Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-24 Thread Keith Johnson
Agreed. 

- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2010 1:17:05 AM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






I think that it is mostly hype. Most of the time they are getting the meat from 
the same sources. Others try to pretty up the meat by saying they bought it 
from an organic farm or some other bs. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 10:06 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I hear you! One of the surprising and ironic things going on in food is a turn 
or return to food that many of us ate out of necessity as kids. This is 
especially true of blacks, Southerners, and poor country folk. Things like 
chitlins, pig's feet, hogshead cheese, ox tail, turkey neck, souse meat, etc., 
are showing up in many fancy restaurants. And as you mentioned, they're costing 
a pretty penny. Here in Atlanta there's a return to offal and real meat, a 
kind of pushback against the low cholesterol/fat, no red meat craze. What I 
don't get is why some of these foods does cost so much. When I was a kid, my 
dad used to buy ox tails at the local country market on the cheap. It was one 
reason country black folk bought stuff like that: it was cheap. Now such parts 
cost a bit of money, at least in some restaurants. You can get it fairly 
inexpensively at Jamaican restaurants and the like. I guess the fancy joints 
use better quality of meat? 




- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 



Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2010 12:58:49 AM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






I agree. I think I mentioned the foodie restaurant here that one year the guy 
basically served chittlins, mountain oysters and tripe. For over $100 a plate. 
We had a good laugh on that. I said that for $20 each they could come by the 
house and my mom will cook them up something and they can have 2nds. :) 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I just wonder if any extremely rare ingredients convey a taste sensation that's 
so incredible, or if it's perception. Sometimes food is like art: the value is 
all in what people say it is. 


- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 



Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:30:16 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and expensive 
ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the things that are 
raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to personal pallet and 
subtle differences in flavorings. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted* to all 
things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones, ices, 
etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is a 
perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send me 
into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar bucket, keep 
Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk shakes and 
pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really high quality 
vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd pay $19 a scoop 
for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a perception of taste 
based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and shipping the product, 
etc. 


- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 



Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet. 


Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food Network but 
more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows they were 
talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice cream that 
featured vanilla beans from the left side of a mountain in Italy. $19 a scoop. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference between 
eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than, say 
iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and eat a 
smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more satisfied than 
eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality. 
That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the dining 
experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the History 
Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me that the 
gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it tastes hundreds 
of times better than one that can be made at a quality

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Martin Baxter
Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad I
gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:


  [Attachment(s) #12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopText from Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom.
 Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is
 due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere
 between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this
 delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich. It
 is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
 hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
 2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
 of almost $200.

 Steak and Mushroom Pie

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
 England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
 Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
 $4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
 people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
 served with a glass of champagne.

 Le Parker Meridien Omelet

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien
 restaurant in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six
 eggs, and an entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs
 $1,000. To make it yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700.

 Serendipity 3 Sundae

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at
 Serendipity 3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness
 Book of World Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of
 five scoops of Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat
 edible gold leaf, and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei
 Porceleana. To order this rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona
 Nigari Water

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This
 desalinated, high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of
 Hawaii and costs $16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's high
 proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world, each
 priced at around $53,000.

 Tieguanyin

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 A rare Chinese green tea, Tieguanyin costs $3,000 per kilo (2 lbs, 3 oz)
 and approximately $15 for a single cup.

 Kopi Luwak

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 You can't have a discussion of the world's most expensive foods without
 mentioning Kopi Luwak. Originating from Sumatra, Kopi Luwak is created from
 coffee beans that have passed through the digestive track of the Asian Palm
 Civet. The civets eat the coffee berries and the undigested beans pass
 through their system. The beans are then collected and brewed. Many people
 claim that the coffee has a high level of complex acidity that cannot be
 achieved through any other brewing method. With only around 500 pounds of
 beans produced every year, the cost for a pound is upwards of $300.








