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Posts from the ‘International Intrigue’ Category

Un-American Anthems

McDonald’s: Foreign food doesn’t mean anything anymore. Fusion is a passing fancy. The final frontier clearly lies in interpretations of American classics via chain restaurants in far (and not so far) flung locales. Evil corporations are no more than sources of bemusement to me. McDonald’s is the devil, you say? Aw well, at least they’re imaginative when it comes to marketing. I love regional additions to de rigeur menus. Even in the United States, items like lobster rolls show up in New England and bratwurst sandwiches around the midwest. But leave the country and, oh boy.

Argentina serves croquetas de aceiga, swiss chard nuggets. India, not surprisingly, has an entire vegetarian menu including eggless mayonnaise, and a Maharaja MacTM made with lamb. Every culture’s got their McDonald’s burger: Koreans have a bulgogi version and the Turkish a köfte rendition.

I can only imagine what goes on in a French McDonald’s. In ‘89 I was a summer exchange student and the annoying grandma (as opposed to the rich, barely tolerable grandma who always had lots of good food around the house) kept going on about something that sounded like Macdough. Even with four years of high school level French under my belt I was a bit of a retard. I finally figured out she wanted to take me to McDonald’s because I was American, of course, and I think she was using a slangy abbreviation like McDo. Eventually we ended up at some fast food place, not a McDonald’s, but it was all the same to her like how people call all brands of tissue Kleenex. I think there may have been hard-boiled egg on my burger, but my mind could be playing tricks on me.

Pizza Hut: I never knew Hawaiian pizza was a regional phenomenon until I realized it’s nearly nonexistent here in NYC, even at chains like Pizza Hut and Dominos where I’d expect it, and asking for it could cut your life short. Little did I know that ham and pineapple blasphemy was mere child’s play. Oh my god, Pizza Hut Singapore warms the cockles of my heart. Unfortunately this highlighted Christmas Pizza won’t be around much longer, but let me describe: bell peppers, chicken, ham, pineapple rings, cherries, almond flakes and sausage hidden in the crust. I was already obsessed with Singapore and now I’m totally in love. I knew cheese stuffed crust was nothing new–we have/had Stuffed Crust Gold–but sausage crammed in there as well?! Out of control. Sweet Jesus, I see Singapore’s now doing a “Double Edge” crust. And who says the Japanese are the innovators on that continent? Personal favorites Pineapple and chiles, predominate pizza in these parts. Leave it to Pizza Hut Thailand to up the ante with the addition of Thousand Island dressing.

If you’re unfamiliar with Japanese pizza, you might enjoy this primer. Japanese Pizza Hut kicks ass in its own way. Pay close attention to the Idaho Special. That’s right, it makes use of potatoes and mayo. Corn also appears to be a baffling yet important topping.

Mayonnaise? And speaking of mayonnaise, I hear they’re crazy for it over there. Supposedly, young Japanese have gone so mad for mayonnaise that the term mayora has been invented to describe these sick souls. In fact, there’s an entire restaurant, named Mayonnaise Kitchen, duh, devoted to the emulsified gunk.

Mayo has always scared the crap out of me. For years I’d covertly wipe it off burgers and sandwiches with napkins, but I’ve been learning to deal as I’ve grown older. When I think of mayonnaise, I imagine Shaggy, this girl who lived in the cul de sac (freaks always live in cul de sacs, don’t they?) where I grew up, who’d eat mayonnaise out of a bowl with a spoon (the neighbor kids two doors down ate raw potatoes like apples, so she wasn’t the only oddity). I will admit I’m simultaneously fond of/repulsed by that Chinese dish of prawns with candied walnuts and mayonnaise, but that’s an exception and I can’t think about it too hard while eating.

Cafe du Monde: I laugh every single time I visit Cafe du Monde’s Japanese site that includes “New Orleans-style Hot Dog With Voluminous and Choice Ingredients.” You know those great Lettuce Dogs they serve in the Big Easy. The original Cafe du Monde sells no more than coffee and beignets, but who can blame the Japanese for taking a good thing even further.

As an aside, I can’t quite figure out the Cafe du Monde Vietnamese connection. You often see cans of the chicory coffee in Vietnamese cafes (and amusingly used as parts of makeshift shrines). And during a recent trip to New Orleans, it seemed that about 90% of the waitstaff were Vietnamese. What gives? Is it a twisted Francophile fondness?

Foreign Concepts

I’m distrustful of men who dig Asian stuff. Anime, manga whatever…you know they’re really just hot for Asian chicks. Well, no yellow fever here, I’m all about the peculiar charm of anthropomorphic characters, ad copy turning poetically earnest in translation and the twisted things foreigners do to good ol’ fashioned American cooking. Of course, I’m open to quirks of all cultures, but Asians seem to have the corner on the market.

You might find it surprising that I love Engrish, considering my usual low tolerance for ESL, but massacring the English language occurs in varying degrees. People abusing apostrophes and quotes as in: Juicy Apple’s For “Sale” makes my bones hurt. Seeing a fruit cart advertising Orinjs instead of Oranges or a middle aged Hispanic woman obliviously wearing a tee shirt reading “Me So Horny” makes me smile a little. But “The Art of Hot. Side by Side, I’ll be yours forever. Because please don’t weep.” printed on the side of a styrofoam cup is smile-inducing on another level.

