All the most interesting cheeses
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Full Irish breakfast. Every single day until a heart attack gets me.
What's in a full Irish breakfast?
The typical ingredients are bacon, sausages, eggs, black pudding, baked beans, tomatoes, mushrooms, toast, fried bread and a beverage such as coffee or tea. Hash browns are a common contemporary but non-traditional inclusion.
My heart hurts reading this list, I love it!
There's my favourite chipper in Greystones, Ireland. They sell the Tasty Roll. Probably instant cancer, but I don't give a damn. I grab one every time I'm down there.
It's a baguette filled with chips (fries), bacon, garlic sauce and molten cheese.
that sounds amazing
High quality chocolate. Most of the stuff in the local grocery stores is cheap, waxy and awful. There's a place within reasonable distance with the good stuff, but it's hella expensive.
Aldi and Lidl have good German and Belgian chocolates pretty cheaply. Like $2 for a big bar.
Thanks! That is good to know. We have some of those around. Not on our usual rotation (a little out of the way) but this could change that. I know they have pretty good produce in there, because I have used them for that on occasion.
Ones prepared by my personal shopper and chef, because I want to eat healthy but have more time for creative and outdoor activities.
- Beef jerky
- Salmon
- Cashew nuts
- RedBull
- Fresh asparagus
- Raspberry jam
- Corona Extra
- Freeze dried fruits and berries
- Fresh orange juice
Beef jerky and swordfish for me.
Swordfish? Interesting.. What's that like?
Pointy!
No but really it's got a deep flavor with some metallic tone, like tuna? It's fantastic as a big "steak".
Swordfish is a great answer!
It's been too long since I had that! Got scared off due to all the mercury levels, and now I forget about how great it tastes, mercury be damned!
A better question would be, What foods and drinks would you buy more often if health was not an issue?
... and environment.
I'd love to eat ribeyes daily, but guilt (and heart attack) would stop me pretty quickly
Nice restaurant food, but I guess that doesn't count.
Lychees. The funny thing is that I can afford lychees, but I always think "Why buy them when these perfectly good grapes cost three times less?"
Chips. I love chips, I like trying different flavors, but these days, justifying 5-7 dollars a bag for times other than parties and get togethers is getting harder and harder to do.
Actually healthy and nutritious and delicious breakfast food. I can have two of the three for reasonable prices if I make it myself. But I want all three at max level, and I don't want to have to make it myself from scratch.
Local special, long away.
Cost of food is not an issue for me. What is an issue is that I have no time nor budget to make long travel (inter-continent, with weeks off job) to eat.
With money, I can stop working and go on a vacation.
Sushi would be nice. I have pretty cheap/basic taste otherwise lol. Maybe Korean fried chicken.
I guess fancy wine or whiskey.
Sushi all the time every day every hour every minute.
All the fanciest Dijon ketchups.
- pistachios
- kombucha
- daiginjo sake
- omakase sushi
- fried risotto balls
- duck (e.g. foie gras)
- filet mignon
- venison jerky
I would always have restaurant hummus on hand.
Berries
I would definitely like to have duck more often. I only rarely get it for myself as a treat but god damn is it the best bird going.
Eh, might have steaks more than once a year or so. Still wouldn't be a regular thing.
Would likely increase the usage of aged balsamic to more than just a very dribble more and then.
Would definitely cook with better bourbons when I use it. Not that it really makes a huge difference in most cases, but I usually have a little bit while cooking when I do, so it would be nice lol.
Fancy Cheese
Really good wine, really good whiskey
Raspberries
Restaurant foods, would eat out more if funds were ample for it.
(I do love fish and other seafood but worry about overfishing, wouldn't buy more. Also like beef but wouldn't buy more of that either, don't want it often)
Some different expensive mineral waters
Freeze-dried fruit
Beef jerky
Nuts in wasabi dough
Pizza
Yeah, I just forgot about mineral waters until you mention on.
There is a brand that makes fake dried meat out of smoked beet. It's absolutely fantastic but pretty expensive. Same goes for fake salmon.
What's the name of the fake salmon? I'd like to try that.
Wines, cheeses, cold cuts, mutton, salmon, porcino. I'd be also experimenting different stuff here and there (casu marzu, maple syrup, etc.)
Lobster and crab. And more of the good butter. 🤤
Avocado, nuts, fish, kombucha
Impressive how much jerky is showing up on here, but that was one of my first thoughts too. I actually got a monthly jerky subscription for Christmas, and the packs are kinda little, but it's fun getting new flavors every month.
I'll throw caviar out there. We tried a wide range of it for my gf's birthday twice, and there is good stuff at every price range. Even the cheap whitefish stuff was good.
The Bowfin and Spoonbill was our best bang for the buck both times. If you want a splurge without going bust, that's my recommendation. Got it from Browne Trading if anyone is interested.
It's great right off the spoon, on a chip, on a blini, or as a garnish on something else. If you like salty, fishy, umami you deserve to try it.
I'd probably buy hummus, buy a bunch of new stuff I've never tried, maybe buy some red meat a bit more often than once a month or so.
I also usually don't buy orange juice for cost reasons so probably that too.
Allllll of the types of Chili, from dried and smoked to fresh and pickled all of them. Also good cuts of beef
just eating out in general. i cook at home as often as possible because restaurant prices are nutso. even chinese takeout that used to be cheap is like $15 before tip here
Check out the Too Good To Go app! There's probably a few things near you. It's designed to help reduce food waste. As long as you're open to a little surprise, you can get great stuff for like 75 percent off. We do it almost weekly.
A whole case or ten of Port to cellar. A couple barrels of whiskey to cellar. Really just I'd get into cellaring things myself in general.
Yakitori, tom yum soup, chicken skewers, sushi, exotic fruit, foreign snacks eg. biltong, ukrainian candy, japanese gummies