Who Has the Best Food?

It is a fun question going around the internet this past week, so here we go.

In particular, people focused on the question of France vs. America. As one would expect, those on the French side think those on the American side are crazy, it is insulting to even consider this a question. Those on the American side like food.

All of this is always just, like, your opinion, man, or at least that’s the story.

Checking the Survey Data

YouGov asked back in 2019, got the following answers across nations, which we were reminded of during current debate on Twitter of American versus French food.

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I will quibble, but I was impressed how good this list was for nationally identified cuisine, as opposed to in-country experience.

Where do I see obvious mistakes, ignoring the unfamiliar ones?

Everyone is underrating Brazilian because meat on swords is awesome, Pão de queijo is awesome, and the accompaniments are optional, if not diverse enough for the true top tier.

Mongolian is not even listed, and I realize that what I think of as ‘Mongolian’ is in no way authentic, it’s where you fill a bowl with meats, noodles and sauces (and for some, vegetables) that they then grill for you, but that one format is an excellent experience, and I will take advantage of it every chance I get. Which is not often. Somehow you cannot get Mongolian BBQ (yes, I am aware it is not technically in any way BBQ either) anywhere in New York City or anywhere in San Francisco proper or the East Bay.

I have two very different places I like to go for Lebanese, one low end and one high end. I’m not sure if this is a coincidence or not and what distinguishes them from other Middle Eastern cuisines, except perhaps their rice style. Either way, underrated.

America’s biggest mistake is underrating Indian quite a lot. Indian provides a unique set of flavors and experiences, done mediocre it is fine and done well it is very good. Only China and Thailand have it lower than America, and I am guessing that opinion is mostly not about the food.

Spanish and British seem clearly overrated here, although perhaps Spanish gets a lot better when Italian isn’t available locally. I have never not felt Spanish cuisine was an inferior good.

Thai food is very good when they don’t overdo the chili oil as a cheat code, but is likely higher than it should be due to its absurdly excellent marketing.

Korean is alien, they serve you all these things my brain refuses to agree are food, so while I still occasionally enjoy the straight Korean BBQ experience it always seems like an inferior good to me. But who am I to say?

I consider Italian to be Tier 0 and the clear #1, then Tier 1 can go mostly in any order for Chinese, Japanese, Indian and American. Tier 2 is Mexican, Thai, Brazilian, Greek and Lebanese, plus whatever includes Katz’s and Mongolian BBQ.

In practice that’s essentially all my meals. My wife will sometimes make what she calls Vietnamese Chicken and I occasionally go to The Halal Guys. Otherwise, that’s it.

Then there’s France.

Genius in France

French restaurants I see as overrated. I always feel like they want me to be impressed rather than that they want me to enjoy the food. And yes they are often very impressive, but who wants to pay for being impressed? Or they want to check off boxes.

Whereas Italian focuses on your experience of consuming food. In France or in French places, in my experience, everyone is implicitly trying to impress you in the same way (except the higher end places that want to impress you even more, but which made me mostly feel like I was being robbed, and sometimes lower end places are a pure simulacra) and everyone has the same menu that does little for me. As Tyler notes the hours are infuriatingly particular. If you messed up and went to the wrong place, it was bad, as in reheated frozen bad.

French style assumes you want to sit around and not eat painfully slowly before, during and after your meal, and that you want to plan all of this around drinking wine. I am fine with having a nice slow meal on occasion, to enjoy some company, but slowness for its own sake is painful, and like Tyler I do not drink. This is not an advantage.

French supermarkets I remember from my visits as being a huge pain in the neck where there is limited selection, the hours will often leave you hungry and they treat you rudely and badly. If you want exactly the handful of things they think you should want, and are willing to go at the times they want, you will do well, and I can survive for a few days on baguettes, butter and cheese. For more than a few days, none of that interests me.

Bakeries are a different story. Yes, the croissants and other pastries are amazing, I give them that. The baguettes are iconic but like their other breads they are only average, and a generally bad design.

