What is your country's national or traditional dish?
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I like all seasonal foods.
This time of the year it is time to enjouy the new (soft+fat) "maatjes Haring",or "Hollandse nieuwe"
The first barel of this years New Herring was traditionaly sold today on an auction for charity for ā¬66.000.
We Dutch eat about 30.000 ton of this dilicatesse a year.Greetings Bep van Malde
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@bep said:
We Dutch eat about 30.000 ton of this dilicatesse a year.
And with good reason, too. Yum!
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excessive fishing...not good
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@ely862me said:
excessive fishing...not good
We Dutch ar fisching this herring sins about the year 1500 ,we made a lot of mistakes in the past
but it is very regulated now a day's to not disturbe the continuity of the commercial herring fischery.Bep van Malde
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@bep said:
This time of the year it is time to enjouy the new (soft+fat) "maatjes Haring",or "Hollandse nieuwe"
I used to get Maatjes at the Imbiss when I lived in Hamburg, Germany, Yumm!!
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This was a great success! (South African Night -See information below)
We sold out and served up 50 plates of food. I did about 1/2 the preparation work (chopping vegatables, skewing meat, making sauces, etc.) And filled about 1/2 of the plates. At one point we have more than 14 plates to serve all at once - a table of 6 and 4 other tables - so the rest of the cooking staff jumped in to help. (They weren't going to let the quality of the restaurant suffer just so I could learn how hard it is to complete 14 orders and dish up the plates)
I wanted to do Spain or Greece for July, but the Chef insists on a more obscure country. There are some ideas in this thread already (smaller countries or areas) - Palatine - Finland - Romania - Belgium - Hungary. I will consider them. Also, a South American country might be interesting.
Keep the ideas coming.
@unknownuser said:
Food is an Expression of the Heart
In this case, itās an expression of our returning guest chef, Al Hart. Al has had two guest chef appearances at Sansoneās, as well as contributed to our Wine and Tidbits promotion throughout 2008. Join us Wednesday June 10th as Al Hart and Chef Robert recreate the national dishes that have captured the hearts of Africa.
A Special Combo Plate of:
Lamb Sosatie ā grilled marinate lamb kabob with apricots, and green peppers
Boerewors (bu : ravors) - a traditional sausage of beef, pork, spices and vinegar
Frango Piri PiriāChicken Piri Piri is originally a Mozambique Portuguese dish that is now a staple in many African restaurants.
Your African Taste Bud Safari will be completed with Pumpkin Fritters, Chakalaka Relish and Malva Pudding, and some wonderful wine selections from this amazing wine growing region of the world.
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well, for a finish dinner i would suggest something like this:
for starters karelian pasties served with egg-butter (hardbolied eggs mixed with butter and salt) or gravlax
as the main dish glowfried salmon with potatoes
and as desert leipƤjuusto served with cloudberries
i am getting hungry and i wish i could be in finland at the moment!
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@eeva said:
well, for a finish dinner i would suggest something like this:
for starters karelian pasties served with egg-butter (hardbolied eggs mixed with butter and salt) or gravlax
as the main dish glowfried salmon with potatoes
and as desert leipƤjuusto served with cloudberries
i am getting hungry and i wish i could be in finland at the moment!
How about a second main course - we like to offer either a choice or a combo.
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Thanks to those who posted recipes. While it takes more then that to cook, its a start. In my part of the world, the most delicious ethnic food I've eaten is a wild pig, seasoned in part with sea salt, stuffed and roasted in a earthen oven lined with rock. It is covered with broad leaves that become part of the meal, and from time to time is steamed with water. Of course, kalua pig is no longer made in a imu. In fact the law makes it difficult to do so.
My roots immigrated to this part of the world from Japan, and our food, like my karate is "chop sui", a mix of east, and west fermenting in soy sauce:-)
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@al hart said:
How about a second main course - we like to offer either a choice or a combo.
then i would serve sautƩed reindeer, as notareal has already suggested.
following notreals links (and this one) i found this site with a few finnish recipies. there are also a few modern ones in between, but more traditional foods from finland. finnish food has been influenced by sweden (we have many common dishes) and also by russia. finland is a relative young country, it has been independent only for 91 years.
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For our second dinner, (the first was a great success), we have chosen the country of Chile.
We will be serving Empanada de Pino, Curanto, and Panqueque con Manger. It should be great fun.
One question though, all the recipes I have found for Curanto have no special spices, (other than salt and pepper). Do you know what spices people in Chile might add to this, or other typical Chilean dishes?
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Spotted this just a moment ago... starts with making of blood pudding, the base ingredient of Rƶssypottu. A local delicacy from Oulu region.
[flash=853,505:2amadkoa]http://www.youtube.com/v/02JSKf_k-L0[/flash:2amadkoa]
[flash=853,505:2amadkoa]http://www.youtube.com/v/L9_tYJ31bxA[/flash:2amadkoa]
[flash=853,505:2amadkoa]http://www.youtube.com/v/w29wVEtXIEY[/flash:2amadkoa]
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Well, here every traditional pig slaughter starts with letting the blood out...
...then either fry it with onions...
...or stuff it into some special sausages...
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