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Eating Around the World

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Eating Around the World Cooking Methods The Chinese Wok About 2,000 years ago, woks were probably inventions of necessity. In China, fuel was scarce, so food ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Eating Around the World


1
Eating Around the World
2
Cooking Methods The Chinese Wok
  • About 2,000 years ago, woks were probably
    inventions of necessity. In China, fuel was
    scarce, so food needed to be cooked quickly. The
    bottom of the wok is small so it can use minimal
    fuel and be heated quickly.

3
The Indian Handi
  • Meat and legumes are more prevalent than fresh
    vegetables and require slow cooking techniques.
  • The Handi is a deep, narrow-mouthed cooking
    utensil with a cover. It is the opposite of a wok
    the opening of the pot is usually smaller than
    it bottom.
  • Traditionally used over hot coals,
  • the shape and the cover keep the
  • steam and moisture from escaping
  • making it ideal for dishes that
  • need to be cooked for hours
  • without drying out.

4
The Clay Pot of Egypt
  • Cooking food at a high temperature in a clay pot
    can be traced back to when the Egyptians were
    building the pyramids and baking bread for the
    workers. Modern chefs still use this method,
    burying a clay pot in the ground and heating it
    with well-stocked wood fires. Some say this was
    the basic idea that created the Crock Pot.

5
The Tandoor
  • The tandoor works on the same principle as an
    oven, by providing a high heat that wraps around
    whatever is being cooked. This makes it ideal for
    cooking
  • meat or bread. A
  • chef in India might
  • marinate their meat or
  • fish in spices and
  • yogurt based sauce,
  • then cook it in a
  • tandoor to produce
  • Tandoori chicken or Tandoori fish.

6
Japanese Knives
  • In Japan the most common cooking utensil is the
    Japanese knife. Not only because they cook less
    (raw fish), also a result of the intricacies of
    Japanese cuisine and the traditional adherence to
    beautiful presentations of their dishes.

7
Spanish Paella Pan
  • Also called a paellera, they are commonly made of
    stainless or carbon steel. A paella pan is always
    broad and shallow, usually has side handles and
    does not have a top. The shape of the pan is what
    creates the layer of toasted rice at the bottom
    of the pan, essential to making authentic paella.

8
Mexican Three-legged Bowl
  • Like a mortar and pestle, they are used for
    making salsa and guacamole. But they can also be
    used as a cooking vessel where they are heated to
    a high temperature, and filled with a mixture of
    onions, bell peppers, chicken, beef, shrimp and
    sometimes cheese.

9
Eating Utensils
  • Depending on where you travel, you may find
    yourself using fingers, chopsticks, knives, forks
    or spoons or a combination of these to eat. Each
    region has developed traditions for the use of
    utensils over many generations.

10
India
  • Fingers are the main utensil used in India. Only
    the right hand is used as the left is used for
    cleaning yourself and is considered dirty.

11
Thailand
  • Cutlery the spoon and fork are used to eat most
    meals, except noodle soup which is eaten with
    chopsticks and a typical Asian flat-bottom soup
    spoon. The spoon is used for putting food in the
    mouth while the fork is used for cutting and
    shovelling. It seems strange to Thai people if
    you put the fork in your mouth!

12
Japan
  • Unlike Chinese chopsticks, which are squared-off
    and blunt at the end, these Japanese utensils are
    rounded and tapered to a point at the end (and
    much more difficult to use). It has been
    suggested that this is in order to facilitate the
    removal of bones from fish, which makes up a
    great part of the Japanese diet.

13
Eating Customs
  • In China you are expected to leave a small amount
    of food uneaten on your plate. If you finish
    everything, you are sending the insulting message
    that not enough food was served to you.
  • In Crete people rarely eat the last meal of the
    day until 9 PM or later. Restaurants will be
    largely empty during what is considered the
    dinner rush in America.
  • In Egypt, a loud belch after a meal is a way of
    expressing your satisfaction and complimenting
    the cook.
  • In Japan it is acceptable to loudly slurp noodles
    and similar foods. In fact, it is considered
    flattering to do so, because it indicates that
    you are enjoying the food.

14
Eating Customs
  • In Kenya and other places in Africa, there are
    still people who practice the warrior tradition
    of drinking cow's blood, either directly from the
    cow, or after mixing it with milk as a delicacy.
  • In Mexico it is considered rude to leave the
    table until a respectable amount of time has
    passed after a meal. To get up to make a phone
    call, use the bathroom, step outside for some
    air, etc. should be avoided right after a meal.
  • In Sweden, going "Dutch" is the norm. Even on a
    date, it is customary for each person to pay
    their share of the bill. Generally in fact this
    is calculated precisely it is not enough to
    estimate it roughly.

15
Test Your Knowledge
  • http//www.anvari.org/fun/Misc/Eating_Habits_of_Pe
    ople_around_the_World.html
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