Wednesday, October 12, 2011

Americanese Food

Some food items that most American families would consider staples are a bit difficult to find here, especially in our little town.  So, we've had an interesting time trying to create meals that remind us of home - especially for special occasions, such as birthdays.  For the first birthday party, we were told that the guest of honor is quite fond of pasta/Italian food.  We knew noodles would be no problem, but finding a good sauce or canned tomatoes and dried/fresh herbs to make a good sauce, cheese, meat, etc might be tricky.  Indeed, it was.

I pulled up the ever handy google translate and looked up key words like "oregano" and "butter" so I could write down the pinyin (alphabetic romanization of Chinese characters) and try to scratch out the Chinese characters before heading off to our local street market and grocery.  The required herbs and dairy products were not to be found, but success was mine in the form of spaghetti sauce pouches - that's right, plastic packets of Hunt's for the bargain price of $3 (USD) a packet.  Ok, not so much a bargain as a purchase of desperation, but good enough.  It acted as a good base for Arianne to add in some additional tomatoes, onions and such.  So, we had noodles, sauce, and salad but still needed to find bread and dessert.  We  found some bread, but it was a bit sweet.  That made the pan-fried garlic bread taste a bit...off, but it must have tasted ok because we didn't have any leftovers!  We found oreos easily enough and decided to use them for a crust. We mixed more crushed oreos into some vanilla ice cream that we were lucky enough to come across and then drizzled some melted chocolate bars over the top - not too shabby.  One of the guys claimed the spaghetti was better than Olive Garden and the dessert was better than Dairy Queen.  Though grateful for the encouragement, I responded by asking him how much time has passed since he's been to either.

The next birthday party was in honor of a good, old-fashioned Texan.  We decided to aim high and attempt fajitas.  A nearby restaurant has a sizzling beef dish that comes with peppers and onions - we ordered several and also requested the same dish in chicken along with fried potato sticks - instant fajita filling.  We made the tortillas from scratch - that was sadly a first for this Texas girl, but surprisingly easy.  With the help of my friend in a nearby city, I also found a great recipe for apple pie with ingredients we could find here.  This meal came together quite a bit easier than the first and was probably more delicious.

High on the success of the birthday parties, I decided to attempt to cook for my teammates after one of their TL days.  I set off for the local grocery store rather optimistically.  We had some leftover pasta sauce and I thought grilled sandwiches with that as the dressing would be great - I only needed to find cheese, bread, and meat.  The store had one packet (five slices) of "breakfast cheese,"  bread with a few sesame seeds sprinkled on top - promising to be less sweet than the garlic bread, and...pig head?  Ugh.  I finally resorted to combing the canned meat aisle.  I found spam.  Not even real spam, though.  Knockoff spam.  I was desperate.  I grabbed some, went home to slice and brown the knockoff spam, then assembled and fried the sandwiches.  When David asked for the food to be blessed, we all heartily agreed and hoped for the best.  Amazingly enough, they tasted pretty good!  I also cut up different kinds of fruit and melted chocolate bars with milk to create a kind of almost fondue for dessert.

On the TL day for the guys and I, Arianne found a way to make crepes.  I still can't figure out how she did it!

On the TL day for Arianne and I, the boys returned the favor and picked up Pizza! from the local restaurant.

This is a picture of the chicken curry pizza - a first for me, but pretty darn amazing.

This is "Hawaiian" - spam (maybe not even knockoff!), peppers, and tomatoes.

We might really be in trouble if only one month in spamwiches and chicken curry pizza already top the list of favorites.

2 comments:

  1. Well, you can always make your own bread...its not that hard...Yeast, flour, some type of milk, sugar, water and some elbow grease. I don't think you will have problems finding yeast since they use it to make dumplings. Or just befriend a person that owns a bakery. Food for thought!

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  2. I guess this is a bad time to tell you that Pizza Hut is offering any size pizza with any toppings for ten bucks right now. :) heehee

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