Deep-fried Mars Bars

When I first heard about this scary Scottish treat a few years ago, I was hesitant yet curious. (Then I heard about the Scottish deep-frying pizza and decided they’re mad geniuses.)

Recently, these coated candy bars have gained minor popularity–-they’re even served at the Chip Shop near my apartment. They’ve fancied theirs up, plating them drizzled with raspberry sauce and sprinkled powdered sugar. In fact Chip Shop’s gone as far as including deep-fried Twixs, Reese’s Peanut Butter Cups and Twinkies (good, but the cake shrinks into near nothingness), among others. I even saw Nigella Lawson deep-fying Bounty bars with pineapple on the side the other night. I was wowed.

One could deep-fry any sweet, for sure, this recipe is only a base. Any fish batter would work as well, but some people like things spelled out.

4 Milky Ways (which is the same as a UK Mars Bar)
1 cup flour
1/2 cup cornstarch
Pinch of baking soda
Milk or beer
Oil for frying

Chill the candy. Meanwhile, mix the flour, cornstarch and baking soda. Add your chosen liquid until you have pancake batter consistency. Heat oil to around 365 degrees, same as if you were making french fries (yes, I know purists fry fries twice at two different temperatures). Dip the candy in the batter, then fry away. The coating should turn golden brown, give it a couple minutes.

Serves 4 good sports or 8 pantywaists

Invite

Ok, I’ve since gone nuts with this theme. A few years back, I bought James a deep fryer as a gut-busting birthday gift. Up until recently, it had primarily been put to savory uses. But after moving in together, I thought a housewarming parting was in order. And what better way to warm a house than with piping hot oil?

The idea of a B.Y.O.C. Party was born. Everyone was encouraged to bring their own candy to be deep-fried, and bring they did. The massive pile of Oreos, Twinkies, Mallomars, Almond Joys, Cadbury Eggs, Reese’s and assorted sweet treats was unofficially dubbed “Deep-Fried Candy Mountain” (if such a locale actually existed, I’d be packing my bags posthaste). It was beyond a bonanza.

The thing with fried candy is that you can’t eat a ton of it, and it’s not the speediest way to feed a group. Only a couple items can really be fried at once, so satiating twenty or so guests must be done in shifts. It worked out well, though, and everyone was able to put in requests for their fried goodie of choice. Good things come to those who wait.

So, the supply ended up being higher than demand. Our downstairs refrigerator (never mock a two-fridge household) still has crisper bins full of sugary souvenirs in their wrappers, and two months have passed since this unhealthy little experiment. I’m sure this problem will soon be rectified, since I’m a sweet tooth utterly lacking in self-control.

Frying
Scene of the crime

Friedtomatoes
Deep-fried cheese-stuffed tomatoes

Cadbury
Cadbury egg

Candymtn
Candy Mountain

Crisper
Raw leftovers

Singapore Laksa

Ok, I’ve since had the real deal. I sampled Singapore laksa in Singapore at Lau Pa Sat and a Holland Village branch of Katong Laksa this past summer. I never thought I’d live to see the day. What I did see was where the Portland version was coming from, and it’s not totally off-base, though chicken isn’t a major laska ingredient. There might be shrimp and/or cockles, but I didn’t see any poultry being used. At least not in the Singapore version. I have heard of chicken in laksa, though, but it’s a different style. The only problem with laksa in Singapore is that there is so much damn food to be sampled, you don’t want to go overboard with it or else you’ll be ruined for the rest of the day. I totally had to restrain myself.

McCheesesteak

I don’t know if this is new or just new to me but I’ve just discovered that certain McDonald’s serve Philly Cheesesteaks. And I thought McGriddles were nuts.

I thought I was hallucinating the other day when I passed by a Dominos with a Philly Cheesesteak Pizza ad in the window. I don’t suppose provolone, beef and green peppers is any crazier than Thousand Island dressing and corn on a pizza, but I tend to think pizza should stay pizza and that sandwiches keep to their own.

S.E. Asia or Bust

Santas
I don't know why Santa hawks burgers in Bangkok

Rendang
How cool is a rendang burger?

Beergarden
One of the first indications that Hua Hin was an odd place. Thai workers in drindls and lederhosen were quite a surprise.

Buffalo
"Buffalo wings" from the Hua Hin Hilton. Don't forget that traditional marinara for dipping. After eating Thai pizza, it only seemed fitting.

Huahinitalian
No, it's not Mulberry St. When you think of Thai beaches, don't pizza pies come to mind?

Little
I don't recall palm trees in Little Italy.

Petty
Ignore James's big head. I'm a very bad photographer and was trying to capture the Filipino Tom Petty in the background.

