It may smell like cat poo, but it doesn't taste like cat poo.lordsbm wrote:tenuki wrote:+1 with the caveat the people can definitely be wrong.
There's this old saying that Malay loves durain so much that they can pawn their sarong to buy durian. BUT you see many westerners thinks durian smells like cat poo
Re: Official Pu of the day
Re: Official Pu of the day
So the moral of the story is, don't assume something is bad cause you think is bad. There must be a reason why there are people who love the things you don't.Tead Off wrote:It may smell like cat poo, but it doesn't taste like cat poo.lordsbm wrote:tenuki wrote:+1 with the caveat the people can definitely be wrong.
There's this old saying that Malay loves durain so much that they can pawn their sarong to buy durian. BUT you see many westerners thinks durian smells like cat poo
Sometime just have to get out of comfort zone and try it. Well if you still don't like it, well it just mean you dislike it, doesn't mean it's true to others.
Oh ya I hate Thai durians, but I won't say thai durians are bad or they aren't as good as MY one
Re: Official Pu of the day
Not sure what or if there is a difference. Could be different hybrids. Ripeness is the big factor in smell and taste. Some like the almost syrupy consistency of very ripe fruit but the smell also increases. Durian is usually too rich for me. I like it but in small quantities.
May 24th, '13, 04:15
Vendor Member
Posts: 397
Joined: Feb 2nd, '12, 03:03
Location: RSA
Contact:
SilentChaos
Re: Official Pu of the day
+1 to that.lordsbm wrote:So the moral of the story is, don't assume something is bad cause you think is bad. There must be a reason why there are people who love the things you don't.Tead Off wrote:It may smell like cat poo, but it doesn't taste like cat poo.lordsbm wrote:tenuki wrote:+1 with the caveat the people can definitely be wrong.
There's this old saying that Malay loves durain so much that they can pawn their sarong to buy durian. BUT you see many westerners thinks durian smells like cat poo
Sometime just have to get out of comfort zone and try it. Well if you still don't like it, well it just mean you dislike it, doesn't mean it's true to others.
Oh ya I hate Thai durians, but I won't say thai durians are bad or they aren't as good as MY one
What if I said it smells like cat poo and that's why I like it... Hmm....I love stinky tofu too...(I'm disturbed at myself)>_<
Re: Official Pu of the day
I love stinky tofu tooSilentChaos wrote:+1 to that.
What if I said it smells like cat poo and that's why I like it... Hmm....I love stinky tofu too...(I'm disturbed at myself)>_<
Oh ya those really stinky salted fish. But I cannot stand som tam (green papaya salad) with crab
Re: Official Pu of the day
lordsbm wrote:I love stinky tofu tooSilentChaos wrote:+1 to that.
What if I said it smells like cat poo and that's why I like it... Hmm....I love stinky tofu too...(I'm disturbed at myself)>_<
Oh ya those really stinky salted fish. But I cannot stand som tam (green papaya salad) with crab
Re: Official Pu of the day
What other Thai things do you not like? Get it all out.lordsbm wrote:I love stinky tofu tooSilentChaos wrote:+1 to that.
What if I said it smells like cat poo and that's why I like it... Hmm....I love stinky tofu too...(I'm disturbed at myself)>_<
Oh ya those really stinky salted fish. But I cannot stand som tam (green papaya salad) with crab
May 24th, '13, 09:11
Vendor Member
Posts: 1301
Joined: May 27th, '12, 12:47
Location: Boston, MA
Re: Official Pu of the day
There are a few types of Durian; &, as one might expect, one is considered by most people to be the best, etc. I think one's likelihood of enjoying durian depends less on its type than what makes most fruit good: is it in season, when was it picked, is it ripe?
I've seen Thai durian sold in Singapore as Malay durian; &, durian that was not grown in Singapore but shipped from there, sold as Singapore durian: misleading place-names that do not say anything useful.
When offering Pu-Erh to someone for the first time, I try to remember to say, "This is singularly delicious," (or something to that effect) rather than, "You may not like this because some people feel like they are drinking swamp water" (durian equivalent, "Hold your nose because it smells like sh....)
Pu & durian are similar for me in that some that I try is disgusting, some just okay, & some is divine. Also, overindulging in either = physical....
