Brussels sprouts
I've avoided brussels sprouts for many years because I hated them as a
child.
Recently I went to Masa's, a very tony restaurant in SF (it was supposed to be a surprise for the OH, but he figured it out beforehand). The chef at Masa's is Ron Siegel, famous for besting Iron Chef Sakai in Battle Lobster. I don't like lobster either, but when Siegel reproduced his Iron Chef meal at his former restaurant, Charles Nob Hill, I went, and he did indeed feature the lobster in ways I liked.
Anyway, at Masa's, my dish came with brussels sprouts on the side. I figured I would try them again - if anyone can cook brussels sprouts in a way that I can tolerate, Ron Siegel can, right?
I ate one. I still hate them.
Habit
I hated broccoli as a kid. I like it lightly cooked now. Steamed spinach is okay, don't overcook it or it'll nauseate me.
I still hate okra. Still despise brussel sprouts. {grin} I retried grits today and enjoyed them!
I do think retrying every now and then is wise.
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I have retried reconstituted mashed potatoes (and derivatives like Pringles) with no luck at all. Gag, gag, gag.
Ditto any kind of canned veggies except tomatoes.
Brussels sprouts, on the other hand...
Just wait until you've tried them cooked *right*. :-)
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This is a love I try to practice mostly at a distance.
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I'm glad you and
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I do the retrying of things periodically too- and have been pleasantly surprised at times- other times, not. I recently retried sea urchin (can't remember the Japanese name for it offhand), and learned that I still can't stand it.
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Mary Kay
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i like brussels sprouts, too, though. and spinach. and broccoli.
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Another food category I've never changed my mind about is seafood with skeletal material attached (fish with bones, shellfish still in the shell).
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There's a brussels sprouts packing plant a few blocks from my house, that we walk by while running errands sometimes, and in front of the building is a big conveyor belt often covered with brussels sprouts. They don't seem to be too good about cleaning up wayward brussels sprouts -- often there are puddles of water on the ground with rotting brussels sprouts in them that have the most horrible smell, like rotting seaweed/sewage. Because of this I doubt that my children will ever want to eat brussels sprouts.
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A brussels sprouts plant with rotting brussels sprouts. If I wind up in hell, I bet there will be one nearby.
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Second: If the texture is part of the problem, and you're in the mood to experiment again sometime, try them the way my sister prepared them the other night: Steamed to the point where they were very soft, then very thoroughly mashed with lots of butter and a little salt.
IMO, brussels sprouts are one big exception to the "vegetables are better when they're not cooked to mushiness" rule. Al dente brussels sprouts make me feel like a ruminant - chew, chew, chew.
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Thanks. I needed the laugh.