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#11 | |
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Certified Master Chef
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I'll eat just about anything....
But I don't want them to touch on my plate. I can't tell you why. My family laughs at me, but at Thanksgiving and large meals I either use more than one plate at a sitting, or have some things on the first round and the rest on the 2nd. Something in my head says, "they weren't cooked as 1 dish they shouldn't BE one dish" I'm not super wierd, I will put gravy on my mashed potatoes and turkey, but I dont let the taters and turkey touch....
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Not that there's anything wrong with that..... |
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#12 | |
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Senior Cook
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Suzi, I understand. One of my food quirks would be not having the taters touch the gravy because it'll make my taters soggy. I can't really tell you why, either.
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#13 | |
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Senior Cook
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Interesting topic.
I eat almost anything. My brother who grew up in the same house with the same food on the table every night eats a shockingly limited diet. He enjoys the foods he likes but they are amazingly limited basically to simply cooked meats and breads. The only vegetable he willingly eats outside of a potato is a raw salted baby carrot. The only fruit he eats are apples (sliced). The only place I have ever seen him eat cheese is on pizza and he will only eat plain cheese pizza. No rice, no pasta, no soup, no milk on his cereal, no pie. No "ethnic" food of any kind. A hamburger is meat, bread and a litte ketsup... all lettuce tomato pickle etc will be removed from his plate. I have never understood. we had great and varied food on our table every night... he never ate most of it. He is an adult and is still the same way. Beyond his food issues he is a pretty normal well adjusted kid. In all I dont understand. My anuts and uncles mostly eat everything but of my cousins (there are 14 of us) about half have strange food issues and dont eat most of the great Italian family foods. The other half of us relish food. Go figure. there are a few things I dont like but most of them I have changed my opinion on... I do hold the line on the organs wont go near em and I really dont like my eggs runny but that's about it. Last edited by PanchoHambre; 03-24-2008 at 04:29 PM. |
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#14 | |
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Senior Cook
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lol yikes.. maybe i'm still worse than I think..
The only veggies I like are potatoes (any kind,shape,or form!) corn, and Olives (is that a veggie or a fruit?) The only fruit I like is Apples and Grapes... sometimes kiwi if it's not too sour..And I take everything off of my hamburger except for the cheese and ketchup!!! (no lettuce, pickle, tomatoe,etc. either...) ![]() |
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#15 | |
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Certified Executive Chef
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I have no formal training on this so take it with a grain of salt. It is pure conjecture formed from other things I do know, or have heard about. It has been shown that mothers who eat a wide variety of foods, while the baby is still in the womb, generally have less probelms with picky eaters. It has been proven that many flavors end up in the amniotic fluid, and hence, are tasted by the growing child.
I also do know that as we grow older, our taste buds become less sensitive to certain flavors. My Dad over-salted everything he cooked. He blamed it on the fact that he smoked like a chimney and that the smoking made him less sensitive to the salt. So to my pristine young tatebuds, the food tasted extremely salty. And yet, I have never smoked a cigarette in my life. but I have been known to over salt foods to many people's tastes, while others have said that I don't use enough salt. Training and exposure do play a part, but are just one piece of the puzzle. My sisters and I ate at the same table every night, and were admonished to eat our veggies and given the usual threats of "No deserts if you don't eat your peas" kind of thing. I always ate all of my food. I loved nearly everything I tried from the get go. My youngest sister, on the other hand, can't stand peas to this day, and used to hide them under her plate when no one was looking. She got caught of course when the table was picked up. But she continued to do it. On the other hand, she used to steal sips from my step-father's beer, again when no one was looking. She loved the flavor from about as soon as she could walk. And it's a credit to her that she has always been a fairly light drinker. Me on the other hand, I have always hated the taste of any beverage with alcohol in it. I tried for two years to "develop a taste" for alcoholic drinks, with no success. I didn't quit drinking for religeous reasons. I quit before I heard of the church of which I am now a part. I just couldn't handle the flavor or the effects on my body. I wanted to move way to fast to allow anything to slow me down. So, there are physiological differences that affect what we do and don't like. There are sociological stimulus, such as the availability of food types, and the training we received from our parents, as well as shunning foods for a host of reasons, everything from texture (I can't deal with slimy things, but love canned sardines and meats surounded by aspic). I only have a couple rules about foods. I won't eat any mints except basil; I won't eat any foods that have been cooked with an alcoholic beverage, I avoid slimy foods, and the foods I eat have to be relatively healthy. And yes, I have eaten my share of potatoe dishes, either swimming in, or loaded with butter, but not after I learned about nutrition and how much harm can be done to a body by eating junk food and too many carbs and/or fats. Do I like french fries? I love them. But I dont' eat them very often. Does cake taste great? Certainly. But again, in extreme moderation. In a perfect world, our bodies would only like what our bodies need. Unfortunately, there seems to be little reason for our likes and dislikes. Some we are born with, while others are learned. Luckily, I like so many things that it's easy for me to cook a very healthy meal and enjoy it. The only thing that slows me down in the health food dept., is that good food costs more money than does junk food. What does that say about our society? That's my take on it, right or wrong. Seeeeeeya; Goodweed of the North
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"There is no success outside the home that justifies failure within the home." |
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#16 | |
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Senior Cook
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#17 | |
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Certified Master Chef
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Yeah, see if we were all the same, they would only sell separated plates!!!!
