Anthony Bourdain's "A Cook's Tour"
The subtitle is "Global Adventures in Extreme Cuisines" but the real goal is a mildly macho food travel show, not shock value. We like Mr. Bourdain -- he's funny, idiosyncratic, and opinionated. But why is he whining like a wussy when he has to eat bird's nest soup, natto, or mountain potato? We've eaten all these things in our home country, America, and we didn't freak out about it, even long before we began the Weird Meat Project. Our favorite suburban sushi chef dishes out natto and mountain potato all the time, and plenty of white people eat it and even ask for it. I even cook with satoimo mountain potato or yamaimo mountain yam at home, my local grocer carries them in California. They're white and slimey like semen, but we like how the stuff soaks up sauces and provides a unique contrasting texture on top of a crunchy or chewy dish.

Natto we like for breakfast. We buy small cases of it in the frozen section. It is kind of a chore to eat it without being messy, but the flavor is worth it, especially mixed with hot mustard and MSG broth. It also feels nourishing and healthy and we know that's not macho, but whatever, we like a dose of good-for-us-ness from time to time. Like listening to jazz.
We agree with Jeffrey Steingarten
Now, we have found some things that are simply bad, even after many many tries and in different settings. As we've mentioned many many times before, Shanghainese food is one of these sad bad things -- it's just not good. And even though we shrugged off warnings from Chinese and foreign friends alike, we finally have to admit that there is nothing, absolutely nothing, good about baijiu. Báijiǔ is the strong, sweet clear wine that is to China what vodka is to Russia or sake is to Japan. Tastes like gasoline with sugar.
Speaking of disgusting things, I guess I'm obsessed, but I was "treated" to another Shanghainese meal the other night. Shanghainese food is sadistic. One dish, for example, was ... pork cuts, deep-fried with crunchy corn meal. Over that, they poured a sickly sweet mayonaise, and then -- the horror -- they sprinkled those little rainbow-sprinkles that kids like to put on cheap ice cream sundaes. It doesn't get weirder than that, nor more unpalatable. Give me natto! There's a lot of talk about the joys of mixing east and west cuisines, but this is what they came up with?


9 Comments:
Amen on the Baijiu. Stuff smells like vomit, too. We bought a bottle on Chinese New Year. I choked down a glass. But I had to keep it covered with a plate in between swigs, as the smell made me gag even from a distance. A friend tried to mix it with Coke, with no success.
Bleh... Above user stole my commentz.
~Anonymous, heart and soul of the intertubes.
I've never had Yamaimo or Satoimo, but if they taste like cum, then I'm game!!!
Wimps.
Baijiu tastes fine--even good--when consumed the way it is supposed to be consumed: as part of a meal. Drinking it on its own? Yeah. It's filthy. Drinking it as part of a meal, accompanying, say, a good Chongqing hot pot? Absolutely fine.
It's a whole lot better than even the best gins I've tasted (and I've tasted a lot of those!).
Wait, what's so scary about taro root? It's so delicious, especially in shabu shabu or ice cream!
@ Julia -- who said anything about taro root ??
@ michael t. richter --
No, Bai jiu does not taste good with anything. We weren't born in a barn, we know that wine goes with food, but baijiu is disgusting no matter what you do with it.
Does it repel mosquitoes?
Duh! Everybody knows that sataimo is taro root.
WOW! Thank you!! I have been eating the little mixed Japanese veggies for YEARS (lotus root, konnyaku, bamboo, etc), and i always wondered what those slimy little potato things were! i could never figure it out! those things are so yummy!!!
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