It is currently Thu Sep 02, 2010 9:55 pm

Registration
Login Help

Advertise Here

What is your country's national or traditional dish?

FAQMembersRegisterLogin

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Al Hart on Sun May 24, 2009 8:35 pm

Jackson wrote:LOL, that's amazing- Edinburgh is my hometown and the Peacock Inn is one of my family's favourite eateries entirely on the basis of their fish and chips! You chose well!


Yes - I had lunch there while my wife was off on the tour bus to Glasgow. It was so great that I took her to dinner there the same night.

DSCN0005-50%.JPG


I loved Scotland, and although you probably won't appreciate it, I loved the accent as well. (What accent? :o )

I took the city tour bus three times because the people giving the narration were so friendly, and so fun. And the third time around we got to see Queen Elizabeth and Price Phillip entering a house - (with much less security then we Americans would have thought possible - even prior to 9/11) - from the top of the bus.

QE.jpg


Can't wait to get back.
(I see from the Photo that this visit was in 2000)
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Al Hart
Image IRender nXt from Render Plus
User avatar
Al Hart
 
Posts: 1157
Joined: Sun Nov 18, 2007 3:54 pm
Location: Centennial, Co
Operating system: XP / Vista
SketchUp version: SU 7 Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Mike Lucey on Mon May 25, 2009 12:44 am

Al Hart wrote: Do you ever eat it, or only we tourists?


Yep, and love it especially on cold wet winter evenings :thumb:
"Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one." - Albert Einstein
User avatar
Mike Lucey
Mayor
 
Posts: 4949
Joined: Mon Oct 22, 2007 1:22 pm
Location: West of Ireland
Operating system: Mac OSX
SketchUp version: SU Pro V7.1

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby utiler on Mon May 25, 2009 12:59 am

Mike Lucey wrote:Guys,

I'm not too sure what the national dish is here in Ireland but the Net tells me its Irish Stew!

Mike



I wish I was Irish, Mike; I love Irish Stew!!!!!


Australia - T-bone steak and veg [not the 'shrimp on the bbq you thought....]

Or maybe bucket of banana prawns, slice of lemon and a cold beer.
Andrew
purpose/expression/purpose/....
User avatar
utiler
 
Posts: 952
Joined: Wed Nov 14, 2007 11:35 am
Location: Queensland, Australia
Name: Andrew Carter
Operating system: Windows XP SP3
SketchUp version: 7. Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby notareal on Mon May 25, 2009 1:23 am

Welcome to try Thea Render, Thea support | kerkythea.net -team member
notareal
 
Posts: 434
Joined: Tue Nov 13, 2007 9:54 pm
Location: Oulu, Finland
Operating system: Windows 7
SketchUp version: 7

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Al Hart on Mon May 25, 2009 3:14 am



Thanks - the link mentions Finland.
Al Hart
Image IRender nXt from Render Plus
User avatar
Al Hart
 
Posts: 1157
Joined: Sun Nov 18, 2007 3:54 pm
Location: Centennial, Co
Operating system: XP / Vista
SketchUp version: SU 7 Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Al Hart on Mon May 25, 2009 3:22 am

utiler wrote:Or maybe bucket of banana prawns, slice of lemon and a cold beer.


Isn't that the same as "Shrimp on the Barbie?"

I was surprised when Outback Steak House first opened that their idea of Australian dishes was:

    Kookaburra Wings®
    Aussie Cheese Fries
    Walkabout Soup® of the Day
    Alice Springs Chicken®, etc.

I was surprised that they couldn't adopt anything which sounded like an authentic Australian food.

For instance, our Rodizio Grill (Brazilian) offered things like Quail Eggs which we don't usually see at other restaurants.

Image
Al Hart
Image IRender nXt from Render Plus
User avatar
Al Hart
 
Posts: 1157
Joined: Sun Nov 18, 2007 3:54 pm
Location: Centennial, Co
Operating system: XP / Vista
SketchUp version: SU 7 Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby solo on Mon May 25, 2009 3:26 am

Another South African dish, and my favorite.

Peri-Peri Chicken

500 grams chicken tenderloins
seasoned flour
1/4 cup olive oil
3 cloves crushed garlic
3 tablespoons fresh chopped coriander leaves or parsley
2 teaspoons chicken stock powder
1/2 red chile -- sliced
3 tablespoons lemon juice
1 kilogram baby potatoes -- parboil and quarter
Peri-Peri basting sauce

Sprinkle the chicken with the seasoned flour. Mix together the oil, garlic, coriander or parsley, dry chicken-stock powder, chili and lemon juice to make a paste. Toss the chicken into the mixture to coat. Stir fry in a hot frying pan in the olive oil for 5-8 minutes until the chicken is just cooked. Add the potatoes and peri-peri sauce and warm through. Serve with extra peri-peri sauce, Portuguese rolls and fresh sambal salads, e.g. chopped onion, cubed avocado, diced cucumber, cubed tomato, cubed pineapple etc.