 --
 Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
 Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/
  




-- 
If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell
wrote the script? -- Charles E Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik


Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Mr. Worf
Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad I
 gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:


  [Attachment(s) #12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopText from Mr.
 Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom.
 Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is
 due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere
 between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this
 delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich.
 It is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
 hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
 2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
 of almost $200.

 Steak and Mushroom Pie

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
 England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
 Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
 $4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
 people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
 served with a glass of champagne.

 Le Parker Meridien Omelet

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien
 restaurant in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six
 eggs, and an entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs
 $1,000. To make it yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700.

 Serendipity 3 Sundae

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at
 Serendipity 3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness
 Book of World Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of
 five scoops of Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat
 edible gold leaf, and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei
 Porceleana. To order this rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona
 Nigari Water

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This
 desalinated, high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of
 Hawaii and costs $16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's
 high proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world,
 each priced at around $53,000.

 Tieguanyin

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 A rare Chinese green tea, Tieguanyin costs $3,000 per kilo (2 lbs, 3 oz)
 and approximately $15 for a single cup.

 Kopi Luwak

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 You can't have a discussion of the world's most expensive foods without
 mentioning Kopi Luwak. Originating from Sumatra, Kopi Luwak is created from
 coffee beans that have passed through the digestive track of the Asian Palm
 Civet. The civets eat the coffee berries and the undigested beans pass
 through their system. The beans are then collected and brewed. Many people
 claim that the coffee has a high level of complex acidity that cannot be
 achieved through any other brewing method. With only around 500 pounds of
 beans produced every year, the cost for a pound is upwards of $300.








 --
 Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
 Mahogany at:
 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/




 --
 If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell
 wrote the script? -- Charles E Grant

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik


 




-- 
Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/


Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Keith Johnson
I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference between 
eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than, say 
iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and eat a 
smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more satisfied than 
eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality. 
That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the dining 
experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the History 
Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me that the 
gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it tastes hundreds 
of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice cream joint. I'm 
surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling the nests of 
cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build their nests, or 
that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing saki through some 
animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the excreted liquid. 

- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter  martinbaxt...@gmail.com  
wrote: 





Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad I 
gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me. 


On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  wrote: 






[ Attachment(s) from Mr. Worf included below] 




-- Forwarded message -- 
From: Missy May  missy.may...@gmail.com  
Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM 
Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS 
To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com 















White Truffle 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom. Found 
in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is due to 
it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere between 
$1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this delicacy, 
however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth. 

Essen Platinum Club Sandwich 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich. It is 
a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham, hard-boiled 
quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost 2,000 calories 
and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price of almost $200. 

Steak and Mushroom Pie 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in England, 
this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of Matsutake 
mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at $4,200 each, 
black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8 people and costs 
around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also served with a glass of 
champagne. 

Le Parker Meridien Omelet 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien restaurant 
in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six eggs, and an 
entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs $1,000. To make it 
yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700. 

Serendipity 3 Sundae 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at Serendipity 
3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness Book of World 
Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of five scoops of 
Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat edible gold leaf, 
and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei Porceleana. To order this 
rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona Nigari Water 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This desalinated, 
high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of Hawaii and costs 
$16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's high 
proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world, each priced 
at around $53,000. 

Tieguanyin 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

A rare Chinese green tea, Tieguanyin costs $3,000 per kilo (2 lbs, 3 oz) and 
approximately $15 for a single cup. 

Kopi Luwak 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

You can't have a discussion of the world's most expensive foods without 
mentioning Kopi Luwak. Originating from Sumatra, Kopi Luwak is created from 
coffee beans that have passed through the digestive track of the Asian Palm 
Civet. The civets eat the coffee berries and the undigested beans pass through 
their system

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Martin Baxter
Mr Worf, I'm expecting that out of Starbucks any time now.

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:07 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:



 Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.


