Hi Everyone, as mentioned in my introduction post, BOTL needs quite a bit of updating, patching and whatever else I might come across. Over the next few weekends BOTL may be unreachable on occasion as I do migrations or updates, etc. Just be patient - we'll be back! I'll generally try to keep these maintenances until later in the evenings.
Those two are definitely acquired tastes.Being born and raised in Miami I was an odd ball for not liking sushi until about 6 years ago. These days I enjoy almost any type of sushi except for sea urchin and octopus
No kidding!!! personally I can't stand them...Those two are definitely acquired tastes.
Sushi is actually the umbrella food of a variety of specific types all of which can, and typically do, contain raw fish/seafood....I'm still not a big sashimi fan (that includes raw fish/seafood for those who don't know ... sushi is cooked or smoked fish/seafood). Salmon and tuna aren't too bad raw, but I can't do the other stuff.
That dive I mentioned in Osaka had a tiny charcoal grill manned by an elderly sushi master, working shoulder to shoulder with his wife. He lightly grilled some eel, patted in some sushi rice then brushed on some of his special eel sauce. It was stunning. Doubt I'll ever taste anything that good again, and I'm not even an eel fan. :drool:Cool - love the eel sauce...
The guy that introduced me to quality cigars also introduced me to sushi. :thumbsup:
Bro, you're spoiled for life! Once you've tasted the best, there's no going back. :thumbsup:While in stationed in Japan I feel in love with sushi and sashimi. I just seem to not get enough of it.
Thanks bro, you are on hallowed foodie ground, lol!You're ALL welcome to come visit me anytime! The Sushi here is pretty good :eyebrow:
True dat. My wife's half japanese, so we just hit the local Japanese market and bring home what WOULD be ~100 of dollars worth of fish (for about $45, after you include the bottles of Nigori Sake), and slice it up for sashimi. I'd make rolls, but that is too labor-intensive, and I'm always ripping the nori anyway.Sushi is actually the umbrella food of a variety of specific types all of which can, and typically do, contain raw fish/seafood.
Sushi rolled with seaweed & rice is called makizushi.
Sushi stuffed into a rolled pouch of seaweed temakizushi.
Sushi placed on top of a bed of rice is called nigirizushi.
Sliced raw fish by itself (no rice) is called sashimi.