• Shapillon@lemmy.world
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    2 months ago

    Yeah that’s strange, I always associated raisins in food as something ranging from Morocco to Bangladesh. Not the whitest countries ever.

    Imho in general European food isn’t very keen on sweet and salty mixes. Except for the USA who does it all wrong smh.

    • wieson
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      2 months ago

      We have a few potato and apple combinations in the Rhineland.

      Also goose with quince or pear are present in french cuisine.

      I think traditional European cooking has many similarities with south med/ near east cooking. Don’t lob us in with modern American randomness.

      • Shapillon@lemmy.world
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        2 months ago

        I’m not very familiar with German cooking though (if that’s what you meant by Rhineland) so if you got some tips and/or must tries please enlighten me :3

        edit: I removed most of my message since it added nothing to the discussion.

          • Don_alForno
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            2 months ago

            If you’re feeling risky: Himmel un Ääd/ Sky and Earth . I have never eaten it myself (so far).

            Nothing risky about it, it all comes down to if you like the fried blood sausage. Try it, it’s awesome.

            The one in the picture doesn’t look good though. Slices are too thin and it’s been in the pan too long.

      • Hegar@fedia.io
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        2 months ago

        You can find isolated examples from western cuisines (often rich people food) but mixing savoury and sweet is still an exception. You don’t get things like how palm sugar is used in so many savory staples from SE Asian. Applesauce or quince paste aren’t as ubiquitous in western food as chutney is in Indian.

        I’ve also just met way more westerners who talk about salty/sweet mixes being gross. Raisins in rice, pineapple on pizza and fruit in salad are all things I’ve heard (mostly americans or australians) react strongly to.

        • wieson
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          2 months ago

          I can not agree. As I said, potato and apple meet in half of my regional dishes. And those are farmer’s food, not rich.

          Scandinavian and Alpine dishes love lingonberry sauce on dark meat or schnitzel.

          I think the best way, is to not think of “western cuisine” as a thing that exists uniformly.

          PS: obviously we cook differently than SE Asia, but red cabbage is sweet, carrots are sweet and caramelised onions are sweet. And they are really often used with savory dishes.

          • Loki@discuss.tchncs.de
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            2 months ago

            Lingonberry sauce on meat, ham on melon, apple in coleslaw… Apple sauce on hash browns! I think every cuisine has combinations like that, but the specific ingredients are location specific.