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-   -   Trips with a fun food theme (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/diningbuzz/1653809-trips-fun-food-theme.html)

travelmad478 Feb 10, 2015 9:44 am

Trips with a fun food theme
 
In the last year I've taken two longish vacations in which I made an effort to eat a certain local food every day. Last August, in the Canadian Maritimes, I ate lobster in some form or other for 10 days in a row (lobster chowder, lobster roll, lobster club sandwich, lobster spring rolls, lobster bruschetta, etc.) And last month, on a vacation/MR in Hawaii and Panama, it was pineapple (fresh pineapple for breakfast, pineapple juice in a drink, pineapple shave ice, pineapple malasadas, pineapple empanadas, etc.)

Anyone else do this? For me it makes the whole trip more enjoyable and creates an amusing dining challenge.

mbece Feb 10, 2015 10:04 am

You should go to Mexico City and do tacos! There's so much variety you'd never get bored.

exilencfc Feb 10, 2015 10:44 am

Never done this delibirately but I did eat a lot of Doner last time I was in Austria

cblaisd Feb 10, 2015 10:56 am

I have done barbecue road trips before :)

U.S. higway 67 through Oklahoma comes to mind.

BamaVol Feb 10, 2015 11:39 am

A couple years ago we went to Estes Park CO and tried elk in every form we found it on a menu. Steaks, burgers, sausages, "tips".

BuildingMyBento Feb 10, 2015 7:07 pm

travelmad478, if you go to France, try doing that with butter!

DavidDTW Feb 10, 2015 7:56 pm


Originally Posted by BuildingMyBento (Post 24327571)
travelmad478, if you go to France, try doing that with butter!

I have tried to tell friends that butter, and otherdairy products in different countries taste so much better than in the US, but they don't believe me.

LeviFlight Feb 10, 2015 9:25 pm

Trips with a fun food theme
 
Tapas in southern Spain.

travelmad478 Feb 10, 2015 10:24 pm

I don't think I'd have to TRY doing it with butter in France; it would just happen.

I would love to do it with 'cue but I am a rather small person, and might not live to tell the tale :) At the very least I would need an eating partner for that!

VivoPerLei Feb 11, 2015 2:44 am


Originally Posted by DavidDTW (Post 24327788)
I have tried to tell friends that butter, and otherdairy products in different countries taste so much better than in the US, but they don't believe me.

What accounts for this? I was in the US last week and had milk which I thought had gone bad. I looked at the container and the date was in the future. Turns out the milk hadn't turned at all, it simply tastes like crap compared to what I normally drink here in the UK.

stut Feb 11, 2015 2:48 am

Sri Lanka and the ubiquitous 'rice and curry'. Sounds fairly dull, but it absolutely isn't - you get a tableful of delicious little bowls of veg (and sometimes meat), different in every town you go to, and beautifully spiced.

VivoPerLei Feb 11, 2015 2:50 am

It's been 35 years, but I once took a road trip to New Mexico and ate Mexican food for something like 10 days in a row. To me that was the pinnacle of Mexican food and I still remember that trip because of it

rsqrott Feb 11, 2015 7:47 am

OP, I love this idea and always try to plan my meals accordingly when I travel. One trip to New Orleans I made it a point to have crawfish at least once a day, sometimes twice.


Originally Posted by VivoPerLei (Post 24328907)
What accounts for this? I was in the US last week and had milk which I thought had gone bad. I looked at the container and the date was in the future. Turns out the milk hadn't turned at all, it simply tastes like crap compared to what I normally drink here in the UK.

The UK has far, far superior dairy products (and chocolate) in comparison to the usual offerings here in the US.

I'm supposed to be heading to the UK for business in a few weeks and it's always a challenge to think of what to bring to my colleagues in the UK offices. "Here's some crappy US chocolate. No?" This year I'm bringing pralines. :)

BamaVol Feb 11, 2015 8:58 am


Originally Posted by VivoPerLei (Post 24328920)
It's been 35 years, but I once took a road trip to New Mexico and ate Mexican food for something like 10 days in a row. To me that was the pinnacle of Mexican food and I still remember that trip because of it

We did something similar almost 40 years ago, driving from Denver to Santa Fe and back. Every breakfast was huevos rancheros. Each one was served at a different restaurant and each was outstanding.

BuildingMyBento Feb 11, 2015 9:36 am


Originally Posted by DavidDTW (Post 24327788)
I have tried to tell friends that butter, and otherdairy products in different countries taste so much better than in the US, but they don't believe me.

Heck, even Hokkaido does dairy very well!

(For instance, in Sapporo, butter is a typical ramen topping...)


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