 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad
 I gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:


  
 [Attachment(s)#12aa08fdc998f18d_12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopTextfrom
  Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom.
 Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is
 due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere
 between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this
 delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich.
 It is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
 hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
 2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
 of almost $200.

 Steak and Mushroom Pie

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
 England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
 Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
 $4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
 people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
 served with a glass of champagne.

 Le Parker Meridien Omelet

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien
 restaurant in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six
 eggs, and an entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs
 $1,000. To make it yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700.

 Serendipity 3 Sundae

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at
 Serendipity 3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness
 Book of World Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of
 five scoops of Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat
 edible gold leaf, and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei
 Porceleana. To order this rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona
 Nigari Water

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This
 desalinated, high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of
 Hawaii and costs $16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's
 high proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world,
 each priced at around $53,000.

 Tieguanyin

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 A rare Chinese green tea, Tieguanyin costs $3,000 per kilo (2 lbs, 3 oz)
 and approximately $15 for a single cup.

 Kopi Luwak

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 You can't have a discussion of the world's most expensive foods without
 mentioning Kopi Luwak. Originating from Sumatra, Kopi Luwak is created from
 coffee beans that have passed through the digestive track of the Asian Palm
 Civet. The civets eat the coffee berries and the undigested beans pass
 through their system. The beans are then collected and brewed. Many people
 claim that the coffee has a high level of complex acidity that cannot be
 achieved through any other brewing method. With only around 500 pounds of
 beans produced every year, the cost for a pound is upwards of $300.








 --
 Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
 Mahogany at:
 http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/




 --
 If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell
 wrote the script? -- Charles E Grant

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik





 --
 Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
 Mahogany at: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/mahogany_pleasures_of_darkness/
  




-- 
If all the world's a stage and we are merely players, who the bloody hell
wrote the script? -- Charles E Grant

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fQUxw9aUVik


Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Martin Baxter
Keith, I don't get the appeal in those last two at all, and I've had the
Bird's Nest Soup. That last... I wonder if those partaking bothered to read
the ingredient list or preparation before swallowing. And I've eaten lots of
offal in my life, including prairie oysters recently. Call it a VERY
acquired taste.

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference
 between eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than,
 say iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and
 eat a smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more
 satisfied than eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality.
 That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the
 dining experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the
 History Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me
 that the gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it
 tastes  hundreds of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice
 cream joint.  I'm surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling
 the nests of cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build
 their nests, or that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing
 saki through some animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the
 excreted liquid.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad
 I gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:


  
 [Attachment(s)#12aa09a2650130bf_12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopTextfrom
  Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom.
 Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is
 due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere
 between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this
 delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich.
 It is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
 hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
 2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
 of almost $200.

 Steak and Mushroom Pie

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
 England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
 Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
 $4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
 people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
 served with a glass of champagne.

 Le Parker Meridien Omelet

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien
 restaurant in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six
 eggs, and an entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs
 $1,000. To make it yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700.

 Serendipity 3 Sundae

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at
 Serendipity 3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness
 Book of World Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of
 five scoops of Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat
 edible gold leaf, and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei
 Porceleana. To order this rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona
 Nigari Water

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This
 desalinated, high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of
 Hawaii and costs $16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's
 high proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world,
 each priced at around $53,000.

 Tieguanyin

 [image

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Mr. Worf
Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet.

Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food Network
but more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows they
were talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice cream
that featured vanilla beans from the left side of a  mountain in Italy. $19
a scoop.

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference
 between eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than,
 say iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and
 eat a smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more
 satisfied than eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality.
 That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the
 dining experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the
 History Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me
 that the gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it
 tastes  hundreds of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice
 cream joint.  I'm surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling
 the nests of cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build
 their nests, or that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing
 saki through some animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the
 excreted liquid.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad
 I gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:


  
 [Attachment(s)#12aa099f98058d4f_12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopTextfrom
  Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom.
 Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is
 due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere
 between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this
 delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich.
 It is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
 hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
 2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
 of almost $200.

