M
Magus
Guest
Post deleted by posters request
If all you've eaten is food that fits that description, then you've never eaten good French food.Not French. It's all stolen, overrated, and horribly saucy. French "cuisine" is about masking the food...
Bangkok is the best food city I've been to - you can get the best of just about everything there, at prices I can afford. I haven't eaten in New York (I've only passed through the airports there) or LA, but I have spent time in San Francisco and, to be honest, I didn't think it was a great food city. Good, yes, but not great.I think the world's best restaurant cities would be New York and Los Angeles, and possibly San Francisco, because they don't really concentrate on one distinctive cuisine (as do the best restaurants in Paris, Rome, Hong Kong or Tokyo) but serve a wide variety of cuisines at a very high level. IMHO
FrankS said:Hey, don't hot sauces have interesting names?
Dave's Insanity
Habanero Halitosis
Rim of Fire
Nuclear Fission
Frank's Hot Sauce
Marc-A. said:I cook everyday (French and Morrocan food); I don't bake.
Best food, AFAIC: Lebanese, Morrocan, Italian, Spanish ... and French (It just means that I like Mediterranean food + Indian food). French food is not always "saucy", Magus ... at least if you mean with a lot of sauce![]()
Food from Southern France (from Bordeaux to Auvergne), just yummy ... you can hardly beat that. But I hate "nouvelle cuisine", French stews ... etc![]()
steamer said:Sauce Technology, that sounds much more relaxed than being a chef, no insane hours, no leading men into battle, I guess the chemistry would do me in though.
Michiel Fokkema said:Absolutely!
There is nothing romantic about being a chef. Hard labour, long hours, low pay if any at all.
A lot of chefs I know would do anything to get out of the kitchen. The industry is one of the better places to go then.
I do however take on catering work now and then. Just for the fun of it.
Cheers,
Michiel Fokkema