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Things to eat before you die (Series 1)

I’ve been getting feedback that this blog is full of serious "boring" stuffs. So to please the masses I’ve decided to post something that most of us (I think will) like and something which I feel sooooo passionately about: food.


I remember watching a bbc tv documentary on food to eat before you die so let’s do something different shall we. Let’s find out further what’s nice and what’s not in the exciting world of food. Shall we begin?


1. Cornish Pasty

A Cornish pasty is a type of pie, originating in Cornwall, United Kingdom. It is an oven-cooked pastry case traditionally filled with diced meat—nowadays beef mince (ground beef) or steak—potato, onion and swede (rutabaga). It has a semicircular shape, caused by folding a circular pastry sheet over the filling. One edge is crimped to form a seal. Our Malaysian version of it is called curry puffs. Will you eat this?




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2. Caviar



Caviar has long been regarded as a luxurious, expensive delicacy since as far back as the Roman Empire. It comes from the roe of various species of sturgeon - most notably the beluga as well as sevruga and oscietra - traditionally fished from the Caspian Sea.







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3. Haggis


A Scottish steamed pudding which was a popular dish for the poor, who ate the parts of the sheep that would otherwise have been thrown away - namely, heart, liver and lungs, which is then minced with onion, oatmeal, suet, spices and salt. This is then mixed with stock and boiled, traditionally in the sheep's stomach lining, for several hours. Now that’s place a new meaning to eat till your guts spills out.




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4.
Jerk Chicken and Pork


Jerk is a taste of the sun-kissed Caribbean and is ideally sampled on a postcard-perfect beach under a palm tree. This barbecue style goes back 1,200 years to when the Arawac Indians, the island's original inhabitants, used chillies, spices and garlic to rub into their meat and cook it slowly over a hot, wooden grate known as a barbicoa.






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5. Tapas

Spanish tapas are traditionally bar snacks, served to accompany drinks. A tapa is a small serving. It is said that the tradition of the tapa was begun in the region, starting out as a way of keeping flies off of bar customers drinks. They can be as simple as some cheese or iberian ham, or elaborate creations that with a few, make a meal in itself. Traditional tapas include olives, seafood, meatballs, sautéed mushrooms, chorizo, vegetables and the tortilla, or Spanish omelette. There’s this restaurant in Bintang Walk in KL called Sentidos tapas which serves excellent tapas but be prepared to pay a bomb for it.


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6. Roast Beef

Remember watching movies featuring jolly old England like Robin Hood or A Knights Tale? There’s always a huge slab of Roast Beef served in front of the King in one of his huge feast/regular dinners.

"There's no greater meal than a roast dinner. It has to be served to perfection, which means rare, very rare - with the cow practically standing in the field! Roast beef, when done well, is one of the nicest things in the world."

Maggie Robins


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7. Octopus

Octopus means 'eight feet' and it's these feet, or tentacles, which, along with the lower body, are the delicacy of this somewhat intellectual creature of the sea. Tough and chewy, the octopus needs to be tenderised once caught, which involves a bit a hard graft; pounding it with a mallet or 'massaging' it with sea salt are two of several techniques. If you're not too exhausted to eat, enjoy octopus raw, boiled, pickled, sautéed or deep-fried. Of course the best way to eat it is raw, do as the Japanese do



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8. Durian


Crowned the king of fruits.

“It's an extreme-looking fruit with a tendency to provoke extreme reactions in would-be eaters. Native to South-east Asia, this much-maligned tropical fruit is characterised by a hard outer husk, covered with sharp, prickly thorns. To add to its odd looks, it's also notorious for emitting a pungent, 'distinctive' odour from its edible, yellowish flesh.”

But once it’s in your mouth…simply satisfying. (Shame on you Malaysians who despises this fruit)




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9. Paella

Hailing from Valencia in Spain, paella is the Catalan word for 'pan'. Paella is both the dish itself and the shallow metal pan in which this complex rice dish is cooked. There are lots of regional variations, but the staple ingredients tend to be vegetables, meat or seafood, saffron and olive oil. Rabbits and snails sometime make their appearance, too. Gargantuan paellas are often prepared in Valencia to mark special occasions, such as festivals or rallies. The largest paella recorded was made in 1992 and spanned a 20-metre width, weighing 30,000 kilograms, as recorded in the Guinness Book of Records.


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10. Balut

Well this wasn’t on the list of the documentary but I feel it should be. A delicacy of Asia and especially the Philippines, China, Cambodia, and Vietnam, a balut is a fertilized duck egg with a nearly-developed embryo inside that is boiled and eaten in the shell. I did try it on my trip to the Philippines. Too bad it was just those mildly developed ones. One day before I turn 60 I’ll take another trip there and have one of their big ones. Mark my words. I will eat balut again!


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So that’s the end on series one. I recommend reading this blog post just before you go for your dinner. What’s your food to eat before you die? (hey, maybe if we get enough feedback I can write another post on what Malaysians want to eat before they die. Haha)

posted by sam @ 7:39 AM,

5 Comments:

At August 21, 2006 4:09 AM, Blogger Life in the 80's said...

Hey, some obscure foods there. I live in Engalnd, but was born in Scotland. Cornish Pasties are lovely - interesting fact, they are crimped at the side because when the miners took them into the mines it was easier to eat!
Haggis is nice too. Should be served with Mashes Potatoes and Mashed Spinach. (Neeps n Tatties)

 
At August 21, 2006 7:58 AM, Blogger sam said...

Hey "Life in the 80's". Thanks for the additional info. Think I've eaten Cornish Pasties without me knowing it. Would really want to try Haggis one day!

 
At August 23, 2006 5:51 AM, Blogger Life in the 80's said...

You should! It's not as nasty as everyone makes out!!

 
At August 23, 2006 10:56 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Durian is to die for but balut is gross.

 
At August 28, 2006 10:49 AM, Blogger Jod{i} said...

I am never going to eat again...lol

 

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Samuel Yau

How do you truly know someone? The truth is, you can't. Each person that you come across have a perspective of you that differs from another. So it's entirely up to you on how I am perceived to be

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Initially this blog was birthed out of curiosity, on what it would be like to have a blog. To explore the world of entrepreneurship, business, marketing, etc and to jot down my learnings/experience here. As time passes on, the purpose change, the passion change, the person change.


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