一句话总结各国料理:中餐要探问星空?
From the potato-loving Irish to the pretentious French, these tumblr users perfectly poke fun at their traditions, unmasking the cornerstones of their most beloved foods. French recipes: If you’re not making this in Paris then what’s the point. Italian recipes: use the left leg meat of a pig from one of three farms in this specific area of Tuscany, or from this day my grandmother will begin manifesting physically in your house. American recipes: buy these three cans of stuff and put them in a pan, congrats you cooked. Chinese recipes, as handed down from mother to child: season it with a pinch of this and some of that. You want to know the exact amount? Feel it in your heart. Ask the stars. Yell into the void. Greek recipes: You followed all the right steps but this isn’t quite right. I don’t know what to tell you. Australian recipes: Chuck it on the barbie. Armenian recipes: Spend eight days laboring over the stove, The food will be flavorful with the sacrifice of your sanity. No one will appreciate it. Canadian recipes: it either needs more bacon, more maple syrup, more gravy, or an unholy combination of the three. Filipino recipes: Soy sauce and vinegar everywhere. Welsh recipes: You ought to make it with this obscure type of cheese which doesn’t exist any more but you can replace it with the other obscure type of cheese from the other side of the country. Slovenian recipes: Go to the garden, get some weeds, then make a soup out of it. Polish recipes: You have to touch the dough , feel the pierogi in your heart, touch it, lick it, smell it. Internet recipes: here is a heartwarming story about my baby sister’s third birthday that I completely made up, and a copypaste from Alton Brown. Irish recipes:
Boil them, mash them, stick them in a stew . Dutch recipes: Fry it. |