 Steak and Mushroom Pie

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
 England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
 Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
 $4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
 people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
 served with a glass of champagne.

 Le Parker Meridien Omelet

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien
 restaurant in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six
 eggs, and an entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs
 $1,000. To make it yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700.

 Serendipity 3 Sundae

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at
 Serendipity 3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness
 Book of World Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of
 five scoops of Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat
 edible gold leaf, and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei
 Porceleana. To order this rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona
 Nigari Water

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This
 desalinated, high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of
 Hawaii and costs $16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's
 high proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Keith Johnson
Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted* to all 
things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones, ices, 
etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is a 
perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send me 
into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar bucket, keep 
Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk shakes and 
pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really high quality 
vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd pay $19 a scoop 
for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a perception of taste 
based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and shipping the product, 
etc. 

- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet. 


Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food Network but 
more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows they were 
talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice cream that 
featured vanilla beans from the left side of a mountain in Italy. $19 a scoop. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference between 
eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than, say 
iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and eat a 
smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more satisfied than 
eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality. 
That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the dining 
experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the History 
Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me that the 
gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it tastes hundreds 
of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice cream joint. I'm 
surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling the nests of 
cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build their nests, or 
that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing saki through some 
animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the excreted liquid. 




- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter  martinbaxt...@gmail.com  
wrote: 





Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad I 
gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me. 


On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  wrote: 






[ Attachment(s) from Mr. Worf included below] 




-- Forwarded message -- 
From: Missy May  missy.may...@gmail.com  
Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM 
Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS 
To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com 















White Truffle 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom. Found 
in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is due to 
it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere between 
$1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this delicacy, 
however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth. 

Essen Platinum Club Sandwich 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich. It is 
a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham, hard-boiled 
quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost 2,000 calories 
and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price of almost $200. 

Steak and Mushroom Pie 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in England, 
this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of Matsutake 
mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at $4,200 each, 
black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8 people and costs 
around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also served with a glass of 
champagne. 

Le Parker Meridien Omelet 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien restaurant 
in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six eggs, and an 
entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs $1,000. To make it 
yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700. 

Serendipity 3 Sundae 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

One

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Mr. Worf
I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and expensive
ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the things that
are raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to personal pallet
and subtle differences in flavorings.

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted* to
 all things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones,
 ices, etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is
 a perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send
 me into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar
 bucket, keep Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk
 shakes and pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really
 high quality vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd
 pay $19 a scoop for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a
 perception of taste based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and
 shipping the product, etc.

 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet.

 Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food Network
 but more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows they
 were talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice cream
 that featured vanilla beans from the left side of a  mountain in Italy. $19
 a scoop.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson 
 keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference
 between eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than,
 say iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and
 eat a smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more
 satisfied than eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality.
 That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the
 dining experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the
 History Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me
 that the gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it
 tastes  hundreds of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice
 cream joint.  I'm surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling
 the nests of cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build
 their nests, or that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing
 saki through some animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the
 excreted liquid.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter 
 martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad
 I gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:


  
 [Attachment(s)#12aa145b98c7ceb5_12aa099f98058d4f_12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopTextfrom
  Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive
 mushroom. Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white
 truffle's price is due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are 
 generally
 sold for anywhere between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price
 paid for this delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich.
 It is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
 hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
 2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
 of almost $200.

 Steak and Mushroom Pie

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
 England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
 Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
 $4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
 people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
 served with a glass of champagne

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Keith Johnson
I just wonder if any extremely rare ingredients convey a taste sensation that's 
so incredible, or if it's perception. Sometimes food is like art: the value is 
all in what people say it is. 

- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:30:16 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and expensive 
ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the things that are 
raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to personal pallet and 
subtle differences in flavorings. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted* to all 
things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones, ices, 
etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is a 
perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send me 
into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar bucket, keep 
Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk shakes and 
pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really high quality 
vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd pay $19 a scoop 
for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a perception of taste 
based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and shipping the product, 
etc. 


- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 



Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet. 


Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food Network but 
more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows they were 
talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice cream that 
featured vanilla beans from the left side of a mountain in Italy. $19 a scoop. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference between 
eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than, say 
iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and eat a 
smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more satisfied than 
eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality. 
That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the dining 
experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the History 
Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me that the 
gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it tastes hundreds 
of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice cream joint. I'm 
surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling the nests of 
cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build their nests, or 
that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing saki through some 
animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the excreted liquid. 




- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter  martinbaxt...@gmail.com  
wrote: 





Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm glad I 
gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me. 


On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  wrote: 






[ Attachment(s) from Mr. Worf included below] 




-- Forwarded message -- 
From: Missy May  missy.may...@gmail.com  
Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM 
Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS 
To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com 















White Truffle 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom. Found 
in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is due to 
it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere between 
$1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this delicacy, 
however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth. 

Essen Platinum Club Sandwich 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich. It is 
a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham, hard-boiled 
quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost 2,000 calories 
and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price of almost $200. 

Steak and Mushroom Pie 

The World's Most Expensive Foods

Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Mr. Worf
I agree. I think I mentioned the foodie restaurant here that one year the
guy basically served chittlins, mountain oysters and tripe. For over $100 a
plate. We had a good laugh on that. I said that for $20 each they could come
by the house and my mom will cook them up something and they can have 2nds.
:)

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I just wonder if any extremely rare ingredients convey a taste sensation
 that's so incredible, or if it's perception. Sometimes food is like art: the
 value is all in what people say it is.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:30:16 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and
 expensive ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the
 things that are raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to
 personal pallet and subtle differences in flavorings.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson 
 keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted*
 to all things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones,
 ices, etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is
 a perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send
 me into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar
 bucket, keep Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk
 shakes and pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really
 high quality vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd
 pay $19 a scoop for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a
 perception of taste based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and
 shipping the product, etc.

 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet.

 Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food
 Network but more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows
 they were talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice
 cream that featured vanilla beans from the left side of a  mountain in
 Italy. $19 a scoop.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.net
  wrote:



 I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference
 between eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than,
 say iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and
 eat a smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more
 satisfied than eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality.
 That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the
 dining experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the
 History Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me
 that the gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it
 tastes  hundreds of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice
 cream joint.  I'm surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling
 the nests of cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build
 their nests, or that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing
 saki through some animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the
 excreted liquid.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter 
 martinbaxt...@gmail.comwrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm
 glad I gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:


  
 [Attachment(s)#12aa26df9dcd49a6_12aa145b98c7ceb5_12aa099f98058d4f_12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopTextfrom
  Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive
 mushroom. Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white
 truffle's price is due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are 
 generally
 sold for anywhere between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price
 paid for this delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

 Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

 [image: The World's Most Expensive

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Mr. Worf
Cuz I'm not eating it...

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 9:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com wrote:

 I agree. I think I mentioned the foodie restaurant here that one year the
 guy basically served chittlins, mountain oysters and tripe. For over $100 a
 plate. We had a good laugh on that. I said that for $20 each they could come
 by the house and my mom will cook them up something and they can have 2nds.
 :)


 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Keith Johnson 
 keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I just wonder if any extremely rare ingredients convey a taste sensation
 that's so incredible, or if it's perception. Sometimes food is like art: the
 value is all in what people say it is.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:30:16 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and
 expensive ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the
 things that are raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to
 personal pallet and subtle differences in flavorings.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.net
  wrote:



 Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted*
 to all things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones,
 ices, etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is
 a perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send
 me into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar
 bucket, keep Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk
 shakes and pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really
 high quality vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd
 pay $19 a scoop for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a
 perception of taste based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and
 shipping the product, etc.

