal dining tables….cause we all want to dine with strangers (right?).

I didn’t even think about this one till a friend pointed it out.  Apparently it’s a new trend in restaurants to have a communal dining table(s) where people can choose to sit, and some restaurants just flat out encourage sitting at tables with strangers.  There are, of course, the hibachi restaurants that seat you around the grill with other people to “watch the show”, and Bea’s, a local restaurant that seats you with whomever has room at their table.  We don’t go to these restaurants unless we are with other people.  I don’t have a problem with strangers….it’s just that I’m not the most outgoing person and I’m probably not going to feel too free with my conversation around someone I don’t know.  And I really don’t want to be uncomfortable while I’m eating….

6.  Food in fancy restaurants must be stacked.  Apparently chefs like Jenga?

I realize that part of a dish’s appeal is in its appearance, but is it really necessary to put everything on top of each other?  Invariably, if you order a dish that comes with mashed potatoes, rice/risotto, or some sort of vegetable puree, the meat part of the entree will be on top of that item.  Sometimes multiple items are stacked on top of each other.  Tetris, anyone?  It kind of makes you worry that the food is going to topple off of the plate before it makes it to the table.  Also, some people prefer for their food to not touch.  This is an ugly proposition for those people.

7.  Artisan everything.

This is made even more annoying (albeit funny) when pronounced “artesian”.  But seriously.  According to dictionary.com, artisan means:

1. noun; a person skilled in an applied art; a craftsperson.
2. noun; a person or company that makes a high-quality, distinctive product in small quantities, usually by hand and using traditional methods: food artisans.
3. adjective; pertaining to or noting high-quality, distinctive products made in small quantities: artisan beer.
Okay, I get that.  I have great respect for artisans, in the food world and not in the food world.  In a way, I feel like an artisan, at least an amateur one.  However, the word artisan lost its credibility when Tostitos introduced an “artisan” line of mass-produced chips that they charge more for than their regular chips.  “Artisan” is to this era what “gourmet” was to the eighties.  I cringe when I hear the word now.
8.  Bacon on everything.
Just kidding!  You know I’m totally down with that.  Except the bacon sundae at Burger King.  Or the bacon milkshake that someone has (Jack-in-the-Box, I think?).  Or bacon “flavored” anything.
So, those are some trends that annoy me.  There are more, to be sure, but these are the ones I’ve thought of over the last couple of weeks.  I am sure that many of these things will be gone in a few years, or maybe just a few months.  For the moment, though, they’re on my nerves.

Filed Under: Chattavore Chats Tagged With: lists, writing By Mary // Chattavore 8 Comments

A Friday List: Foods That Confuse Me

June 15, 2012

As I go to the grocery store more and more I see food that I just don’t understand! I guess I’ve just gotten so used to the idea of cost, quality, and nutrition over convenience that things concocted for convenience just don’t make a lot of sense to me! Someone please explain….

  • Frozen Peanut Butter and Jelly “Sandwiches”

Clearly, I am missing something here.  Is it really that much trouble to spread peanut butter and jelly on a couple of slices of bread and slap them together?  I’ve seen these things up close.  They have about a million ingredients and there is nothing appealing about peanut butter and jelly literally oozing out of the mushiest previously frozen white bread that you’ve ever seen.  Gross.  And these are served in school cafeterias!

  • Whole Wheat Crackers….That Aren’t Whole Wheat

Honestly, it can be a challenge to find whole wheat crackers that are whole wheat.  The crackers in this picture are made by a well-known “health food” company.  Out of four or five boxes of “wheat” crackers, only one of them was whole wheat.  Now, if you don’t want to buy whole wheat crackers, that’s your prerogative.  I buy crackers that aren’t whole wheat.  But I don’t buy “wheat” crackers that aren’t whole wheat, and it seems like a bit (or more than a bit?) of false advertisement (I just said that as ad-verr-tis-ment like a British person in my head!) to put out wheat crackers and have the first ingredient either be “enriched flour” or “wheat (not whole wheat) flour”.  Soap box-read the labels!