White Kat, Big Kat

So, I hear there are White Kit Kats floating around NYC. Supposedly, they’re at Duane Reade, but I haven’t seen them. Duane Reade does have the limited edition dark chocolate Kit Kat, but who cares — that’s too classy. White chocolate is all cheap and gauche, just like me. And why is there no American Kit Kat site? I see British and Japanese (damn them, they have strawberry, banana and Hello Kitty varieties No white, though). I think it’s because Hershey’s sucks, and Kit Kats are made by Nestle elsewhere. Oh shit, but look at this. A Hershey’s mega store opening in Times Square holiday season 2002. Isn’t that right now?

Maybe I should just hold on to my horses. England had the Big Kat first, then we got it, so maybe we’ll eventually get the white chocolate and orange varieties too (they can keep their mint version). It’s just like the dulce de leche M&Ms. New York’s always the last to know when it comes to mainstream confections.

Also heard, but not seen is the rainbow Pepperidge Farm’s Goldfish. I’m starting to think I imagined seeing an ad somewhere.

Trolling Around

Germans don't have the corner on the market where odd tales are concerned. Norwegians have their fair share of legends, many involving trolls. No, not those adorable, mop top Norfin Trolls America has come to love. These are terrifying trolls, examples for naughty children.

My introduction to Troll Kjerringa (Troll Woman, the Troll of Hate), Tusselader (Nuisance Trolls) and Tobi-Tri-Fot came from a scary little 1979 self-published book, Trolls-Trolls-Trolls by one Art "Grandpa" Stavig that I picked up in a thrift store in Gladstone, OR. Grandpa, who was based out of Seattle, had quite a workshop and was a craftsman of all sorts of creepy creatures. When not tinkering, he traveled to local schools and libraries scaring the bejeezus out of little kids (you should see the photos filled with horrified expressions). The full effect is probably lost without the puppets and costumes, but this will have to suffice.

Tobi-Tre-Fot
(Wooden-Legged Tobi, the Barn Troll)

Tobi Most of the people in Norway readily agreed that Tobi-Tre-Fot, the Barn Troll, was just about the meanest troll in the land. Other trolls, as a rule, waited for a person to have a moment of carelessness before they moved in to make mischief, and even then, they tried to make it look like an accident had happened, but NOT Tobi-Tre-Fot! Tobi didn't care what people thought nor was he concerned that anyone would learn that it was HE that kicked them–and kicking people was what the really liked to do!

Tobi was so mean that one day in the forest he cut off his OWN leg and put a wooden leg in its place: he believed that he could deliver a more painful kick with a wooden leg. Now hen this troll kicked someone, he practically kicked them into the middle of next week! If that person turned around to see who kicked him, he never saw Tobi, for he was already behind him ready to give him another kick!

When Grandpa told us this story, I asked him, "Grandpa, did Tobi-Tre-Fot kick children too?"

Grandpa answered, "Yes, he often did; hat is, he sometimes kicked the mischievous and naughty ones."

But Grandpa, didn't you say that Tobi was real mean himself?"

Yes, I did."

Did he kick the nice children, too?"

No, he didn't. You must understand, he didn't LIKE any children! He just stayed away from the nice children; he wanted NOTHING to do with them, but he kicked the naughty ones because he became jealous of them. Tobi was very proud to consider himself the meanest creature in the country and when he saw a youngster get pretty nasty, he was afraid that if he didn't do something about it, the brat would grow up to be MEANER THAN HE WAS! When that happened, Tobi would conceal himself behind a door, and when that certain younger came through that door: WWWWWHHHHaaammmmm!

Tobi-Tre-Fot made his home in the farmer's barn. When he chose to visit a certain farm and entered the barn, he expected to find an empty stall to live in while he was there. Most farmers knew this: for this reason they usually built their barns large enough to have more stalls than they neede. Of course, some farmers were stubborn. They were the kind that built the barn to please themselves–NOT Tobi-Tre-Fot! They weren't going to let and TROLL tell THEM how to arrange their stalls! Well, they had no trouble until that sad day that Tobi-Tre-Fot came to call!

Tobi didn't like what he saw. And to prove he didn't like it, he quickly threw all of the farmer's harnesses, bridles and saddles out of the barn window; then he untied all the animals to run loose and get into mischief. Then he took a station behind the barn door–waiting, waiting, waiting for someone to come through that door that he could kick the daylights out of!

Grandpa Grandpa told us he didn't exactly believe the story of the Barn Troll, but we couldn't help but notice that there was always an empty stall in his barn–even after he came to South Dakota! None of us asked him why.

Lesson of Tobi-Tre-Fot:

CURB A VICIOUS TEMPER. DON'T INTRUDE ON OTHER'S RIGHTS, BUT DEFEND YOUR OWN

Dulce de Leche

Dulce de Leche M&M's My friend Todd tipped me off to this M&M/Mars attempt to win over the Latin American candy market. He saw them while in L.A. recently and said they were too sweet, but I’m still obsessed with why we don’t have them here. I’m such a bigger fan of caramel than chocolate. I discovered that this summer they were being test marketed in L.A., San Antonio, San Diego, Miami, Puerto Rico and Brownsville. It’s not as if NYC is lacking in a Hispanic audience for these things. Hurry up, already.