Here is a question about food discrimination. What exactly is gourmet food? I will list a number of

Bluebeard asked:


foods, and you tell me how many of them you would consider to be goumet foods. My guess is that you will pick very few of them, unless you are from the South. I think that gourmet food is food enjoyed by the rich and famous in the Northeastern part of the U. S. How many of the following would you consider to be gourmet? 1. Chicken Fried Steak with cream gravy 2. girts 3. Purple Hull peas 4. Blackeyed peas. 5. cornbread 6. turnip greens 7. fried okra. 8. Deep fried fresh water catfish. My guess is that you think very few of these would be gourmet food. Am I right? If so, it just proves that Southern culture and Southern foods are considered inferior by many of you. Tell me what you think.

Eric
This entry was posted on Saturday, August 22nd, 2009 at 8:44 am and is filed under Gourment Food. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

3 Responses to “Here is a question about food discrimination. What exactly is gourmet food? I will list a number of”

  1. Carlos Says:

    Dylan

    Gourmet food is used as an adjective for meals of especially high quality, whose makers or preparers have used special effort or art in presentation or cooking the meal, or for facilities equipped for preparing such meals, such as a restaurant. The term and the practice may have negative connotations of elitism or snobbery, but is often used positively to describe people of refined taste and passion.
    AS for those foods you’ve listed:
    1 – I would call it comfort food rather than gourmet
    2 – I wouldn’t call it food
    3 – unfamiliar with this one
    4 – comfort food
    5 – comfort food
    6 – soul food
    7 – see #2
    8 – I have had this in what I would term a gourmet restaurant, so maybe this one can be ‘gourmet’

  2. Chase Says:

    Hunter

    Actually, in the past few years, the trend is to upscale comfort food. Many expensive restaurants are reinventing burgers, grits, mac and cheese-during a business lunch couple weeks ago, I came across a homemade mac and cheese in NYC that was $60 a portion. They also had blackened catfish with fried green tomatoes, so there you go.
    I don’t like Southern food because I find it too heavy, and I hardly ever eat fried food, but that’s just my personal preference.

  3. Christopher Says:

    Michael

    They would be ethnic or regional foods. Not necessarily gourmet. I hae only tried cornbread out of those, and probably not a great one at that. Would be tottally up to trying ANY of these – they all sound great!
    Don’t be so down on your foods…