Hello everyone!
Welcome to the Community Center! I'm @Bhu...
Latest reply
Hello everyone!
Welcome to the Community Center! I'm @Bhumika , one of the Community Managers for our English Community Ce...
Latest reply
Hello everyone!
As the song says, “food, glorious food, we’re anxious to try it”. There are so many delicious international dishes available, and travelling gives us the opportunity to try food that we might not have tried before. You might even have discovered a new dish after hosting a guest from another country.
With that in mind, I’d like to start a new game.
The rules are easy! Below I’ve listed twenty international dishes, and scrambled the letters up, so it’s your task to unscramble the letters and tell me what the dishes are! Bonus points if you can tell me the country that the dish comes from!
✅ Haggis - Scotland
✅ Cheese Fondue - Switzerland
✅ Pho - Vietnam
✅ Dim sum - China
✅ Tagine
✅ Meat Pie - Australia
✅ Moules-Frites - Belgium
✅ Poutine - Canada
✅ Frikadeller - Denmark
✅ Fish and Chips - England
✅ Crêpe - France
✅ Moussaka - Greece
✅ Nasi Goreng - Indonesia
✅ Lasagne - Italy
✅ Sushi - Japan
✅ Kibbeh - Lebanon
✅ Enchiladas
✅ Kimchi - Korea
✅ Bigos - Poland
✅ Paella - Spain
I hope you enjoy the game!
Jenny
@Emiel1 @Ann72 @Laurelle3 @Mike-And-Jane0 Sorry guys! I've just updated the list for you, poutine and enchiladas were indeed correct guesses. 😃
As clues for the remaining ones, perhaps I can give you the countries linked to the dishes?
6 - Australia
7 - Belgium
9 - Denmark
10 - England
13 - Indonesia
What do you think, any more ideas with those in mind? 🙂
Emilie
-----
Merci de jeter un oeil aux Principes du Community Center/ Please follow the Community Guidelines
@Laurelle3 You got it! Fair point - I think many anglo-saxon dishes kind of overlap, don't they? It's one of the great things about cuisine, you can see how dishes travelled and evolved as cultures and nations did. 🙂
-----
Merci de jeter un oeil aux Principes du Community Center/ Please follow the Community Guidelines
@Emilie @Jenny is no 10 Fish and Chips. One year we were staying in Whey- on- Went and we queued for over an hour for fish and chips in a shop that had served them for over 100 years the advertisement said.
To our Aussie tastes they had thick batter and were fatty and they weren't worth the waste of time but we did enjoy the conversations with the people in the front and behind us.
@Laurelle3 Shame they weren't the best, hopefully you'll get a chance to have a proper good one sometime - they can be delightful! 😊 Did you get vinegar on your chips to make it even more authentic?
-----
Merci de jeter un oeil aux Principes du Community Center/ Please follow the Community Guidelines
Correct yet again, @Emiel1! I've never tried either of those dishes actually ... have you? 👀
-----
Merci de jeter un oeil aux Principes du Community Center/ Please follow the Community Guidelines
Nasi Goreng is also a popular dish in The Netherlands, not only in Indonesian / Chinese restaurants but also to cook at home.
I never tried the Danish Frikadeller. Wikipedia shows me it is related to "meatballs".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frikadeller
BTW
In NL we have a snack with almost same name, it is called "Frikandel".
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Frikandel
So now there is one unknown dish in the game (Belgium)
When i think of Belgium in Dutch (Flemisch) language, first "patat" or "friet" (UK: fries) comes to my mind ! But also mossel (UK: mussel)
Then suddenly i released: it is all in French language !
Moules Frites (Mussels with fries)
@Emiel1 That one was super tricky, well done! Moules-Frites is such a classic in Belgium, as well as in the north of France (which I'm more familiar with personally).
Frikandel does sound very similar to Frikadeller ... @Sybe and @Quincy does it bring back memories from home? ☺️
-----
Merci de jeter un oeil aux Principes du Community Center/ Please follow the Community Guidelines
Must see it's hard