Borneo’s Forest Food Article and Location Photos by Victor Paul Borg Recipes: Steamed Red Snapper with SpicesDeep Fried Fish in Pineapple and Tomato SauceBamboo Shoots in Spices,Wild Mushrooms in Spices and Dried AnchovieBarking Deer in Curry Masala They need half an hour to gather the food in the forest for our dinner,” …
The Cayenne Trail
The Cayenne Trail By David G. Jackson Emma Jean Cervantes stands at the edge of the field of red and green cayenne peppers in the Mesilla Valley of New Mexico. She watches as harvesters, some of whom have worked for her family for many years, gather the shining red peppers and place them in hoppers for transportation to …
Thailand’s Dark Side of the Fork
By Benjamin Rush Editor’s Note: Warning–Don’t read this if you’ve recently eaten or are planning to eat anything ever again. Thai food has taken the world by storm, regularly voted the favorite ethnic food in prestigious Zagat surveys around the world. Today most metropolitan foreigners are ardently familiar with Pad Thai, Tom Yum Goong and Green Curry. Yet there is …
Spicy Singapore
Spicy Singapore Story and Photos by Austin Bush Is there a better place in the world to eat than Singapore? Consider the variety: from Malay laksa to southern Indian curries, a diverse smattering of Chinese cuisines (Hokkien, Teo Chiew, Cantonese), the obscure Baba-Nyonya (a fusion of Chinese and Malay styles) and Eurasian cuisines, Singapore is a virtual microcosm of …
The Tongue-Numbing “Flower Pepper” of Sichuan Province
The Tongue-Numbing “Flower Pepper” of Sichuan Province by Kimberly Dukes In Chengdu, the capital of China’s Sichuan Province, eating is often more than just food. Huoguo, or “hot pot,” restaurants, for example, are an experience. They often open at dusk and close long after midnight, tables spilling out onto the dark sidewalk. Hot pot isn’t a solitary activity–the more …