shape
carat
color
clarity

You eat that?

kenny

Super_Ideal_Rock
Premium
Joined
Apr 30, 2005
Messages
34,682
Wow! Talk about . . . "people vary"!!!

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052970204661604577186843056231170.html

Partial snip:

Nattō is a stringy, sticky, slimy, chunky fermented soybean dish that Japanese regularly eat for breakfast.
It can be eaten straight up, but it is usually served cold over rice and seasoned with soy sauce, mustard or wasabi.

Aside from its alien texture, nattō suffers from another problem, at least for Westerners—odor.
Nattō smells like the marriage of ammonia and a tire fire.
Though this might not be the worst smell combination ever, it has zero food connotation for me, and I've never met a Westerner who can take a bite of nattō on the first attempt.
What Japanese love, we find disgusting.

Some cultures consider cheese repulsive.
Worth considering: The bacteria that cause foot odor are also found in many cheeses.

In the last several years there has been an explosion of research on disgust.
Disgust is one of the six basic emotions—along with joy, surprise, anger, sadness and fear—but it is the only one that has to be learned, which suggests something about its complexity.

Most children get their first lessons in disgust around the time that they are potty trained.
After that, the triggers of disgust are quickly acquired from the responses and rules of parents, peers and, most importantly, the wider culture.
One of the best places to look for the vast differences in what is or is not considered disgusting in different parts of the globe is food, especially distinctive foods, like every culture's favorite fermented dish.

Take cheese, considered by Westerners to be anything from a comfort food to a luxurious delicacy.
A good taleggio, Gorgonzola or Brie might be described as sweaty or slimy.
Cheese also has its fair share of aromatic obstacles and, depending on the circumstances, may be confused with vomit, stinky feet or a garbage spill.
Many Asians regard all cheese, from processed American slices to Stilton, as utterly disgusting—the equivalent of cow excrement.
 
interesting.
 
Natto actually doesn't taste anywhere near as bad as it sounds. Same as how cheese doesn't taste anywhere near as bad as it is made to sound.

Heck I'm neither Japanese nor western.

Ah, but I adore durians. To death. And that has been proven to be a challenge for a wide variety of palettes. Although I can't really figure why. Such a complex intense fruit. Delish!
 
My mom is half Japanese, and she loves natto, but she can't eat sashimi...strange huh? She says the texture of raw fish makes her gag. We, on the other hand, can eat any animal protein raw or rare, but cannot down natto at all.
 
I had a couple of Japanese roommates in college. Natto is nasty! I tried it and it is awful, awful, awful. The Japanese people I knew LOVED it and could not BELIEVE I thought it was so bad. My roommate ate it often. But she was a great person and it didn't bother me that much.
 
Jumping maggots?? Ewwwww
I thought some traditional asian dishes scared people, but that's just taking it too far!
 
For 9 years I spent 4 to 6 weeks in Japan working with Japanese, rarely even met w/"round-eyes." Never had natto -- never was offered it. Maybe they didn't want to watch me gag. Especially after I almost bawled at the dinner where they presented a living fish, off of whom we were to cut pieces of sashimi as it lay gasping on a platter.

Couldn't, Could. Not., do maggots, jumping or not! Worse even is the place I saw on tv recently where they eat deep-fried spiders the size of my hand. Crispy with legs all curled up, oh, where's the VOMIT emotie!?

--- Laurie
 
GET 3 FREE HCA RESULTS JOIN THE FORUM. ASK FOR HELP
Top