2016年12月8日星期四

Popular Food in Different Country (2)

There are many reasons to travel, and food is obviously a main one.


Cambodia: Fired Insects 
Cambodians eat some funky things during the horrible Pol Pot Khmer Rouge era, including the insects. Compared by some to soft-shelled crabs, except "more gooey," fried tarantulas are a favorite in the market town of Skuon.

Indonesia: Soto

In Indonesia the food varies a lot and most cities and regions has a dish they are known for. However there are a few specialties that are found throughout most of the country. One of these is soto, a delicious meat, veggie, noodle soup served alongside rice that is filling, inexpensive and readily available. Also unbelievable, this meal is only $1USD.



Dolsot Bibimbap is a special variation of bibimbap (Korean mixed rice) that is prepared in a sizzling stone pot where the rice nestles with various mixed vegetables, raw egg and spicy red pepper paste. The stone pot is so hot that the raw egg is cooked against the side of the bowl while the bottom section of rice is coated with sesame oil rendering it a lovely crispy golden brown.
Not only is it equally amounts delicious and healthy but more important it is a budget conscious meal, and cost no more than $10 USD


Singapore: Chicken Rice
Also could be called Hainanese rice — chicken rice is the unofficial national street food of Singapore. Although the chicken rice is nothing more than poached chicken served over rice, the flavors combine to create good flavor. The chicken is poached on a low simmer in a gingery broth until perfectly cooked, still moist and juicy. The same broth is also used to simmer the jasmine rice, after it's been sautéed in ginger and garlic. Slices of chicken are served over rice with a side of broth, sliced cucumber and hot sauce. 



Holubtsi are cabbage rolls, stuffed with rice, meat, mushrooms and sometimes even raisins. The title means “little pigeons”, a nickname for lovers in Ukraine. It is old-fashioned traditional dish which people used to cook many hundreds years ago. It’s tasty and simple, available in all Ukrainian street food. 


After researching those famous street food in different counties, I would suggest an event that could promote awareness of the food culture. We could start a "national food festival" , the festival is like a street of the buffet, all about special food, about how to make the simple but good dishes, about the food culture of the world. I would invite bloggers who loves food and traveling, to try first, and cooks from different country, and International students who are good at cooking. People can get any of food here after they buy the tickets. 













Popular Street Food in Different Country

In this blog, I am going to research the street food cultural around the world. Food and travel, one of life's great experience intersections. We do usually enjoy our share of beautiful dishes and cuisine, and elaborate meals at famous restaurants, but it is often our street food quests -- raw on the ground journeys that convey authenticity -- that yield some of life's most revealing moments and enlighten us in unexpected ways


Most of believed that street food is the heart of the International cuisine. Those always the comfort foods we crave at midnight, when the restaurants are all closed.

Also, I list three ways which exploring street food quests serve.


Using the street food dish we seek as the final destination. We walk or use public transport, our quest for the ultimate dumpling, bean soup, taco or curry becomes an adventure in itself, with the meal as the goal, but the journey as the unexpected payoff.


Street food is remarkably democratic, for we all need to eat. Local people and land the holy grail of authentic local interaction (i.e., outside of tourism and service professionals) is by sharing a plastic table, communal condiments, and a bit of conversation.
In any event, we find that almost everyone enjoys sharing their local cuisine with visitors. Therefore, they also help us exercise our language skills.


Since we are so close to the cooking stove, street food shows all the steps. Street food cooks offer the opportunity — for us to get a firsthand sense and preparation of our local dishes so close. After we have witnessed a taste dish emerge from a gas stove and a kitchen equipped with only basic tools, we begin to understand the great lessons about cooking.




Let's go grab a spoon, and get ready to dig in....



Dim sum is a traditional Cantonese cuisine, prepared and served as individual, bite-sized. It is a special and local food in south part of China and Hong Kong. The words “dim sum” translates on words mean “touch the heart” (because the bites were so small they would only touch the heart) and, today, it is a staple of Cantonese dining. Dim sum dishes range across the board and include things like shrimp dumplings, vermicelli rolls, barbecue pork buns and spare ribs.



It’s soft and yellow egg noodles bathed in a thick curry broth. Not soup. Broth. It is then topped with deep-fried, crispy egg noodles, and eaten with pickled greens on the side. The broth is coconut milk-based and the curry can either be cooked with chicken, pork, or beef. Beef is my favorite kind of Khao Soi, especially the ones prepared by the Thai Muslim women in Chiang Mai’s Muslim area along Chang Klan Road.

As the hamsi (anchovies) swarm the Black Sea towards the Bosphorus Strait each winter, Turkish fishermen drop their nets. On any winter arrival in Istanbul, the first thing we do is head for Karaköy fish market for the perfect street food, Hamsi Ekmek. The anchovies are deep fried and served with rocket leaves and thinly sliced onion in a fresh, crusty bread.