I've seen Thai durian sold in Singapore as Malay durian; &, durian that was not grown in Singapore but shipped from there, sold as Singapore durian: misleading place-names that do not say anything useful.
When offering Pu-Erh to someone for the first time, I try to remember to say, "This is singularly delicious," (or something to that effect) rather than, "You may not like this because some people feel like they are drinking swamp water" (durian equivalent, "Hold your nose because it smells like sh....)
Pu & durian are similar for me in that some that I try is disgusting, some just okay, & some is divine. Also, overindulging in either = physical....
Re: Official Pu of the day
Singapore have no space for durian plantation, it's more profitable to build a block of condos and sell a 800-900sqft unit for US$1-1.2m.ethan wrote:I've seen Thai durian sold in Singapore as Malay durian; &, durian that was not grown in Singapore but shipped from there, sold as Singapore durian: misleading place-names that do not say anything useful.
Thai durian sold as Malaysia durian are rare in Singapore. Main reason is transportation cost, maybe 10years ago it's more common to see Thai durians. Thai durians unless they use Malaysia seedlings, it's hard to fool anyone. Mainly due to the size
When offering pu erh to anyone, I just give out around 7g samples. Normally 8-15 tea, let them judge for themselves what's good. Think there's a good chance they'll find something they like in there
May 24th, '13, 10:22
Vendor Member
Posts: 1301
Joined: May 27th, '12, 12:47
Location: Boston, MA
Re: Official Pu of the day
I enjoyed staying in Singapore several times for a week or two from 1990 - 94, mostly in dorm rooms at the Y at One Orchard Street. Back then that cost about US$13 a night, & a good full meal at nearby Paradiz food-court cost about $3.
Returned about 5 years ago & cut visit short to 2 days. > $ for me. Seeing young Singaporeans drinking coffee & tea mixed together, I left sure Singapore was no longer a place for me.
Returned about 5 years ago & cut visit short to 2 days. > $ for me. Seeing young Singaporeans drinking coffee & tea mixed together, I left sure Singapore was no longer a place for me.
Re: Official Pu of the day
haha IIRC yuanyang was a popular trend from HK, but this had been in Singapore since my grandparents days. Not popular then. They used to own a traditional coffee shop back in the 50sethan wrote:I enjoyed staying in Singapore several times for a week or two from 1990 - 94, mostly in dorm rooms at the Y at One Orchard Street. Back then that cost about US$13 a night, & a good full meal at nearby Paradiz food-court cost about $3.
Returned about 5 years ago & cut visit short to 2 days. > $ for me. Seeing young Singaporeans drinking coffee & tea mixed together, I left sure Singapore was no longer a place for me.
1990 $3 in food court is considered expensive. The good old days are gone. Good old tasty unhealthy food are gone. Thank god I inherited part of my grandpa and dad's cookery skills
Re: Official Pu of the day
Yuanyang is a staple of Hong Kong restaurants. I couldn't use the past tense to talk about it.
Re: Official Pu of the day
Bubble tea was popular before it becomes staple in some countriesMarshalN wrote:Yuanyang is a staple of Hong Kong restaurants. I couldn't use the past tense to talk about it.
Edit: Just like bubble tea WAS a popular trend in Singapore (ethan was talking about Singapore, maybe next time I should write very little bits of details in so that people who don't follow the conversation won't get lost. ) FROM Taiwan
In fact here in Singapore, bubble was popular in the mid 90s, then it almost dies off, then around 2008 it became popular again. Now pretty much part of a type of staple tea people enjoy
Anything new had to gone through the popular stage, no?
May 26th, '13, 19:40
Posts: 5896
Joined: Jan 10th, '10, 16:04
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Contact:
debunix
Re: Official Pu of the day
Revisiting an old friend: 2007 'White Bud' sheng puerh from Norbu. Having a friendly afternoon with it. It does not have the complexity of a fine aged sheng, but it is pleasingly sweet, still hints of the original floral sweetness.
Re: Official Pu of the day
Watching the rain/lighting out the window and drinking the Commissioned 2002 8582 from OriginTea... It's incredibly rich. Smokey, and it has an amazingly refreshing mouthfeel. Amazingly relaxing for the occasion too.
Life is good
Life is good