Elizabeth Barrette (ysabetwordsmith) wrote,
Elizabeth Barrette
ysabetwordsmith

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Real Ethnic Food

Yep.  This the true story of what happens when a fair-skinned person walks into an ethnic restaurant and orders HOT food (3 pages).  I have seen versions of this with multiple friends.  Me, the closest I get is having people stare at me when I eat crystalized ginger root as candy.  Link courtesy of my_partner_doug (who likes not just Food That Commands Respect, but food that coshes your respect over the head and drags it into a dark alley to rifle its pockets for loose taste buds).
Tags: art, ethnic studies, food, humor, networking
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  • 48 comments
One thing that seperates the Indian approach to cooking from our own is their insistance for using the freshest spices possible.
They think nothing of roasting and grinding the spices to be used at each and every meal where as with us, there's no telling how long the spices in the bottle might have been in there.
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I use fresh herbs and spices when possible, which is why I grow some things myself. Otherwise it comes out of a bottle. We check our spices periodically to make sure they still smell strong. When they go flat, we toss out anything left and replace our stock.