The spine of the biggie is pretty thick, but unfortunately I cannot measure or photo better as I left home (UK) this morning for about 3 weeks abroad. Spain now.
The small one’s handle is the same standard Bakelite type material as the large one. I bought it new in about 1980, and it was my first good knife, and my main knife until I bought my first apartment with a dishwasher. Rarely used nowadays, but we’re old friends, so it’s staying.
Maybe it is how I grew up. In my circle, when I was growing up… fusion (especially fusion restaurant) has also a negative term. It is a term to say this restaurant is either good at this nor that, and they put different things together to run away from other competitions.: I cannot make a good traditional Japanese ramen to compete with the big boys around, so I am going to put some cheese and pasta sauce into my ramen broth to make me fusion.
I totally agree. I live in Asia, but when I was in London and saw a “Pan Asian” restaurant it was usually a guarantee that they didn’t do any dishes particularly well.
That said, the above post was just a joke about Ray’s (excessive) use of the term “cultural fusion”
You might feel very differently about cultural fusion if you had been living in my part of SOCAL and experienced home cooking as well as restaurant cooking over the last ten or so years.
and, of course, experienced the corresponding changes in the different Asian countries over the same time period.
Thai is a great example–and I got to see the back and forth changes on both sides of the Pacific. Very interesting.
I feel fine about cultural fusion - and I am in no way denying it’s existence. I am just amused by how you manage to weave it into everything, Ray. Hence my little joke about the electric knife being cultural fusion too. Take it as a lighthearted jest
From today’s BuzzFeed um, feed (that’s a fortuitous circumstance) via Apple News:
“`Chefs Are Sharing Red Flags That Say “This Restaurant Is Low Quality” And It’s Useful And Horrifying
“I tend to look down on fusion places as ‘jack of all trades, master of none.’ Everything might probably be passable at best. 'Oh really?! You’re serving sushi,Thai, Chinese, Korean, and pho? Get outta here!’”
I understand. I think that is why I don’t understand. If I call a kitchen knife as “this is a piece of cultural fusion”, then I am very possibility doing a passive aggression condescending remark.
Oh yes. Forget about even cross country fusion. If I really like try Ramen, then I go to a Ramen specialized restaurant. If I really like good sushi, then I go to one that focus on it. If a Japanese restaurant that has a wide range of Japanese foods: sushi, ramen, yakiro, oden,… then I don’t have a lot of faith.
Why wouldn’t you see it in someone’s home?
Seems like that’s exactly where we’d see it.
I mean, my mother’s name was Juanita and she was Irish and English.
My dad was from Texas, my stepfather was born in Scotland.
I absorbed everything from all of them.
Isn’t that the story of America?
My Austrian wife loved to marinade store bought rabbit–and I loved the results: way better than treating it like chicken the way I did before. Made some for my cousin–said it seemed unusually fresh and juicy: must have killed it a few hours ago. . .
Look at the thread I posted for restaurant examples.
Um…
Okay.
My ex was born in Tampa, raised in Omaha.
We lived in Scottsdale and Ashland.
No rabbit.
But lots of delicious Jewish delicacies that I learned to make.
Here are my analogies, and I hope you understand my view.
Q: What are the reasons for Julie Child being so successful and influential?
A: Because she was able to breath oxygen
Q: What is the first thing a restaurant need to do to prepare its grand opening?
A: Staffs need to breath oxygen
Q: How to debone a chicken?
A: You need to breath oxygen.
It isn’t cultural fusion does not exist, but it does not need to be overly contributed to everything. I am sure you can contribute breathing into every single posts too.
Maybe, Chem, maybe not. It’s been so much a part of my life that cultural fusion is almost always on my mind.
What Kai did in creating Shun clearly was an intended Japanese American fusion that I have been following ever since: I don’t make these things up as you’re implying.
We even teach these things to business students at the graduate level.