And I would be in heaven.....
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Not that there's anything wrong with that..... |
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#18 | |
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Certified Executive Chef
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I am not really a picky eater, and will eat most anything. But, there are things I don't eat much of today just because we ate so much of it growing up. Bologna being one of them, had so much of it growing up, still won't eat it today. And yet, my kids love it. My son, on the other hand, hates veggies. I have no idea why other than the kid next door doesn't like them either and his mom doesn't make him eat them. So, no scientific evidence there, but observation says maybe they aren't his favorite foods and he figures he can get away with not eating them like the kid next door? Both my daughters love veggies though.
My dad always used to accuse me of not liking peas just because the kids at school told me not to like them. Hogwash, I just didn't like the mushy taste! I also remember as a kid I would not eat spinach, cauliflower, broccoli, asparagus, or brussel sprouts. Today, I love cauliflower and broccoli, but still don't like the others although I will eat them if served up with no complaints. I have even been known to eat peas on occasion!
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Buddy ![]() "It is an easy thing for one whose foot is on the outside of calamity to give advice and to rebuke the sufferer." ~ AESCHYLUS, Prometheus Bound |
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#19 | |
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Executive Chef
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Hi QSis, I think you are right on the psychology aspect.
Know a number of folks who are very picky eaters, and they are generally not really responsive to to anything new in their lives. Have a bil who will not, as far as I can determine, eat anything different than the food he was introduced to before the age of, oh, maybe six or so. Meat and taters. The same thing every day for breakfast. Pizza with cheese, not double cheese, and no toppings. But his life is as rigid as his food preferences are. And know other folks like that, too many. It is a shame, so much good food out there that some people will never be able to let themselves evjoy. I feel sorry for them. As far as psychology goes, I took 101, had to. But as far as I could tell the prof had as much insight into humans as he did into clams. Food and shelter are the two things we all need to maintain. We all want to survive. So my guess is that you are getting into a very complicated area. But it might be fun to explore. And what the heck you are with friends here.
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Before criticizing a person, walk a mile in his shoes - then you are a mile away and you have his shoes! |
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#20 | |
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Certified Executive Chef
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I might be able to shed a little light on the subject. However, I'm dealing with a definite "pyscological" case in my house.
My oldest step-son, Stephen, is now 13. He's autistic, but "just barely". You have to be around him for several hours or a couple day, to really pick on the fact that he isn't a typical kid. My other half, PeppA, told me that Stephen used to eat anything and everything that was put in front of him. Then, he started school. Immediately after that, he locked into this behavior of only eating meat. If I make a "regular" meal of meat, starch, and veg, he will only touch the meat. No gravy. The only way to get him to eat any veggies is the tomato in spaghetti sauce or pizza sauce, plus the veggies on pizza. He'll eat the crust for pizza, bread for sandwiches, tortillas in quesadillas, rice that's in PeppA's Spanish Rice, and pasta for spaghetti and Beef Stroganoff. He absolutely refuses to eat my clam chowder. He will NOT touch it. He'd rather go to bed hungry, which he has done on several occasions. If I make something with even a hint of heat to it, he won't touch it. Stephen and I go round-and-round about him not wanting to eat my food. I do realize that this is the autism kicking in and locking his behavior. He will probably never get away from this behavior, even though I'm trying like crazy to get him out of it. It doesn't help that I was raised up with "eat what's on your plate or go hungry", and his g'mother, who is currently living with us, believes that if he won't touch what I make, she is fully within her rights to feed him a PB&J later on when I've gone to bed. Personally, I do have a few hangups on food. I can't tolerate the smell of canned spinach. For some reason, it nauseates me. I'll eat fresh, raw spinach all day long as a salad. I'll eat cooked spinach that's been incorporated into something else, like spanikopita, etc. I also cannot stand the smell of cooking liver. BLECK! In fact, the only way I'll ever eat liver is a good dish of Dirty Rice, so heavily seasoned that I won't taste it. I haven't tried any other organ meats, to my knowledge, excluding what incorporated into commerically product meat products like potted meat, hot dogs, etc. I also refuse to consume nervous tissue, especially from cattle. I realize that Mad Cow Disease / Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy is really, really, rare, in this country, but I don't want to risk it. I used to abhor Shepherd's Pie as a kid. Not sure why. Now, I love it, although I rarely, if ever, fix it. I can't stand the texture of canned peas, which is what my mother always made. Give me fresh or frozen, though, and I'm happy. Now, if I can just get the kids to eat them..... I remember, years ago, hearing something about "non-tasters", "tasters", and "super-tasters", when talking about kids and their sense of taste, and that this has an impact on what they will or will not eat, especially certain veggies.
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Peace, Love, and Vegetable Rights! Eat Meat and Save the Plants! |
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