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  • Single Serve “Gourmet” Oatmeal Cups

Again, since when is instant oatmeal too much trouble?  And the much healthier old-fashioned oats take like five minutes.  But apparently we now find it necessary to buy a fancy cup of oatmeal that costs about $1.50 that contains dried fruit, nuts, and no doubt a blooming ton of sugar?  Talk about profit margin.

  • Parmigiano-Reggiano Bites?

Okay, again….profit margin?  Do you see the price on that?  $7.99!  Now, Parmigiano-Reggiano is not cheap-$16-$17 a pound-but this is ridiculous!  And I love Parmigiano-Reggiano, but it’s not a cheese that I really want to take a big bite of.

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  • Flavored Apples!!!

Apples have a flavor.  It’s called apple.

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  • Powdered Icing Flavors

Now, I’m all for flavored icings, but really?  You buy an unflavored “base” and mix in a packet of icing flavor, like bubble gum or mint.  Because apparently mint extract is too complicated?  A few years ago I no doubt would have found this idea intriguing….but now I just find it confusing.

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  • Single-Serve Coffee

Sorry to offend the K-cup lovers out there…but I just don’t get this trend!  I am a die-hard coffee drinker, but (a) these little boxes of single-serve coffee are so expensive (and people call my whole bean coffee expensive!); and (b) I just can’t imagine that it’s that good!  I do understand the convenience of just making one cup…but if I just want to make enough for one cup….I just make enough for one cup!

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  • Ready-made Hard Boiled Eggs

When I worked at a pizza chain with a salad bar in high school, we got bags of peeled, hard-boiled eggs to chop up and put on the salad bar.  Now, you can purchase them at the grocery store.  I can honestly say I’ve never had the thought that I wished I could buy hard-boiled eggs because boiling them myself was just too much work.  Seriously.  Boil the water and let them sit for ten minutes. Done.

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  • Pancake and Waffle Batter in a Can!

And especially organic pancake and waffle batter in a can!  Because adding water to a mix is just too much work?  Honestly, I still don’t get the idea of Reddi-Whip (is that how you spell it?) because it’s just so simple to pour some fresh, unadulterated heavy cream into a bowl with a little sugar and whip it into oblivion with a mixer.  Why would you pay more to eat some propellants?  I am sure that you can imagine that I make my pancakes and waffles from scratch, which is not that much work….maybe ten minutes to put it all together?….so I really don’t get the thought that goes into deciding that adding water to a boxed mix is just too difficult.

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So…just a few things to think about. Does it really take more time to spread peanut butter and jelly between two slices of bread than to eat some processed fluff? Is it worth it to pay $5 for a can of pancake batter? I am not a single serve fan….why not cut up your own cheese and put it in a bag? Or divide your chips up into bags when you get home from the store?

Filed Under: Chattavore Chats Tagged With: lists, writing By Mary // Chattavore 8 Comments

A Friday List: Ten Weird Food Things About Me

May 25, 2012

I don’t have a lot of major food aversions or issues, but I do have a short list of food idiosyncrasies…..

1.  I abhor raw onions (as anyone who has read my blog very much is well aware) but I adore cooked onions.  There is a huge difference in the texture and taste.  I did not discover this until my early twenties, however, and spent my childhood and teenage years picking all onions out of every cooked dish.  In fact, even after I started eating cooked onions, while we were dating and early in our marriage Philip did all chopping of onions.  I am sure that I have confused some restaurant employees at times by ordering burgers and sandwiches without onions but ordering onion rings as a side…..

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2. I have major emotional reactions to unpleasant food experiences. Like when an aforementioned raw onion makes it into my food.  Or when I don’t clean my leeks well enough and I bite into some grit.  This happened exactly once and ever since I have been positively obsessive about rinsing/swishing/re-rinsing my leeks.  Or when I bite into gristle in ground/processed meat.  This is one of the reasons that I prefer to grind my own meat.  Seriously.  When these things happen, tears literally well up in my eyes.  I don’t dissolve into a full-on tantrum, but sometimes I would like to.