Image
My Portfolio:
http://solosplace.com/default.aspx

The average user never reads user guides and tutorials, that's why they are only average.
User avatar
solo
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 6660
Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 1:46 pm
Location: Dallas, Texas
Name: Pete Stoppel
Operating system: Vista
SketchUp version: classified

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Al Hart on Mon May 25, 2009 3:33 am

solo wrote:Another South African dish, and my favorite.

Peri-Peri Chicken


Thanks Solo - we made Peri-Peri Shrimp last year - so I still have a tin of Peri-Peri powder left over. (I was doing a similar apprenticeship for appetizers).

What do you serve it with?
[edit: I guess I could have read the end of the recipe :evil: ]

Is Peri-Peri a South African term, or an island nearby?
Al Hart
Image IRender nXt from Render Plus
User avatar
Al Hart
 
Posts: 1157
Joined: Sun Nov 18, 2007 3:54 pm
Location: Centennial, Co
Operating system: XP / Vista
SketchUp version: SU 7 Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Al Hart on Mon May 25, 2009 3:38 am

I local friend advised a Harry Potter theme. I suggested that most of the foods mentioned in Harry Potter might only appeal to a younger crowd.

I think you might underestimate the number of Harry Potter fans among people (in particular women) who might also be in the range of people who might regularly dine at Sansone's. You may even know a couple of them fairly well.


I didn't mean that there weren't any older fans, just that the older fans might not like the same foods as the characters in the book:

The ones which best qualify as traditional foods are: shepherd's pie, Cornish Pastries, steak and kidney pudding, Yorkshire pudding, and spotted dick (which we remember so well from the Aubrey / Maturin series). Still these could work well as a combination English / Harry Potter theme.

Image
Al Hart
Image IRender nXt from Render Plus
User avatar
Al Hart
 
Posts: 1157
Joined: Sun Nov 18, 2007 3:54 pm
Location: Centennial, Co
Operating system: XP / Vista
SketchUp version: SU 7 Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby solo on Mon May 25, 2009 3:57 am

Peri peri is originally a Mozambique Portuguese dish, South Africans (myself included) used to vacation in Lorenzo Marques and the meal was adopted into our cuisine, after the collapse of the Portuguese Mozambique it became one of our traditionals. Nando's chicken a large International Peri chicken chain is South African founded and is doing a great job in spreading the dish around the world.
My Portfolio:
http://solosplace.com/default.aspx

The average user never reads user guides and tutorials, that's why they are only average.
User avatar
solo
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 6660
Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 1:46 pm
Location: Dallas, Texas
Name: Pete Stoppel
Operating system: Vista
SketchUp version: classified

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby utiler on Mon May 25, 2009 4:34 am

Al Hart wrote:Isn't that the same as "Shrimp on the Barbie?"

I was surprised when Outback Steak House first opened that their idea of Australian dishes was:

    Kookaburra Wings®
    Aussie Cheese Fries
    Walkabout Soup® of the Day
    Alice Springs Chicken®, etc.

I was surprised that they couldn't adopt anything which sounded like an authentic Australian food.


Thanks Franchising for you I guess, Al.....

I expected the shrimp joke sooner than later; gee that thing has stuck hasn't it?
Andrew
purpose/expression/purpose/....
User avatar
utiler
 
Posts: 952
Joined: Wed Nov 14, 2007 11:35 am
Location: Queensland, Australia
Name: Andrew Carter
Operating system: Windows XP SP3
SketchUp version: 7. Pro

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Chris Fullmer on Mon May 25, 2009 6:02 am

Good, you've been to a Rodizio Al. That is very traditional Brazilian food. A nice Onion and Beet salad, quail eggs, all you can eat BBQ, cheese bread, Guarana, Musse de maracuja (passionfruit mousse)or pudim (flan more or less). That is a fine meal!

