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01-24-2010, 06:57 PM
To be honest, that would be extremely difficult.
I live in the south, in Louisiana, and the food here is a big thing. Food is usually one of the tourist attractions anyway, so that should give you an idea. Lots of spicy, hot foods. It should be no surprise that we have a high obesity rate. Sooooo, I really have no idea how long I could go. I've never had Japanese food before, so I'd have to get an idea of how similair and different they are first. Help my Cause for homeless teens!
http://www.socialvibe.com/CarleyGee R.I.P Johnny 3-31-09 http://www.formspring.me/CarleyRenee17 Ask me any question |
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01-24-2010, 07:25 PM
Im actually really glad you asked this. This is something i have wondered after I went to Japan and had Japanese exchange students at my school. When we were in Japan a large majority of my schools Americans barely went a week before they wanted a cheeseburger. I didn't find it that difficult to do, but I usually dont eat "American" food, however you want to classify it. When we had our Japanese exchange students come to our school, they almost instantly were in need of Japanese food. They went maybe two weeks and then had to order stuff from home. I think the Japanese students have a harder time because they have less access to other ethnic foods, and if they do it usually another Asian cuisine like Korean.
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01-24-2010, 07:28 PM
Oh, well in that case...stuff I normally eat can be found there ingredient wise...as far as I know anyway. Usually baked chicken with veggies, like steamed broccoli...sometimes with some rice. Sometimes I might have the baked chicken and a salad. Breakfast sometimes consists of my preparing an omlette with onion and minced garlic and mushrooms and red, yellow, and green peppers. Sometimes I use cheese if we have any. Sometimes I eat Miso soup, a small bowl of steamed rice, and some type of a protein for lunch or dinner at times.
I guess the main difference I might have to deal with is the salad thing. I use some of the same ingredients above for the salad, but I'm sure veggies are easy to get there. =P Now salad dressing might be a prob, especially if I get a craving for a pasta salad. I'm not sure I'll find all the ingredients for that, like salad-seasoning and the dressing of my choice. So yeah...that's typical for me. If choosing though, I'd say maybe months to years, since I do eat Asian foods here too and like them and have prepared some Japanese dishes as well, like onigiri (snack) and okonomiyaki. Quote:
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01-25-2010, 05:43 AM
I really think that you would have to be forcing yourself in order to not eat any non-Japanese foods while in Japan. I have no idea how long I could go, because at no point in Japan have I ever felt deprived of any food I liked. There are a very small number of things that I liked (or that were "comfort" foods) while in the US that are not available in Japan... But I have gone around 10 years without eating most of them. And if I REALLY wanted them, I could pay for them to be imported.
I think that if you believe you can never eat something again, you will feel much much more deprived than if it`s just a pain to get or expensive. Or if you realize that 95% of things other than ultra-processed-pre-packaged stuff can be easily made at home as Japan has no shortage of ingredients available. These days the only strange thing I occasionally miss that CANNOT be acquired (in my experience) in Japan is cheapy macaroni and cheese with Lawry`s seasoning salt. It was never a favorite food, never ranked on a list of foods I enjoyed... But for a period of time it was probably the main food I ate. My mother spent all her money on "partying" and didn`t buy food for me and my siblings...Basically leaving us with nothing to eat. Church food pantries would hand out packs of cheapy generic macaroni and cheese boxes to kids who came begging for food. We had an old deluxe sized package of seasoning salt and a working electric stove... |
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