 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet.

 Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food
 Network but more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows
 they were talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice
 cream that featured vanilla beans from the left side of a  mountain in
 Italy. $19 a scoop.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson 
 keithbjohn...@comcast.net wrote:



 I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference
 between eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather 
 than,
 say iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and
 eat a smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more
 satisfied than eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality.
 That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the
 dining experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the
 History Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me
 that the gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it
 tastes  hundreds of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice
 cream joint.  I'm surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling
 the nests of cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build
 their nests, or that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing
 saki through some animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the
 excreted liquid.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Well, there is always the $15 a cup tea.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 3:25 AM, Martin Baxter martinbaxt...@gmail.com
  wrote:



 Way above the price range of a Poor Black Welshman, that is. And I'm
 glad I gave up coffee, or that last would've done the trick for me.

 On Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 4:58 PM, Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.comwrote:


  
 [Attachment(s)#12aa2767e4e22605_12aa26df9dcd49a6_12aa145b98c7ceb5_12aa099f98058d4f_12a9e7b1b567ee27_12a9ba7f2e51ddf3_TopTextfrom
  Mr. Worf included below]



 -- Forwarded message --
 From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
 Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
 Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
 To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








 White Truffle

 [image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

 Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive
 mushroom. Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white
 truffle's price is due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are 
 generally
 sold for anywhere between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record 
 price
 paid

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Keith Johnson
I hear you! One of the surprising and ironic things going on in food is a turn 
or return to food that many of us ate out of necessity as kids. This is 
especially true of blacks, Southerners, and poor country folk. Things like 
chitlins, pig's feet, hogshead cheese, ox tail, turkey neck, souse meat, etc., 
are showing up in many fancy restaurants. And as you mentioned, they're costing 
a pretty penny. Here in Atlanta there's a return to offal and real meat, a 
kind of pushback against the low cholesterol/fat, no red meat craze. What I 
don't get is why some of these foods does cost so much. When I was a kid, my 
dad used to buy ox tails at the local country market on the cheap. It was one 
reason country black folk bought stuff like that: it was cheap. Now such parts 
cost a bit of money, at least in some restaurants. You can get it fairly 
inexpensively at Jamaican restaurants and the like. I guess the fancy joints 
use better quality of meat? 



- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com 
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2010 12:58:49 AM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






I agree. I think I mentioned the foodie restaurant here that one year the guy 
basically served chittlins, mountain oysters and tripe. For over $100 a plate. 
We had a good laugh on that. I said that for $20 each they could come by the 
house and my mom will cook them up something and they can have 2nds. :) 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I just wonder if any extremely rare ingredients convey a taste sensation that's 
so incredible, or if it's perception. Sometimes food is like art: the value is 
all in what people say it is. 


- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 



Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:30:16 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and expensive 
ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the things that are 
raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to personal pallet and 
subtle differences in flavorings. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted* to all 
things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones, ices, 
etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is a 
perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send me 
into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar bucket, keep 
Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk shakes and 
pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really high quality 
vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd pay $19 a scoop 
for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a perception of taste 
based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and shipping the product, 
etc. 


- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 



Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS 






Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet. 


Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food Network but 
more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows they were 
talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice cream that 
featured vanilla beans from the left side of a mountain in Italy. $19 a scoop. 


On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson  keithbjohn...@comcast.net  
wrote: 






I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference between 
eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather than, say 
iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and eat a 
smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more satisfied than 
eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality. 
That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the dining 
experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the History 
Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me that the 
gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it tastes hundreds 
of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice cream joint. I'm 
surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling the nests of 
cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build their nests, or 
that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing saki through some 
animals digestive system, then boiling and consuming the excreted liquid. 




