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Post by Deleted on Jan 3, 2020 16:29:30 GMT 10
I mentioned this in the other thread, but I caught up with two of my friends at a kebab shop in Warilla. We ordered lunch there and then went over to the boat ramp in Oak Flats (a nearby suburb) to have them. The doner kebabs were nice and I'd definitely go there again, but that part of Warilla is an absolute hellhole. This is your first time trying a foreign cuisine other than Chinese right? Well, this might be a start of a new trend. Try Thai food next
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Post by SharksFan99 on Jan 3, 2020 16:45:52 GMT 10
I mentioned this in the other thread, but I caught up with two of my friends at a kebab shop in Warilla. We ordered lunch there and then went over to the boat ramp in Oak Flats (a nearby suburb) to have them. The doner kebabs were nice and I'd definitely go there again, but that part of Warilla is an absolute hellhole. This is your first time trying a foreign cuisine other than Chinese right? Well, this might be a start of a new trend. Try Thai food next Tbh, the first time I tried a doner kebab was when I was only 12, so I've been having them for quite a long time now, lol. I guess doner kebabs would in fact be considered as being a foreign food; it's just that they are so ingrained into the Australian cuisine that I don't think of them as anything out of the ordinary. It also doesn't help matters that you can even order them at some general takeaway shops. So I have in fact tried a foreign cuisine other than Chinese, sorry for misleading you. I'm not sure about Thai food, I've got no idea what I would even order. I couldn't even think of an example of Thai food.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 3, 2020 22:40:17 GMT 10
For Thai food, just get some fried rice or a noodle dish and you’re good.
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Post by SharksFan99 on Jan 4, 2020 16:46:13 GMT 10
For Thai food, just get some fried rice or a noodle dish and you’re good. Probably a ridiculous question, but would the fried rice be any different to the rice you can order at Chinese restaurants? I do like fried rice, but if I were to try an entirely different cuisine, I think I would want to be a bit more adventurous and try something that isn't similar to something I've already had. A noodle dish of sorts would likely do the trick.
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Post by Deleted on Jan 4, 2020 20:17:49 GMT 10
For Thai food, just get some fried rice or a noodle dish and you’re good. Probably a ridiculous question, but would the fried rice be any different to the rice you can order at Chinese restaurants? I do like fried rice, but if I were to try an entirely different cuisine, I think I would want to be a bit more adventurous and try something that isn't similar to something I've already had. A noodle dish of sorts would likely do the trick. Yes and no. Thai food uses different spices and sauces than Chinese food (for example, Chinese food does not include any dairy, Thai may or may not depending on the dish, such as curry-based foods). At the end of the day, unless you're getting curry fried rice, you're still basically getting fried rice with vegetables and some sort of protein, same as Chinese fried rice. Thai noodle dishes are the best, bar none. Personal favorites include Drunken Noodles and Pad Gai (the latter is not really served widely, I've only ever seen a handful of restaurants that do).
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