This might be consistent with Nate Silver’s position that they do better for the 20th percentile, where that is indeed the best you can do, but it must get repetitive quickly.

France loses badly on variety all around. The supermarkets and French restaurants are narrow and similar, and there are not so many foreign alternatives available.

Tyler Cowen as usual offers mostly completely different considerations than mine. Perhaps there are indeed small towns with amazing specialties, but once again that is anti-variety that benefits no one most of the time. What is the point? The idea is to have one of everything here, not to have everything of one type in each place and have to travel.

I Thought This Was America

What about here in America?

Where to put American food depends on what you mean by that. If you mean things that are distinctively American, then I go by the earlier rankings, and have it as somewhere between second and fifth.

If you mean the overall quality of experience of eating in the USA versus in other countries, we are number one, and it is not close, because on top of other considerations we have the best of all possible worlds via our diversity. I get great versions of everything, the variety is amazing even in generic places but especially places like New York City, and I always find a plethora of good choices wherever I travel. Within walking distance of my apartment there is an amazing version of everything I like to eat.

I do realize New York is an outlier, but you still do very well in other places. Restaurant variety is mostly off the charts good, the standard strip mall sees to it and quality is typically not bad at all.

Nate Silver does his analysis, and he concurs. If you make an effort to find the best restaurants, and especially if you want to live in a place, New York City is the food king of the Western world, although I can’t speak to the comparison to Tokyo.

Nate notes that you cannot purely stumble into a place in New York and do all that well. Yes and no. You cannot go in with zero information, but if you know how to read Google Maps and are willing to consider several options, you can do very well overall, although many great places are still easy to miss. The problem is Asian food, where people are too obsessed with superficial questions in reviews, so it can be very tricky to identify the very good places, and they often have only 4.2-style ratings.

He notes that wait times at good places can be tough, but I have mostly found the opposite, all you have to do is not test the prime spots on Friday and Saturday evenings and 95% of even great places are no problem, unless you are going into the multiple-Michelin-star land where I don’t want to go anyway. Yes I have issues with Four Charles Prime Rib or Carbone but there are so many other options.

Nate’s theory is that some places in California have the best American median quality of all meals or all restaurant meals consumed, perhaps in the San Francisco area, because they combine strong local produce quality, strong variety, few chain restaurants and he does not mention this but very high income to spend on all of it.

What I love most about American food, and eating in America in general, is that it is the opposite of the French mistake of trying to impress you or waste your time. American food wants you to be happy, it wants to give you the experience you want and not hold back, it values your time and it does not much care how it looks doing it. There is the high end variation where it does care what it looks like, at which point it is a kind of generic Italian with a lower average and ceiling but still solid.

Americans spend less time on meals than others. A lot of this is that we spend a lot less time waiting. Some of that is that we have baked speed into our designs, some of that is caring about service and not making people wait endlessly for no reason. Is there something nice about a quiet relaxed meal? There certainly can be, if you want that no one will rush you. Even when I want to relax, I don’t want to be forced to wait.

America did optimize somewhat too hard on speed and convenience for a while, at the expense of quality. I find most of that is gone by now, and what is left is the best of both worlds.

There is one actual downside. America does not much care about your waistline, so do be careful of that. American foods both are generally not so healthy and also the portions are absurdly large. You need to know when to quit.

What about our supermarkets? Once again, we knock variety out of the park. We might not deliver on your country’s particular specialty but overall the places are huge and do not waste their space, and you can choose to go cheap or go fancy at every step. Produce is the one place we may have some issues due to longer supply chains, as Nate Silver suggests, combined with less customer discernment on that front. I am one of those non-discerning customers, because I have little use for the produce, and also can afford to and do hit artisan stores often.

Note that much American food is in optimized to survive having mediocre ingredient quality, whereas other top cuisines rely on quality ingredients to work. If your ingredients are indeed mediocre, American is your best bet, with Chinese the only other consideration. If your ingredients are top notch, you more often want to go in another direction to take advantage of this.