- Original Message - 
From: Mr. Worf  hellomahog...@gmail.com  
To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com 
Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:07:06 PM 
Subject: Re: [scifinoir2

Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS

2010-08-23 Thread Mr. Worf
I think that it is mostly hype. Most of the time they are getting the meat
from the same sources. Others try to pretty up the meat by saying they
bought it from an organic farm or some other bs.

On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 10:06 PM, Keith Johnson
keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I hear you! One of the surprising and ironic things going on in food is a
 turn or return to food that many of us ate out of necessity as kids. This is
 especially true of blacks, Southerners, and poor country folk.  Things like
 chitlins, pig's feet, hogshead cheese, ox tail, turkey neck, souse meat,
 etc., are showing up in many fancy restaurants. And as you mentioned,
 they're costing a pretty penny. Here in Atlanta there's a return to offal
 and real meat, a kind of pushback against the low cholesterol/fat, no red
 meat craze.  What I don't get is why some of these foods does cost so much.
 When I was a kid, my dad used to buy ox tails at the local country market on
 the cheap. It was one reason country black folk bought stuff like that: it
 was cheap. Now such parts cost a bit of money, at least in some restaurants.
 You can get it fairly inexpensively at Jamaican restaurants and the like. I
 guess the fancy joints use  better quality of meat?




 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Tuesday, August 24, 2010 12:58:49 AM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 I agree. I think I mentioned the foodie restaurant here that one year the
 guy basically served chittlins, mountain oysters and tripe. For over $100 a
 plate. We had a good laugh on that. I said that for $20 each they could come
 by the house and my mom will cook them up something and they can have 2nds.
 :)

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 9:49 PM, Keith Johnson 
 keithbjohn...@comcast.netwrote:



 I just wonder if any extremely rare ingredients convey a taste sensation
 that's so incredible, or if it's perception. Sometimes food is like art: the
 value is all in what people say it is.


 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 10:30:16 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 I think if a dish is difficult to create or has extremely rare and
 expensive ingredients then its ok, but I don't really think some of the
 things that are raved about is all that great. It usually comes down to
 personal pallet and subtle differences in flavorings.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 4:25 PM, Keith Johnson keithbjohn...@comcast.net
  wrote:



 Don't know if I have the Cooking Channel but will check. I am *addicted*
 to all things frozen: ice cream, gelatto, sherbert, milk shakes, snow cones,
 ices, etc. I am also convinced that my biochemical makeup has a gene that is
 a perfect match for vanilla, as the mere smell of vanilla is enough to send
 me into fits of divine pleasure. I kept vanilla bean pods in my sugar
 bucket, keep Madagascan vanilla extract in the cupboard (put it in my milk
 shakes and pancake batter). I have at times paid some big money for really
 high quality vanilla products and gourmet ice cream. But I'm not sure I'd
 pay $19 a scoop for ice cream. At some point, I think the price is more a
 perception of taste based on rarity, difficulty in growing, harvesting and
 shipping the product, etc.

 - Original Message -
 From: Mr. Worf hellomahog...@gmail.com
 To: scifinoir2@yahoogroups.com
 Sent: Monday, August 23, 2010 4:39:11 PM
 Subject: Re: [scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS



 Keith, don't forget the coffee that passes through a Civet.

 Have you checked out the Cooking Channel? It is similar to the Food
 Network but more geared toward cooking and gourmet food. On one of the shows
 they were talking about a gourmet ice cream truck that sells handmade ice
 cream that featured vanilla beans from the left side of a  mountain in
 Italy. $19 a scoop.

