Giant Ants in Belgium Chocolate
Posted by: Adam Meredith on 01 October 2005
A hard day at the coal face and a Friday evening with no food in the house finds me lazily buying a Sainsbury's Cantonese Chinese meal for 2 (I am big boned).
Roasted duck in plum sauce (marinated sliced duck breast in a tasty plum sauce with carrot, pineapple and water chestnuts.)
Chicken and cashew nuts (marinated chicken breast pieces with water chestnuts, onion, baby sweet corn, red peppers in a rich spicy chilli soy sauce garnished with cashew nuts.)
Spicy noodles (egg noodles and bean sprouts in a spicy sauce.)
Egg fried rice (quite bearable)
Prawn spring rolls (again, quite bearable but, threateningly, "hand-rolled")
This feast will live in my memory – along with a fillet steak in Monte Carlo, a pint of Guinness in a Longford bar and a wasp taken, at speed, when crash helmets eschewed the visor – as one of those culinary landmarks that define apogee and nadir of the esurient arts.
“Unpleasant” falls as short of the mark as a child’s rocket straining for the Sun. This subtle blending of the rankly sour, strangely alien and blandly offensive took several mouthfuls to become believable. The chef’s master stroke coming in the disturbing textures that darkly hinted at the contents of each mouthful. Duck breast pieces like Pomfret cakes, cashew nuts like Witchetty grubs and all else reminiscent of Soylent Quorn.
I once ate (all of it, in disbelief) an Ice Lolly so revolting that it seemed impossible that news of it had not spread. The suspicion remained that, like root beer, it might have been made in response to a local peculiarity of taste. That was Clapham Common 1975 – perhaps a historian could enlighten me.
Posted on: 01 October 2005 by Deane F
Thank you Adam.
I might just print that one out and pin it to my wall.
Posted on: 01 October 2005 by Nime
A masterpiece of culinary diatribe!
Posted on: 01 October 2005 by long-time-dead
Adam
For a man whose very being is enrobed in all things hand-crafted and honed to perfection with repeated testing, why did you resort to the uber-shopping equivalent of blandom ?
No doubt you will be watching X-Farter of some other piece of TV Twat..............
Oh yes, keep a Pot Noodle in the cupboard for your next bland attack - the money saved will buy you a new CD.
Posted on: 01 October 2005 by Deane F
...brain the size of a planet. I'd be depressed too.
Posted on: 01 October 2005 by Adam Meredith
This week I will mainly be watching ........ The Prisoner.
I have no excuse.
I feel as gullible as my colleague - who popped the proffered formic lozenge into her unsuspecting mouth and spent the next few hours violently expelling fragments of hairy ant leg. We have both learned a cruel lesson in trust.
For me - back to the safety of risottos and stir fries. For her - another reminder to “beware geeks bearing gifts”.
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Mick P
Adam
Just another reason to dispense with attending shows. They are a total waste of time all round.
Regards
Mick
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Nime
12/72/180/753
I am not a number!
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Mabelode, King of Swords
Is that why you resorted to eating these then?
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Deane F
Looks just like a "thingy" Baldrick.
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Adam Meredith
quote:
Originally posted by Deane F:
Looks just like a "thingy" Baldrick.
Not the last time I looked.
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Deane F
I meant a "swedey-turnippy" thingy. What were you looking at?
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Nime
quote:
Originally posted by Mick Parry:
Adam
Just another reason to dispense with attending shows. They are a total waste of time all round.
Regards
Mick
Sir,
With respect. You are mistaken.
Your most obedient servant....
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Andrew Randle
Adam,
You should come with me to Guangdong and add a few more to the list
In Guangdong, the snakes fear us.
Andrew
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Adam Meredith
You can eat locusts - even without chocolate. It would be good to see the tables turned.
270 zillion of the buggers hovering about - trying not to be the first into the frying pan.
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by joe90
My Dad once was skinning and gutting a deer, and couldn't get the bladder out, no matter how hard he tugged. To his mate this was hilarious, and was laughing a big, wide-mouthed laugh when Dad finally ripped it free, gushing urine into his friend's mouth.
Top That!
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Deane F
quote:
Originally posted by joe90:
Top That!
Easy. Pink Flamingos.
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by Adam Meredith
quote:
Originally posted by Deane F:
Easy. Pink Flamingos.
Petrifying.
Posted on: 02 October 2005 by u5227470736789439
Surely that would be the ... erm ... droppings ... petrifying...
Fredrik
Posted on: 03 October 2005 by Stephen Bennett
This subject sounds like a track title from a long-lost 'Hatfield and the North' song.
Stephen
Posted on: 04 October 2005 by Steve2701
Has anyone yet found a culinary (or any other use) for woodlice?
Posted on: 04 October 2005 by graham55
Adam
Was the wasp (taken at speed) markedly worse than other insects inhaled while on the bike? And how exactly would you describe the taste? Might it have benefited from improved power?
Graham
Posted on: 04 October 2005 by Adam Meredith
quote:
Originally posted by Steve2701:
Has anyone yet found a culinary (or any other use) for woodlice?
Olive surprise.
Posted on: 04 October 2005 by garyi
Seriously though. In England has anyone truly enjoyed a Chinese meal?
Its all shite. I have ate all around China Town in London, not once did I have anything memorable. Chinese food served in England is gloopy gloopy shite.
There is a van that drives around Watford that says 'specialist meats for the Chinese trade' what's so special about their fucking meat?
Another thing, have you noticed that pork dishes always have that perfectly formed pork with the little red marking on the top? Also the chicken and beef is extra succulent?
The king prawns are always exactly the same size and shape?
They always give you something complimentary such as greasy prawn crackers or chicken wings.
The spring rolls are precisely the same shape and taste the same no matter where you go, this goes for chicken balls etc.
The duck is fucked (it is because no doubt it gets reheated day in day out)
I ate in a number of places round San Francisco as well and it tasted shite there as well.
I have not been to China so cannot comment on the true cuisine, I have met people that say its wonderful and that its shite, all of them 'foodies'
Posted on: 04 October 2005 by graham55
Come to Limehouse in East London, the old Chinatown from the days of Oscar Wilde and Conan Doyle, and, if you're sensible, you can still get very good Chinese food.
Graham
Posted on: 04 October 2005 by Deane F
quote:
Originally posted by garyi:
Seriously though. In England has anyone truly enjoyed a Chinese meal?
Its all shite. I have ate all around China Town in London, not once did I have anything memorable. Chinese food served in England is gloopy gloopy shite.
There is a van that drives around Watford that says 'specialist meats for the Chinese trade' what's so special about their fucking meat?
Another thing, have you noticed that pork dishes always have that perfectly formed pork with the little red marking on the top? Also the chicken and beef is extra succulent?
The king prawns are always exactly the same size and shape?
They always give you something complimentary such as greasy prawn crackers or chicken wings.
The spring rolls are precisely the same shape and taste the same no matter where you go, this goes for chicken balls etc.
The duck is fucked (it is because no doubt it gets reheated day in day out)
I ate in a number of places round San Francisco as well and it tasted shite there as well.
I have not been to China so cannot comment on the true cuisine, I have met people that say its wonderful and that its shite, all of them 'foodies'
garyi
I have to ask, why have you been so persistent with your search for a good Chinese meal when you've found the results so consistently bad?