Nate thinks that because of our penchant for fast food, prioritization of speed and reluctance to spend time eating, median meal quality here is going to end up lower.

I think speed and convenience matters, but sometimes Americans do take this too far. If you ignore the value of speed, and you care a lot about produce quality, than perhaps we fall behind on the median meal due to all the fast food at home and outside it. But much fast food has gotten remarkably good, and also we are much richer and can far more often pay for better and more varied things. Also I think we focus a lot more on what we actually like, not only less on formalism, and this matters.

The Upgrade

I think that American food suffered a quite horrible period centered on the 1950s, from a combination of the effects of prohibition on our restaurant industry and the impact of various new weird industrial foods and a focus on mass production over quality. Things were dire. That reputation persists.

But then American food got The Upgrade steadily over the last 50 years. It has radically improved in quality and variety over my lifetime, and it is very easy to find the ones with higher quality if you pay attention when trying places and do even a little gradient descent, and combine this with Google Maps.

Even fast food has radically improved. Shake Shack and In & Out are vastly different than McDonalds and Burger King. We now have fast salad chains, fast quality Mexican chains and much more.

Whereas to the extent you like French food, it seems to be because it has done its best to stay exactly the same.

The counterargument is that we do have to answer for Olive Garden and Applebee’s. Which somehow are still bringing Americans together?

Abstract: We use location data to study activity and encounters across class lines. Low-income and especially high-income individuals are socially isolated: more likely than other income groups to encounter people from their own social class.

Casual restaurant chains, like Olive Garden and Applebee’s, have the largest positive impact on cross-class encounters through both scale and their diversity of visitors. Dollar stores and local pharmacies like CVS deepen isolation. Among publicly-funded spaces, libraries and parks are more redistributive than museums and historical sites. And, despite prominent restrictions on chain stores in some large US cities, chains are more diverse than independent stores. The mix of establishments in a neighborhood is strongly associated with cross-class Facebook friendships.

This goes back to The Upgrade. Before The Upgrade, if you were able to access an Olive Garden or even an Applebee’s you were doing all right. It was food, and you could eat it. After a given sector got The Upgrade, we learned you could do so much better. Even so, I am often reminded that such places are not so bad. There is a famous Pro Magic player from another country who loves Olive Garden. The last time I was traveling and ended up at Applebee’s went fine, and the value cannot be denied.

Again, it’s not great, but it is food. It is what is sometimes called the great middle, everyone can eat something and you have a nice place to hang, it will be fine and everyone can agree on it, in exchange you are not at a good spot on the cost-quality curve.

I get why the poor use such places. I l do not know what rich people are still doing, in 2023, at either establishment? Or why people would actively travel to such lousy chain restaurants, breaking geography?

A theory is that it is exactly the mixing that is enabled here. A party of four rich people would never choose Applebee’s. However, a party of two rich and two poor people might, the poor can afford it and not feel sick about the price, and the rich can get a form of dining they are familiar with and can abide and also trust. They would perhaps all be better served by the actually good cheap local place, but cannot coordinate on this. And such places offer the trappings of socialization in ways fast food places don’t, even when the rich go to such places they don’t stay to mingle.

Note also that this could be reverse causation. Perhaps we do not mingle because we go to Applebee’s, instead we have an Applebee’s because we mingle. If we did not need to find such compromises, the place would rapidly no longer be in business.

Conclusion

To me America is the clear winner. Quality is strong and improving. You get endless variety, both at restaurants and at the supermarket. Even when I lived in a small town like Warwick, none of the places worth going to were duplicative at all, so I had a decent rotation even in a very small town. Even when we slum it, we do so for good reason, and get things in return that we value. Our wealth lets us afford all of this.

Certainly you can argue that on a per-meal basis, the median meal eaten in France might be, in the sense that a food critic might evaluate it in isolation and ignoring costs including time (or even having the perverse opinion that longer time spent is a benefit rather than a cost), better than the median American meal, either at a restaurant or overall, due to the considerations of fast food and produce quality, but that is a poor proxy for overall quality of life or experience related to food.

