Which foreign cuisine reigns supreme?

Which foreign cuisine reigns supreme?

  • Italian

    Votes: 59 34.7%
  • Chinese

    Votes: 5 2.9%
  • Japanese

    Votes: 7 4.1%
  • Thai

    Votes: 18 10.6%
  • Mexican

    Votes: 7 4.1%
  • Indian

    Votes: 34 20.0%
  • Moroccan

    Votes: 1 0.6%
  • Portuguese

    Votes: 11 6.5%
  • Greek

    Votes: 12 7.1%
  • Other

    Votes: 16 9.4%

  • Total voters
    170
I have been to Portugal twice and the food is not memorable.

That sandwich thing dunked with sauce is all right for a hangover.

I once ordered peri peri chicken and got a grey boiled chicken with a bottle of peri peri sauce on the side.

The braaid sardines and chips is good, I also had a baked cod dish similar to a potato bake that we now make at home because it's great.

The wine is good.
 
Cuisine is subjective in general and depends on a variety of factors such as familiarity and childhood upbringing

European and western food is pretty cool. However overrated and overexposed that they utilize the same ingredients in different combination and usual preparation method. Also overly commercialize in that they have been spruced up to suit modern people, and overly flowery with an emphasis on presentation

Asian food on the other hand utilizes a diverse range of ingredients and method, largely unchanged from decades or even centuries ago

European or western food is what you give to toddlers or rigid adults. And Asian food because of its variety caters to toddlers and to discerning adults, the latter of whom is able to appreciate the subtleties and sophistication of complex or unusual types of Asian food. Except that Euros love to dress up their cuisine, especially their more unusual ones, in fancy dress in expensive tableware and glasses. However, Asian food still remain largely in its egalitarian setting. The ingredients and cuisine are the highlight, not the ambience or presentation

Back to that thesis, cuisine is indeed subjective to the extent that it is personal and individualistic.

However when in Africa you have independent Asian shops that have Asian cuisines or beverages, and fine dining establishments that have Asian dishes on their menu, and even the debonair or macdonald in mzansi incorporate Asian ingredients like Sriracha sauce, then it begs the question, is cuisine really totally subjective, especially when you find more Thai Indian Japanese cuisine and elements of them in Italy, and by extension south africa and cape town, than you would find Italian cuisine and its elements permeating Asian countries

And then you have world famous chefs that whipped up a mean burger or plate of pasta like Gordon Ramsay and Anthony Bourdain and Jamie Oliver. Many of them incorporate Asian ingredients and are mesmerized by Asian cuisine. Even Michelin Stars, the emmys Oscars for chefs, that are reserved for luxury dining are given to humble street food in Asia. A first and a record
 
what now???

LOLz, you clearly have not been to Portugal :ROFL:
Amusing how you're so confidently ignorant.

Did you know anyone reading our posts can verify the staple flavourings used in Portugal by doing a Google search?
 
I'm keen to hear why.
Most of Africa loves Peri-peri of sorts. guess where that comes from.
Look, the Porras might have sailed across the world to discover & trade in spices, but they then forgot about their existence.

We have eaten at countless restaurants all over PT, from your local €4 for the meal of the day to your €100 for a starter Michelin-starred ones, and unless you go to the latter, the food is overwhelmingly tasteless and bland.

To the point that we now carry our own salt & pepper mini-shakers because we are so gatvol of having to ask for them.

If you want good/tasty food in PT, you go to a Brazilian/Angolan/Mozambican/Goan-owned restaurant, because these people can cook lekker food - full of spices & herbs
 
Cuisine is subjective in general and depends on a variety of factors such as familiarity and childhood upbringing

That's the only objectively true thing you said. The rest is subjective and yes depends on upbringing.

Michelin stars are also subjective. Everything is subjective. Outside of nutritional value, you can't get objectivity here. You can at best claim what's popular. But is it also what people would like to eat day to day? Again, that's also something else to consider.
 
Yep, it looks like there are plenty good places to eat in Lisbon for example:
So many restaurants that serve peri-peri chicken in Portugal, and many are cheaper than Nando's.


Yes, keep relying on clickbait YT videos and ignore the people who actually like there :rolleyes:
 
Yes, keep relying on clickbait YT videos and ignore the people who actually like there :rolleyes:
I don't ignore people who like it there? Most of my relatives have left South Africa and live in Lisbon, Porto, Ericeira and Algarve.
 
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