Authentic cuisine cooking

More people have a passion making authentic food from other country with their country origin recipies and ingrediens. Since covid i have getting into Italian, South Korea, Mexico and Japenese cusisine using over a year with country to learn the basic when, where and what to use the recipes. Also finding good recipe sources from their homeland, i did post on my cooking account on instagram.
To find authentic ingridens here is Norway is hard, you need to order from niche stores that have does ingridens you need, like Italian cheese etc we have about 80-200% import tax on that so that makes it expensive to make these recipes. If you live in Oslo you can get most of it from those stores but, the rest of the country need to order from some online stores or travel to the Sweden to get it.
There's nowt like authentic foreign food. However, I couldn't persuade Mrs Ewing to sample the meat balls last time we were in the Ashton branch of Ikea.
 

Love the way the japanese treat food. Not sure I could be bothered with all that effort for breakfast. Malaysia has something similar Nasi Lemak (rice cooked in coconut milk, anchovies, peanuts, cucumber and sambal or curry). My favourite is bak kut teh which is a pork rib stew/soup. Great way to start the day
 
There used to be a lad on here from Greece who used to post some decent cooking recipes and not just kebab dishes.
Can't remember his name,wasn't Tony or Samaras.
 
Cumin, coriander and turmeric?
I've been cooking "Saturday curries" for the better part of the last 25 years and I am not sure it is correct at all.
In my experience, the more complex curry - more spices and other ingredients - the better taste.
Spices ratio, the roast level, etc, plays a huge part in what-we-refer-as-curry taste.
And similar to pesto sauce, home made curry paste/mixture is always superior to any branded one, and some of them are really vile.
 

Don't have an account? Register now and see fewer ads!

SIGN UP
Back
Top