To me, the real question is America versus Italy. Italian food in Italy is often outstanding, although as usual you need to beware, my visit to Rome was a mix of reliably outstanding Italian places that I searched for carefully, as good as such food gets, and reliable true disaster when going places on a whim while walking around, including some truly inedible places trying to pretend to sell you pizza. I presume that once you get into less tourist style places, the ratio turns more favorable. But, as Nate Silver points out, if you want non-Italian food the pickings will be quite slim. The Italian bench is deep, but only so deep. So it’s great if you both are only going to be there at most a few weeks and pay enough attention to find the good side of the divide.

In terms of actually living somewhere purely for the food, I wouldn’t be anywhere else.

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22 Responses to Who Has the Best Food?

  1. mikksalu says:

    My experience from Italy (not talking about tourist areas), food is constantly good, though. Even more so in Japan, it does seem that japanese are not even capable of making bad food. I Japan they also know how to make western dishes, what in my experience is not a case in Thailand or China.
    I would rate Tokyo over New-York mostly because you do not have to worry where and what to eat, quality is high.

    In reality of course there are considerable regional variances in all countries. In Spain or Italy it depends are you close to the sea or not, in Hokkaido food is much more meat based than in southern parts of Japan, etc.

    Agree, Lebanese food is underrated. Though, my experience of Lebanon comes almost entirely from christian areas.

    French food, in my opinion, is somewhat victim of its own success. So many styles and cooking techniques invented by French (or at least popularized by French) are today so ubiquitous, that it is harder to tell what excatly is essence of French food.

  2. sniffnoy says:

    I’m not sure if this is a coincidence or not and what distinguishes them from other Middle Eastern cuisines, except perhaps their rice style.

    I believe a significant part of the answer here is likely “garlic”.

    • mikksalu says:

      Addendum.

      My experience from Lebanese food comes from Lebanon. I have not been able to find same experience from Lebanese restauarants from other countries. In my hometown (northern Europe) there are couple of Lebanese restaurants run by Lebanese immigrants, but once I asked from restaurant owner why I am not able to get tabbouleh what I experience in Lebanon and he explained that in northern Europe parsley (main ingredient of tabbouleh) is different, more bitter than in Lebanon.

      Point being, local cuisine and its internatioanal versions are quite often different depending on climate, logistics, etc.

  3. Nicholas Weininger says:

    French food is more regionally variable than most people realize, and the international version is not rooted in the best region, which is of course Provence. Provencal cuisine is amazing, though part of that is that the quality of the local ingredients is ludicrously high; the only plausible competitors on that axis are Italy, California, and New Zealand. Italian food is even more regionally variable but has a lot more great regions that are internationalized, so you can get Tuscan/Umbrian stuff done well in a lot of places as well as the Campania-ish version brought here by the 19th C immigrant wave.

    I am sad to see Filipino and Peruvian near the bottom of the YouGov list. Both have too many bright spots (lumpia, adobo, ceviche, lomo saltado etc) to deserve such a low ranking. It may be that CA does these much better than most places.

  4. magpiewonderland says:

    The only widely available US food I can think of is the hamburger. Hamburgers are pretty great, but I’d still have to rate the US well below the rich cuisines of Italy, Thailand, Japan and India, and about on par with Turkey – another one-hit-wonder nation – as I’m not sure if I’d rather live without burgers or without döners if I had to choose. France, on the other hand, is not even in the running.

    • bugsbycarlin says:

      Nonsense. Southern food, southern breakfasts in particular. Chowder, a sailor’s dish originating in trans Atlantic maritime trade. Pizza as understood by the world, and as you might find in a nice artisan NY pizza place. A whole other style of avant garde pizza, as you might find in an artisan SF pizza place. At least three significantly different regional styles of barbecue. Cajun food. California fresh style, which essentially gets credit for starting a world wide trend back to fresh, local, organic food with clean, ingredient forward taste. *Most* of the modern preparations of steak. More than half of all the interesting fusions! Nashville hot chicken. Chocolate chip cookies. S’mores.

