Unpopular foods you love?
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I like black licorice and anise.
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@Catseye3 said in Unpopular foods you love?:
When I was a child living in Germany, I used to love what were called 'Rollmops'. They were long strips of (I think) pickled herring rolled around a piece of sour pickle and secured with a toothpick. Yum!
Are they still available, Klaus?
Of course. It's very traditional to eat it for breakfast if you have a really bad hangover.
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@Mik said in Unpopular foods you love?:
@89th said in Unpopular foods you love?:
Clearly there’s an association with intelligence and enjoying black licorice.
Or madnesss. It could be madness.
We all like black licorice here!
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@Mik said in Unpopular foods you love?:
We all float, too.
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@Catseye3 said in Unpopular foods you love?:
Well, I hate it and I am perfectly . . .
I am with you Cats. I do not like black licorice.
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Eels
Anybody here ever had tripe and onions? I had it a couple of times in the UK - quite nice.
Haggis is lovely, if extremely unhealthy.
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I love black licorice. One thing I miss about Atlanta is the high end candy store I used to buy licorice from. I can't remember the name of the store, but the sold candy by the pound, and must have had around 20 or 30 different kinds of anise and black licorice chouces.
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I don’t like black licorice, but I do enjoy anise. Go figure...
Liver...Brussel Sprouts...
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You chaps aren't exactly knocking it out of the park in your quest for adventurous foods.
Liver can be wonderful - calf's liver is great if done right.
Where's Brenda and her disgusting lutefisk? Maybe she's abandoned it in favour of frogs-legs.
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In Taiwan, there is a joke that we eat everything on a pig except the "oink". LOL
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I posted this in another forum thread a while back, but these guys (Norway commandos in the World War 2) went to another level:
From the book:
"they had become connoisseurs of reindeer...... They could tell an old bull from a calf from a yearling....... Eyelid fat and bone marrow were the finest of delicacies. As was gorr, a soup made from the contents of the deers stomach, rich in moss, mixed with meat, blood and water. Truth however, is that they were indiscriminate. They ate the heart, kidneys, liver, brain, larynx, tongue, tooth nerves, eyes, nose, every sliver of meat on the bones, and then the bones themselves. Other than the hooves, horns and pelts, nothing escaped their plates."