 On Mon, Aug 23, 2010 at 1:18 PM, Keith Johnson 
 keithbjohn...@comcast.net wrote:



 I love eating out. And I have to confess, there is a market difference
 between eating at restaurants that use fresh, high quality food rather 
 than,
 say iceberg lettuce from cold storage. It's why you can go to a place and
 eat a smaller meal that consists of high quality food, and yet be more
 satisfied than eating a lot of food that's of lesser quality.
 That being said, there is a limit to how much one needs to pay for the
 dining experience. I saw that ridiculous gold-leaf ice cream sundae on the
 History Channel special on ice cream, and shook my head. You can't tell me
 that the gold or even the high quality vanilla ice cream really makes it
 tastes  hundreds of times better than one that can be made at a quality ice
 cream joint.  I'm surprised they left off Bird's Nest Soup, made by boiling
 the nests of cliff-dwelling birds who excrete a glue-like saliva to build
 their nests, or that soup that the Japanese sell that's made from passing
 saki through some

[scifinoir2] EXPENSIVE FOODS [9 Attachments]

2010-08-22 Thread Mr. Worf
-- Forwarded message --
From: Missy May missy.may...@gmail.com
Date: Sun, Aug 22, 2010 at 6:23 AM
Subject: [BSBB] EXPENSIVE FOODS
To: brownsugars_bodacious_b...@yahoogroups.com








White Truffle

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

Not surprising, the white truffle is the world's most expensive mushroom.
Found in the Piedmont region of Northern Italy, the white truffle's price is
due to it's relative rarity. These truffles are generally sold for anywhere
between $1,350 and $2,700 per kilogram. The record price paid for this
delicacy, however, was $330,000 for 1.5 kilograms worth.

Essen Platinum Club Sandwich

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

The world's most expensive sandwich is the Essen Platinum Club Sandwich. It
is a triple-decker sandwich, containing the finest grade chicken, ham,
hard-boiled quails' eggs and white truffles. This sandwich contains almost
2,000 calories and is the world's most expensive, selling for a hefty price
of almost $200.

Steak and Mushroom Pie

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

Based on the traditional steak and mushroom pie that is so popular in
England, this dish contains $1,000 worth of Wagyu beef, $3,330 worth of
Matsutake mushrooms, two bottles of Chateau Mouton Rothschild priced at
$4,200 each, black truffles and edible gold leaf. The whole pie serves 8
people and costs around $15,900. A single slice costs $1,990, but is also
served with a glass of champagne.

Le Parker Meridien Omelet

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

The most expensive omelet in the world is sold at Le Parker Meridien
restaurant in New York City. It contains 10 ounces of Sevruga caviar, six
eggs, and an entire lobster. If you order it in the restaurant, it costs
$1,000. To make it yourself at home, the ingredients will only run you $700.

Serendipity 3 Sundae

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

One of the most expensive desserts in the world is a sundae sold at
Serendipity 3, located on the east side of Manhattan. Listed in the Guinness
Book of World Records as the world's most expensive dessert, it consists of
five scoops of Tahitian vanilla bean ice cream, Madagascar vanilla, 23 karat
edible gold leaf, and the world's most expensive chocolate, the Amedei
Porceleana. To order this rich dessert, it will cost you over $1,000. Kona
Nigari Water

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

The most expensive water in the world is Kona Nigari water. This
desalinated, high-mineral water comes from the deep waters off the coast of
Hawaii and costs $16.75 per ounce. Wray and Nephew White Overproof Rum

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

This rum is the highest-selling because of it's rarity as well as it's high
proof. Bottled in 1940, there are only 4 bottles left in the world, each
priced at around $53,000.

Tieguanyin

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

A rare Chinese green tea, Tieguanyin costs $3,000 per kilo (2 lbs, 3 oz) and
approximately $15 for a single cup.

Kopi Luwak

[image: The World's Most Expensive Foods]

You can't have a discussion of the world's most expensive foods without
mentioning Kopi Luwak. Originating from Sumatra, Kopi Luwak is created from
coffee beans that have passed through the digestive track of the Asian Palm
Civet. The civets eat the coffee berries and the undigested beans pass
through their system. The beans are then collected and brewed. Many people
claim that the coffee has a high level of complex acidity that cannot be
achieved through any other brewing method. With only around 500 pounds of
beans produced every year, the cost for a pound is upwards of $300.









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Celebrating 10 years of bringing diversity to perversity!
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