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Sep. 14 2009 - 12:35 pm | 120 views | 0 recommendations | 4 comments

Octopus, Ravioli, Chocolate Cake: The World’s Best Foods And Where to Eat Them

[Display of home-canned food] (LOC)

Image by The Library of Congress via Flickr

If you’re fortunate, you’ve enjoyed a meal, a food or a drink whose memory is so sensual and transcendent you never forget when or where you tasted it. Mine include: a pisco sour at Carlin, a restaurant in Lima, Peru; a dish of tiny, hot sausages, baguette with unsalted butter and a cold glass of Muscadet in Concarneau, France; the pork tacos at Toloache, in Manhattan; the spaghetti carbonara at Morandi, in Manhattan, Berthillon’s blood orange sorbet in Paris; street food in Bangkok.

Today’s Guardian offers a list of the world’s 50 best foods and where you must go to enjoy them at their best. Their list includes chocolate cake from Pierre Herme, Paris, the curry at Karim’s in Delhi, the ravioli at Manhattan’s Babbo and the tomato juice at Happy Girl Kitchen in San Francisco.

What would make your list?


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  1. collapse expand

    Top of the list is crab salad made with fresh picked crab from Perry Long’s lobster shack on Newbury Neck and fresh mayo from Gravelwood Farm on Morgan Bay Rd — both in Surry ME.

  2. collapse expand

    The best meal I ever had, oddly enough, was likewise in Lima, Peru, at La Mar, the world’s greatest ceviche restaurant. The pisco sours were out of this world and the ceviche was sublime. But there was more, so much more, sushi, sashimi, potatoes paired with seafood and, now that I think of it, I really need to get back to Lima.

    One of my other favorite meals was moules en frites in Montreal, accompanied by a local microbrew beer which was a buckwheat beer not available outside of Quebec.

    Todd, the best lobster I ever had was one I pulled out of the sea myself while spending the afternoon on a lobster boat. After we docked, we walked to my friend’s apartment 10 minutes away and cooked the lobster. 10 years later, I still dream of that lobster.

  3. collapse expand

    How unlikely we both found Lima a great foodie destination. Thanks for sharing those memories!

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Former reporter and feature writer for the Globe and Mail, Montreal Gazette and the New York Daily News. Winner of a Canadian National Magazine Award (humor) about -- what else -- my divorce. I've been writing frequently for The New York Times since 1990 on almost any subject you can think of -- yup, I'm a generalist. Author of "Blown Away: American Women and Guns" (Pocket Books 2004). Canadian born, raised and formally educated, I've lived in New York since 1989.

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