One of the few things The Girlfriend and I ever seriously disagree about is what constitutes an edible meal (and, by extension, what we should have for dinner). She’s — how shall I say this? — very selective with what she will and will not eat, whereas I pride myself on being willing to give just about anything a go. But am I just fooling myself? Am I truly all that adventurous? Let’s find out!
Here’s a meme courtesy of Javi that does a pretty good job of evaluating the adventurousness of one’s previous eating experiences and — more importantly — the items that force you to draw the line:
The Food tasting meme
- Copy this list into your blog or journal, including these instructions.
- Bold all the items you.ve eaten.
- Cross out any items that you would never consider eating (or eating again)
- Optional extra: Post a comment http://www.verygoodtaste.co.uk linking to your results.
To make the filling out of this form and generating the HTML for it a bit easier, reddywhp has played around with some PHP. Go to http://reddywhip.org/lj/foods/ and fill it out there. After filling it out, you will be given the code to copy and paste into your blog.
Livejournal users, remember to use your LJ-Cuts!
- Venison
- Nettle tea
- Huevos rancheros
Steak tartare
(So I draw my first line at raw meat. I’m not real keen on the idea of sashimi, either…)
- Crocodile
(I had alligator once, is that close enough?) - Black pudding
- Cheese fondue
- Carp
- Borscht
- Baba ghanoush
- Calamari
- Pho
- PB&J sandwich
- Aloo gobi
- Hot dog from a street cart
- Epoisses
- Black truffle
- Fruit wine made from something other than grapes
- Steamed pork buns
- Pistachio ice cream
- Heirloom tomatoes
- Fresh wild berries
(I assume grapes qualify?)
- Foie gras
- Rice and beans
- Brawn, or head cheese
Raw Scotch Bonnet pepper
(Apparently, the Scotch Bonnet pepper is stronger than those Guatemalan insanity peppers that made Homer see a coyote with the voice of Johnny Cash. No, thanks… I don’t mind a little heat, but I don’t want to end up looking like Toht at the end of Raiders, either…)
- Dulce de leche
- Oysters
- Baklava
- Bagna cauda
- Wasabi peas
- Clam chowder in a sourdough bowl
- Salted lassi
- Sauerkraut
- Root beer float
- Cognac with a fat cigar
- Clotted cream tea
- Vodka jelly
- Gumbo
- Oxtail
- Curried goat
Whole insects
(No bugs. I’m sure they’re perfectly safe and probably even quite tasty, but the crunching exoskeleton and stickery little legs… gack.)
Phaal
(It’s that face-melting Ark of the Covenant thing again…)
- Goat’s milk
- Malt whisky from a bottle worth $120 or more
(Mmmmm… I wish…)
Fugu
(I don’t like the thought of being fully conscious but progressively more paralyzed until my lungs stop working, thank you…)
- Chicken tikka masala
(My buddy Keith makes quite a yummy one, actually…)
- Eel
- Krispy Kreme original glazed doughnut
- Sea urchin
- Prickly pear
- Umeboshi
- Abalone
- Paneer
- McDonald’s Big Mac Meal
- Spaetzle
- Dirty gin martini
- Beer above 8% ABV
- Poutine
(I haven’t had this Canadian comfort food, but I have had something very similar, the cheese fries at The Training Table, a local burger chain.)
- Carob chips
- S’mores
- Sweetbreads
- Kaolin
- Currywurst
(Ah, currywurst. Love the stuff. Have some happy memories of it, too… when I visited Germany back in 2003, I arrived feeling pretty jet-lagged, and also carrying around an emotional hangover from something that happened before I left. The weather was cold and blustery, and I hadn’t dressed for it. I was, quite frankly, miserable and certain that my journey was going to royally suck. But then my driver — the wife of my friend Keith who makes the excellent chicken tikka masala — stopped at a roadside food stand called an imbiss and I bought this yummy treat that warmed me up and made me think maybe I ought to give Deutschland a try after all. I went on to have a fantastic couple of weeks…)
- Durian
- Frog’s Legs
- Beignets, churros, elephant ears or funnel cake
- Haggis
- Fried plantain
- Chitterlings or andouillette
- Gazpacho
- Caviar and blini
- Louche absinthe
- Gjetost or brunost
Roadkill
(Um, no… I still have PTSD from the time I found a freshly squashed pet cat on my way to school.)
- Baijiu
- Hostess Fruit Pie
- Snail
- Lapsang souchong
- Bellini
- Tom yum
- Eggs Benedict
- Pocky
- Tasting menu at a three-Michelin-star restaurant
- Kobe beef
- Hare
- Goulash
- Flowers
Horse
(I’ve had horses around my whole life. You don’t eat them, you French ghouls…)
- Criollo chocolate
- Spam
(I quite like Spam, actually, and have never understood why so many people find it so revolting. A nice fried Spam sandwich really hits the spot sometimes.)
- Soft shell crab
- Rose harissa
- Catfish
- Mole poblano
- Bagel and lox
- Lobster Thermidor
- Polenta
- Jamaican Blue Mountain coffee
- Snake
So, there we go… I had to look up a lot of this stuff, and a lot of it truly does sound awful, but I’m willing to try all but a handful of items. I don’t know if that’s a good thing or a bad thing, considering what some of this stuff turned out to be…
[Ed. note: Incidentally, I wasn’t all that impressed with reddywhp‘s automatic scripting tool. It’s slick if all you want to do is the bolding and striking-out parts, but because I like to insert my little commentaries, it got to be kind of complicated to make the spacing come out properly, and I found myself thinking it probably would’ve been just as easy to code everything myself as I usually do. Maybe the tool is more useful for users of LiveJournal, which this script was designed for? The intro text does mention something called “LJ-Cuts,” whatever those are…]