Not just in Japan. This is the way many asian cultures eat food. Rather than dishes being served in sequence, dishes are served as a set simultaneously, and people are meant to alternate between the various dishes. I cringe whenever I bring white friends to Korean restaurants for the first time because they always start eating the side dishes in isolation! The point is to eat them with everything else to give a variety of flavours as well as allow each individual to balance the seasoning to their own preferences.First time I know that method of eating is actually real in Japanese cuisine. Sounds interesting, I think I will try it next time. I thought Shokugeki is just introducing some not popular concept
1000% . People like Tom unfortunately reinforce American stereotypes...This is one of the things that always annoyed me about Top Chef; when an Asian chef would serve the judges multiple dishes within a course, the judges—particularly Tom Colicchio, who already needs everything over-salted because of how badly damaged his palate is from a lifetime of cooking and eating New York restaurant food, which is notorious for being over-salted in the first place—would complain about each individual dish is bland or unbalanced, ignoring the fact that, in many of those cuisines, dishes aren't meant to be eaten separately but are meant to be eaten as a collective. There's just an underlying sense of racism and willful cultural ignorance and pretense of being an expert on food that just pisses me off.
Funny thing is I am an Asian and I never know about this lol thank you for telling me!Not just in Japan. This is the way many asian cultures eat food. Rather than dishes being served in sequence, dishes are served as a set simultaneously, and people are meant to alternate between the various dishes. I cringe whenever I bring white friends to Korean restaurants for the first time because they always start eating the side dishes in isolation! The point is to eat them with everything else to give a variety of flavours as well as allow each individual to balance the seasoning to their own preferences.
On the other hand, when you are cooking, you are cooking FOR SOMEONE, and you should take into account the tastes and preferences of the people you are cooking for.This is one of the things that always annoyed me about Top Chef; when an Asian chef would serve the judges multiple dishes within a course, the judges—particularly Tom Colicchio, who already needs everything over-salted because of how badly damaged his palate is from a lifetime of cooking and eating New York restaurant food, which is notorious for being over-salted in the first place—would complain about each individual dish is bland or unbalanced, ignoring the fact that, in many of those cuisines, dishes aren't meant to be eaten separately but are meant to be eaten as a collective. There's just an underlying sense of racism and willful cultural ignorance and pretense of being an expert on food that just pisses me off.
In my country, that is called pig's food. My mother especially hates that. She will complain and nag from morning to night if I did that.Types of eating: Triangular, Bakkari
Me: Chaos: by mixing everything into one big bowl to make the chef cry
LMAO
It might be different in other provinces, but in Indonesia where I am, most foods are meant to be in one plate/bowl. The exceptions are probably fish aside from catfish, so that the bones can be separated easily.In my country, that is called pig's food. My mother especially hates that. She will complain and nag from morning to night if I did that.