{Grinding my own meat allows me to eliminate the possibility of gristle (and tears).}

3.  I have issues with breakfast. For as long as I can remember, I have been a weird breakfast person.  Unlike my husband, who eats it almost every day, I hate cereal, at least early in the morning.  I can only stomach the texture of oatmeal after 8 a.m.  I used to drink a smoothie every day, but I have an overactive bladder (TMI, I realize) and my smoothies were interfering with my ability to do my job.  I don’t have time to cook breakfast every day (because I do love a good cooked breakfast-biscuits, gravy, pancakes, etc.).  I prefer things like grilled cheese or cheese and crackers or leftover pizza.  It can really be a problem when I’m in a hurry to get to work.

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{This, of course, would be an example of a breakfast that I like to eat.}

4. I went through about a 15-year period where I did. Not. Eat. Eggs. Period.  I was weirded out by the texture for this long period in my life, lasting from 8th-grade until my late twenties.  I am totally serious.

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{Seriously. Fifteen years.}

5.  I still don’t like sausage.  Except for breakfast sausage.  The guy from Link 41 always asks me when I buy my bacon if I’d like some sausage too.  I wouldn’t.  I think it’s the spices….I just have never liked sausage.  I feel that I need to get over this, though.  I’m pretty sure I’m missing out on some good stuff.

{I do love breakfast sausage…}

6.  Related to #5, I pretty much hate hot dogs.  I never liked them, not even as a child.  Philip loves them, and for years he had to wait for my nephews’ birthday parties to get hot dogs.  A couple of years ago I randomly decided (and announced) that I was going to give them another try.  I can eat them now, and even enjoy them, as long as they’re (a) good (i.e. expensive!) hot dogs; (b) charred on the grill or under the broiler; and (c) topped with all manner of condiments.  I also like homemade hot dogs buns….but that’s another blog post.

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{Good Dog does indeed make a good dog.}

7.  I’ve mentioned it here before, but in my younger days I used to have major food tantrums.  When something went wrong with something I was cooking, I would melt down.  Completely.  This could manifest itself in many different ways, including (but not limited to): crying, throwing kitchen tools (not at anyone, and no sharp objects!), jumping up and down, cursing, throwing food across the room, sweating, screaming.  For some reason pancakes were the most tantrum-provoking food in my past.  I once had this experience while icing a cake intended for a cake-decorating class.  The instructor forgot to tell us to thin our icing, and the icing peeled the top layer of the cake off.  Luckily, we were to ice our cake prior to the class, so I was at home.  Alone.  Several of the above behaviors were displayed.  It was ugly.  Very ugly.  From time to time, food tantrums still threaten, but I can feel them coming on and calm myself down, or I tell Philip and he talks me off the ledge.

8.  When I was a child, I ate things like chicken livers and frog legs.  That was before I really knew what they were.  I think I only tried frog legs once, but I recall liking them.  As a “foodie” I feel like I should try some of these unusual foods again, but there’s a mental block and I just can’t.

9.  The first time I made biscuits, they were like little hockey pucks.  I rolled them too thin.  Because they were so thin and I baked them for the recommended time, they were also hard.  We called them biscuit cookies.  Of course, now I am a biscuit-maker extraordinaire (at least in my own mind).  This story always makes me laugh.

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{Don’t roll those biscuits too thin!}

10.  I don’t care for chocolate ice cream.  Oh, I’ll eat it.  And I do like it if it’s homemade.  It’s pretty much the only flavor Philip ever orders when we go somewhere, but I would never order it out.  To me, storebought chocolate ice cream has an off-putting flavor and the aftertaste makes me want to cry (see #2).

Filed Under: Chattavore Chats Tagged With: lists, writing By Mary // Chattavore Leave a Comment

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About Chattavore

Hi, I'm Mary! Welcome to Chattavore, a destination for people who want to feed themselves and their families well every day! Life can be crazy, which means that getting dinner on the table can be a challenge (more often than not!) and my mission is to take all your favorite recipes and figure out how to serve them on a Tuesday.

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