[QUESTION] What's the most interesting thing you've eaten?
When I travel, I try to taste the local cuisine and love to try things that I've never had before. Recently I tried haggis, which was outstanding. I've also had hakarl (fermented shark - not really my cup of tea, but glad I tried it) and balut (surprisingly tasty).
What have you tried? Anything that caught you off guard by how tasty (or not) it was?
Haggis is delicious, and when I first had it, I assumed I wouldn't like it, but had to try, only to really love it.
A lot of stinky cheeses taste really good, but if you've never given then a chance, it's hard to make yourself eat. Humboldt Fog is a favorite of mine, but basically none of my peers will try it.
Deep fried cicadas seasoned with Old Bay. Co-worker gathered a bunch a few years ago when they were around and fried them up. They were fine, and if you had not told me they were an insect I wouldn't even have known. Nothing I wanted to eat again afterwards though.
The Corsican version of Casu Marzu, sheeps milk cheese with fly larvae. It's delicious.
Maple sap, direct from the bucket. The flavor is quite complex compared to syrup since the volatiles haven't been boiled off.
Prahok, fermented fish paste. Used as an ingredient, condiment, and main. It isn't terrible, it's just not very good. I expected I would love it, but meh.
I had them recently ground up on something, and I thought it was just tajin. With chili and zime zest, it basically ends up just a more savory tajin. Not sure I would have given them the chance if I knew what I was eating, lol
I have no idea where it comes from but here I go :
A long time ago, we were invited at some German friends place (I am french) for dinner and they served us a weird unidentifiable "mud" that we did not thought much of.
Well I like to try new food so I dug in and wouldn't you know it I still eat it today and everyone I made some for told me that it was amazingly good for what it is.
The recipe is simple :
For a can of tune, you add a box of creamy cheese (I don't know if there is a word in English, if you look for "Philadelphia" on the internet, you will find it) and some finely cut dried tomatoes.
Be careful to strain everything (remove the water from the tuna, from the cheese and remove most of the oil of the tomatoes) and mix everything together.
Salt, pepper and you are good to go. I recommend eating it with plain crackers as the preparation is already salty.
Unfortunately I don't have the name as we did not understood what our friends told us and simply named it "carabistouille"
I call mine "rillettes de thon" or "rillettes de sardines" depending on which canned fish I put in them. Also, I love to twist them with chopped cilantro, chopped shallots and lime juice or smoked paprika (pimientón de la Vera).
Tuna, cream cheese, and chopped tomatoes. That sounds like tuna spread. I like to make mine with tuna, cream cheese, freshly chopped chives and chopped pickles. Great thing to spread on crackers.
Chocolate covered crickets. What made them interesting is they tasted nothing like chocolate and I kinda suspect the person who gave them to me of having sucked the coating off them first.
I got tricked into trying stinky tofu in Taiwan before the smell was able to hit me and I admit I liked it, but not enough to make up for the smell once it did hit me.
Also tried horse nigiri in Japan. Definitely the gamiest thing I've ever tasted
Deep fried haggis is much nicer than it sounds. I tried it a few years ago in Edinburgh on a rugby weekend.
I had what I thought was fried squid in Spain once. I'd tried squid a few years before, and it was flavourless and rubbery, but I later learned that it had been overcooked. When I saw Calamari on the menu in a seaside restaurant, I thought I'd try it again.
It had a longer name, but a badly translated conversation with the waiter convinced me that it was the same dish.
The same waiter brought out a plate of what looked a lot like deep fried baby squid or octopus.
It was very nice, but I got filthy looks from my young niece for 'eating all the babies', so I haven't had it since.
Had deep fried brain in Spain. Also snout which was not palatable really, i could see nose hairs in it. Crocodile in Cambodia. Are chicken feet interesting?