haha have I ever had nepalese food haha the answer to that funny question of yours buddy boy is I have had nepalese food haha its nice that we've both had a taste of it eh friendo
>>7620505
Why are you such a bastard
>>7620484
Yes, I have fasted before
>>7620484
Oh Yes.
>>7620484
No, but neither have the Ethiopians.
>>7620484
I see momo on the right. The rest I have no idea. Doesn't even look Nepalese.
>>7620534
>Nepalese food
>Ethiopians
Holly shit, stupid Americans...
>>7620484
No though I have been watching everybody loves Raymond lately and I've been wanting to
>>7620534
I did hit up an Ethiopian restaurant when I was passing through Atlanta a few years back. I got the sampler platter. The food tasted like two-day-old Thanksgiving leftovers and was nothing special. The "bread" was a sponge-like thing. All in all, meh. Get this meme outta here.
>>7620608
Well, he's not wrong
>>7620608
>holly
There used to be a place in my town which did Nepalese food. It was pretty much north Indian curries and stews and breads. It closed down about five years ago and I can barely remember what the food was like
>>7620484
I've always been very curious about the tea with yak butter inside thing but I guess you can't get it in the first world, anybody tried?
>>7620484
I've had Tibetan at a couple of places in Bloomington, IN
momos are great
Yeah, but only streetfood so I don't know what the stuff is or is called. I'll explain:
Two neighborhoods over from my house is a Nepalese area. The place is just brimming with them. They starting pouring here about seven years ago and are already well-established, though many still struggle with English. They've opened a few restaurants and small grocery stores selling their things. In the summer, many of the restaurants have people cooking outside under a cloth-topped pergola who sell plates for $5 each, but you can't chooes what you get. It's just whatever they happen to be cooking that day. There's no menu and they barely speak any English, so I have no idea what the stuff is.
There's always rice and some sort of thin, somewhat dal-like yellow soup or gravy with peas in it in a small container, often along with a meat dish and a veg dish. They also give a salad in a baggy and in the baggy is another small container, this one filled with something kind of chutney-like, but just as thin as the dal-like stuff. I don't like it, whatever it is, because it's too sweet, so if I get a plate from the Nepali people, I usually eat the salad at home with lemon and oil.
One plate I've had that stands out was a skewer of three meatballs of, I think, mutton, with chilli, onion and spices and some mustard-y tasting eggplant side dish. Would recommend.
>>7620484
Yeah its tasty, its pretty aromatic kinda like Indian but different.
I love going to my local place and picking up some naan, they have different flavors and it goes with lots of different foods
>>7620484
no but I have a Tibetan place nearby called mt everest. haven't been there yet though.