A lot of questions have arisen about food here, so this post will focus mostly on the dining experience of Korean food.
First of all, let me just say that Americans don’t know jack about spicy. Yes, I’m even looking at you, Buffalo Wild Wings fans. Just because you can keep adding more and more pepper to the sauce of your “hot food” item doesn’t really qualify you for the Spicy Food experience ofKorea America 
The meat is hot. The side dishes are hot. The SAUERKRAUT is hot (and eaten with every meal). The soup is hot. And you drink water with them. Or alcohol if you’re that bold (incidents of the liquor igniting when coming into contact with the sauces are quite common. 277 Koreans die every year from explosions caused by their sauces.) And in all honesty, I’ve shied away from the foods they told me were actually spicy. In other words, the food gets so hot, you wish your tired tongue was fire proof.
UNDEEERRRR THE BOARDWALK.
apologies. Stuck in my head. What can you do?
First of all, let me just say that Americans don’t know jack about spicy. Yes, I’m even looking at you, Buffalo Wild Wings fans. Just because you can keep adding more and more pepper to the sauce of your “hot food” item doesn’t really qualify you for the Spicy Food experience of
The meat is hot. The side dishes are hot. The SAUERKRAUT is hot (and eaten with every meal). The soup is hot. And you drink water with them. Or alcohol if you’re that bold (incidents of the liquor igniting when coming into contact with the sauces are quite common. 277 Koreans die every year from explosions caused by their sauces.) And in all honesty, I’ve shied away from the foods they told me were actually spicy. In other words, the food gets so hot, you wish your tired tongue was fire proof.
UNDEEERRRR THE BOARDWALK.
apologies. Stuck in my head. What can you do?
Another interesting experience I’ve had was visiting the very western Dunkin Donuts for a bagel one morning.  I saw on the overhead menu that they served hotdogs, but the food was labeled Hot-Sausage-Bread.  I laughed inwardly.  How overly complicated!  Why not just call a hotdog a hotdog?  (if you know where this is going, don’t shout it out right now.  You’ll spoil it for the rest of the audience).  I thought nothing of it until my coworker and I met her friend at the mall.  Shortly after introductions, my coworker did the quick rundown of where have you been/ what cute new tops did you buy/ did you eat already?  And she had.  And when asked about this, she replied that she’d had dog for dinner and it had been quite delicious.  Ancient traditional food?  Yes.  Alive and fetching?  Absolutely.  Need more proof?  In the unit on occupations, I asked my kindergarten class what a doctor would need, a teacher, a firefighter, etc.  Then I got to chef.
Jeff-Teacher: Now what would a chef need for his job? I think he would need…..beef!
Jeff-Teacher: Now what would a chef need for his job? I think he would need…..beef!
Student:  Fishy!
Student: Chicken!
Student: Chicken!
Student: Dog?
JT (yeah, JT. That just happened): did you say “Duck?” *quacking duck call with my hands*
Student: *laughing incredulously* Nooo! Dog! Arf arf!
(Of course, by now the rest of the class had latched onto the duck call noise with their hands, and I had to quiet my room of quacking ducks down, which admittedly gave me an excuse to not have any reaction to the barking little livestock)
Don’t worry though, I was reassured by my co-worker’s friend, they only eat big dogs, not little ones. And that makes sense. No matter how good the meat was, could you imagine a whole pasture full of cockapoos?
I think I’d eat them first.
JT (yeah, JT. That just happened): did you say “Duck?” *quacking duck call with my hands*
Student: *laughing incredulously* Nooo! Dog! Arf arf!
(Of course, by now the rest of the class had latched onto the duck call noise with their hands, and I had to quiet my room of quacking ducks down, which admittedly gave me an excuse to not have any reaction to the barking little livestock)
Don’t worry though, I was reassured by my co-worker’s friend, they only eat big dogs, not little ones. And that makes sense. No matter how good the meat was, could you imagine a whole pasture full of cockapoos?
I think I’d eat them first.
*Disclaimer- I am making no judgments here.  Koreans eat dog, some people in China eat live lobsters, we eat pigs(which are supposedly almost as smart as humans), the Japanese eat their fish without cooking it, the Scottish eat sheep stomach…and ok seriously, kilts are weird enough, what made you think Haggis was a good idea?*
They do have burgers and fries and chicken sandwiches, which they never get quite right and always include some sauce I can’t identify which would simply be labled a “zesty asian sauce” in America 
Til next time,
JT
Til next time,
JT
 
 
Too funny, I would love to meet your students. It seems like they have a little fun with you pushing your cultural buttons from time to time.
ReplyDeletewonder why they're thinner? no. wonder why they're much less boss? not anymore.
ReplyDelete