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12-14-2009, 08:51 PM
The mention of a "chicken sashimi" has me both curious and nauseous.
Are we talking completely raw chicken, or chicken chemically "cooked" with an acid instead of over a heat source? Though I am not attracted to the still squirming versions of my beloved sashimi (fish!) I have no qualms about raw fish flesh consumption. However, being all too familiar with poultry processing just the thought ingesting raw chicken is enough to send me running the other direction. And I don't turkey, even if its well cooked. Once in a while I will have an over done wing, but that is generally my limit. Only an open mind and open heart can be filled with life. ********************* Find your voice; silence will not protect you.
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12-14-2009, 09:16 PM
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Where I am from, we call that "uncourteous" and "disrespectful". There is a different between "keeping it real." and being rude. You can live your life without caring about others expectations, but you can still be mannered and courteous about such things. To have no culture, is to have no identity. |
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12-14-2009, 10:04 PM
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Easier said than done. I'm American, and while I'm pretty open minded about other cultures, I'm still grounded in my own, as well as the rest of us. If someone were to flip me the middle finger, or stick their tongue out at me, I would be offended. Why? Because in America, those are offensive gestures. However, in other parts of the world, these are friendly greetings. It's not that they might not know about YOUR culture, it's that you probably don't know about theirs and have no way to know if they're offending you or not. |
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12-14-2009, 10:25 PM
Iv watched several customers in Japanese restaurants in the heart of DC actually stab their food with chop sticks. Now this is of course funny and yet sad. What makes it worse is their forks available why these people never ask for forks is beyond me. So i actually ask a customer who was sitting across from me why he was stabbing his food he told this is the way they eat in China and its rude to eat Chinese food any other way (did i mention we were at a Japanese restaurant) . All i could do was stare then face palm and go back to eating my meal.
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12-14-2009, 11:02 PM
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Im pretty sure chinese people don't stab their food in china either. Trust me, I'm chinese. They use chopsticks too. "I'm sorry, but i must have given you the impression that I actually care about your opinions"
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12-14-2009, 11:04 PM
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When I went to live in japan, I was constantly worried that I may offend if I didn't copy certain aspects of their culture. I actually then realized that it didn't make any difference, and at the end of the day, I simply became natural, and was well respected for that. On the other hand, I met foreigners that wanted to become Japanese, and it just looked so un-natural for both Japanese and foreigners alike. Cultures are always a fun part of travelling. Cheers - Oz |
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12-14-2009, 11:09 PM
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It's rude in Japan to "stab" your food with chopstick's. I could not understand why Chinese would stab their food either because whilst I realize it was a Japanese restaurant with pointy end chopsticks, Chinese chopstick's are very broadly rounded on the tips and would be difficult to stab . I have found that my Western people who cannot use chopstick's well, and lack the rules of Asian etiquette, that they often stab their food whilst attempting to master the fine art of eating with chopsticks. Cheers - Oz |
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12-14-2009, 11:17 PM
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Having had a relative work in a poultry processing plant in the US... I would NEVER EVER EVER eat raw chicken there. There is a reason they tell you to make sure you cook it through and through in the US. |
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