Chris
Your intelligence will never fully compensate for my stupidity.
Cal Poly Pomona - BS Landscape Architecture
UC Berkeley - Masters of Landscape Architecture
All my Plugins I've written
chrisfullmer.com - Art Blog
User avatar
Chris Fullmer
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 4760
Joined: Wed Nov 21, 2007 3:21 am
Location: Davis, CA
Name: Chris Fullmer
Operating system: Windows Vista
SketchUp version: 7.1x

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby PeterCharles on Mon May 25, 2009 11:58 am

Al Hart wrote:Someone else mentioned this.
Any of you from the UK - Did your grandmother serve you Chicken Tikka Masala?

Of course not, we get it at the local Indian restaurant or take-away!
Most younger generation English females have lost the ability to cook anyway. Best they can do is warm something up in the microwave.
PeterCharles
 
Posts: 203
Joined: Sat Nov 17, 2007 4:47 pm

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby Aerilius on Mon May 25, 2009 7:45 pm

What I present is rather not a national but a regional dish from Palatinate (='Pfalz') in south-west Germany (we Germans are more regional).

Potato soup Palatine type
Grumbeersupp.jpg

Ingredients for 4 servings
* 15 medium potatoes
* 1 large onion
* 1 small celery tuber
* 2 medium carrots
* 2 pole (s) leeks
* 175 g butter
* 1.5 l broth
* 200 g cream
* 1 pinch (s) pepper
* 1 pinch (s) salt
* 1 pinch (s) marjoram

Preparation
Wash and clean the potatoes and the vegetables and cut them into small cubes. Dampen them in butter. Cook it with one liter of meat broth for half an hour.

Pass the soft vegetables and the potatoes through a food mill or puree it with a blender. Fill it up with the remaining broth. Season to taste with salt, pepper and marjoram. Refine it with cream before serving the soup.



Dampfnudel - German dumplings
dampfnudeln1.jpg

dampfnudeln2.jpg

Ingredients
* 500 g flour,
* 1 sachet instant yeast,
* 350 ml milk,
* 150 g butter

Instructions
Stir the yeast into the flour.
Warm the milk a little. Alternatively, this can be done by using 250 ml of milk and adding 100 ml of boiling water to it in a jug.
Gently stir the liquid into the flour. Beat until smooth, adding more liquid if necessary.
Leave the dough in a warm place to rise.
Meanwhile, melt the butter in a large saucepan which has a lid. Run the melted butter around the saucepan to coat the bottom and sides generously, then leave to cool.
Cut the dough into 6 equal chunks. knead each chunk lightly into small round balls.
Coat each ball on the bottom and sides with the cooled melted butter, then place on a baking tray in a warm place to rise.
When the balls have increased to about double their original size place them in the prepared saucepan. Add a large teacup full of warm water, place the lid on the saucepan and put on a fairly low heat.
Cook for about 20 - 30 minutes, but keep a watch on them to make sure they do not burn. When the dumplings are cooked they will be golden brown and crispy on the bottom.
Serve with custard or white wine sauce and tinned fruit.


:o And the last one scares again and again tourists, but it's the most original one. I have a rendered an image here:
saumagen.jpg

Saumagen contains potatoes, carrots and pork and tons of spices. It is served with sauerkraut and bread and Wine Schorle as beverage. That's a refreshment made of white wine and mineral water and it needs to be drunk from a 'dubbeglas'. The well-fed person in the background illustrates how healthy it is. His name is Helmut, when he was Chancellor, he tried to palm it off on his friend Reagan and other state guests. :D
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
Aerilius
 
Posts: 275
Joined: Tue Dec 23, 2008 11:00 pm
Location: Kaiserslautern
Operating system: Ubuntu 10.04
SketchUp version: SU 8.0

Re: What is your country's national or traditional dish?

Postby TIG on Mon May 25, 2009 8:19 pm

For England you might think, "Fish and Chips", or perhaps, "Roast-Beef and Yorkshire-Puddings"...

However, recent surveys show that the most popular dinner in England is "Chicken Tikka Masala" [ http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chicken_tikka_masala or http://images.google.co.uk/images?q=Chi ... =en&tab=wi ] - I eat it almost every week - it's delicious ! The British have a long tradition of loving curries from "India" - this one's invented for UK tastes and is VERY popular...
http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/datab ... 7780.shtml
TIG
User avatar
TIG
Global Moderator
 
Posts: 4478
Joined: Mon Nov 12, 2007 7:24 pm
Location: Northumbria UK
Operating system: Vista
SketchUp version: Latest Pro 7.1

SketchUcation One-Liner Adverts

by Ad Machine on 5 minutes ago

Use Your Google SketchUp Model to Create a Virtual World, Try 3DVIA Scenes Today!
Ad Machine
Robot
 
Posts: 2010

PreviousNext

 

Advertise Here

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 2 guests