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Ethnic foods you enjoy overseas but have a hard time finding in the US

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  • Ethnic foods you enjoy overseas but have a hard time finding in the US

    In traveling, we encounter many enjoyable ethnic foods, but often they are hard to find in the US.

    My top two would be:

    1) Mittetei, also called Mici - a skinless sausage from Romania whose origin goes back centuries, but in recent times there have been some new varieties, They are prepared on the grill rather than fried. The traditional formula is a mixture of ground beef and ground lamb with spices. Modern varieties include beef and pork, beef and lamb and pork, beef and pork with Turkish chilli, pork and turkey, and pork and lamb. My favorite is the three meat beef, lamb, and pork version, with the traditional formula second. The only other place I have found Mittetei is in Moldova, which stands to reason because Moldova used to be part of Romania. I have never found it in the US. I did spend a couple of weeks in Bucharest recently and had mittetei at three of my favorite restaurants there - Care cu Bere, Hanul Manuc, and City Grill.

    2) Beef Burek - a flaky, multi-layered pasty containing ground beef from Serbia. I have also eaten beef burek in Slovenia, Croatia, Montenegro, Bosnia, and Kosovo, all of which countries are ethnically close to Serbia. It is most often found at fast food outlets rather than restaurants. I had a quick one day trip to Belgrade last month and was looking forward to some beef burek, but the two places on the pedestrianized main street and one at the central railway station where I can purchased it on previous trips were all closed, and I did not have time to look around for another. I did find bef burek on the menu of a Serbian restaurant in Milwaukee once and they did a good job with it, but I have never seen it anywhere else in the US.

  • #2
    We live in northern NJ, in an area that has a huge variety of ethnic foods and restaurants. My DH has had borek, both meat and cheese versions, at Turkish and Middle Eastern restaurants. Not sure about the Romanian sausage, but I bet it's around here somewhere!

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    • #3
      Haven't found a sushi bar offering oniku.

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      • #4
        Real Mexican is tough but getting easier as more Mexicans make Miami their home.
        Mostly what you find here is Tex-Mex which I like but also like some of the real Mexican things like Mole' and Sope's.
        I can now find Mole' at a few places but Sopes I have to go up to the next county to find.

        And American food is getting harder and harder to find here in Miami.
        A lot of the American Chains like Steak & Ale and Bennigan's have gone belly up.
        Latins don't care for real American food so again sometimes have to go one county up to find a Cracker Barrel or southern food.
        I remember when Miami was a Southern town and American soul food was easy to find.

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        • #5
          Chris, there is a chef here in Santa Fe who is known for his moles. He is originally from Mexico. His food is to die for.
          Luanne

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Luanne View Post
            Chris, there is a chef here in Santa Fe who is known for his moles. He is originally from Mexico. His food is to die for.
            Oh hopefully one day I can return to Santa Fe.
            We ate such great Mexican food there and loved the Christmas chili thing they do there.
            Who knew there were so many chili's?

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            • #7
              Another one that is excellent but I have not been able to find elsewhere is Garlic Soup from Hungary. I cannot even find it in restaurants in cities in Transylvania, which belonged to Hungary before WWI and still has a significant Hungarian population.

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              • #8
                Originally posted by Carolinian View Post
                1) Mittetei, also called Mici -

                2) Beef Burek -
                As to quality, I can't say, but we can get both of these in Chicago, which is true of most ethnic foods I've looked for. Chicago is not exactly next door, but we make a lot of daytrips there.

                The foods I have problems finding are fruits that are native to another region, like pineapple. Pineapple was a disappointment for years after I had it every morning while staying in Puerto Vallarta; the stuff I could find at home just didn't compare, maybe because it was so fresh in Puerto Vallarta, or maybe because they grow a different strain in Hawai'i. Ditto Asian pears from the local market in Korea; not the same as what I can find here (the ones in the Commissary in Korea, however, were the same ones you get in the US!).

                I have not tried the ethnic stores in Chicago for that sort of thing, now I think on it; maybe I should do that.

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                • #9
                  From Mexico - Golden Nuts con limon - absolutely the best with beer. Once called by some I know as "Tony's Golden Nuts"

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