      “as I’m not sure if I’d rather live without burgers or without döners if I had to choose”

      I live in a mid sized American city, having previously lived in Germany and England. I do not have to live without döners. Or korean bbq. Or kbbq mexican fusions. Or excellent vietnamese food. Or excellent shrimp. Or barbecue. Or pakistani. Or iraqi. Or ethiopian. Or diners. Or 夫妻肺片. Or 干煸牛肉. Or nashville hot chicken. Or farmer’s markets. Or…

      • magpiewonderland says:

        I don’t know what half the stuff you’re talking about is, so I think you have a distorted idea of what US food is widely available.

        • bugsbycarlin says:

          Whether you are US resident, US native living abroad, or non-US, I think this speaks to a problem. These things are *extremely* widely available in America, but half of Americans and many internationals Don’t Work This Way and thus don’t know what variety they’re missing.

          When you say “the only widely available US food I can think of is the hamburger”, and I list what are widely available foods in my social group in the US, we are not living the same type of life. But that’s not to say that there aren’t millions and millions and millions of people like me. There wouldn’t be a thriving restaurant industry in the cities, nor upmarket grocery stores, nor popular cooking media, without us.

        • magpiewonderland says:

          Of course every country’s cuisine is widely available in that country. That’s completely beside the point.

  5. Seamus says:

    Regarding the Olive Garden/Applebees remarks:

    To me the best thing about Olive Garden et al. is that they are physically large, relatively quiet inside, with some privacy for your table (at least that’s how I remember them being, haven’t been to one in years). The restaurants my friends choose nowadays usually share some features that I don’t like:

    1) An entry area about four times the size of a phone booth with little benches on both sides that has about twenty people crammed into it waiting to be seated. You have to force your way through to put your name in with the host. Also, the line spills out onto the street so you know from a distance that “it’s gonna be one of those places.” You’re in the way of pedestrians while you wait. Usually, someone calls ahead to try making a reservation, but they don’t take reservations.

    2) Unfinished ceilings, hard surfaces everywhere, and bassy music played loud enough that you have to lean in to hear the person sitting next to you (anyone sitting further away than that might as well be at a different table). I actually like loud music/dancing (on occasion), but somewhere with a dance floor, not a restaurant.

    3) The seating is divided between a bar, a bunch of two tops, and looong tables that seat eight or more, often with benches instead of chairs. The seating area is small, so the tables are uncomfortably close together and sometimes your group will be sharing one of the long tables with another group(s). (I miss booth seating.)

    4) There is a sense of urgency/anxiety. Between the crowds, the line of groups waiting, and the noise, I just don’t feel comfortable. I hate that feeling of constantly needing to shift my chair to let a server/person heading to the bathroom through. This is probably in my head, but I get a general sense of “ok you finished your food 30 seconds ago, if you’re not gonna get another round of drinks then get the heck out now.”

    I would guess that my friends don’t explicitly prefer all of these aspects of restaurant design. But if we went to a restaurant and anything from that list was missing, they would feel that the place was lame, because it’s understood that “this is what cool places are like.” I know there was an article about this phenomenon published on Vox or something within the last decade (I think it might have been in a SSC links post) and I remember agreeing with it pretty strongly. I am well aware that I am driven by nostalgia on this, but I honestly think that “late ’90s Pizza Hut, but for adults” sounds like just about the most fun a restaurant could be for me right now.

    I do understand that some of these wouldn’t be problems if we didn’t go at peak times, but I go to restaurants for the socialization, not the food. And the socialization does happen at peak times for these friends.

  6. waltonmath says:

    I vibe that somewhat wealthy people are often going to eat at places like Applebee’s/Olive Garden. Upper-middle class or maybe nouveau riche seem most likely to. Guessed correlations: family size, suburb dwelling, pretty long, but not insane, work hours.

    Re: the chart, cultures usually like their own food best, and if not, they rate it close to highest (perhaps I missed an exception). Norway and UAE give low peak ratings, Japan rates basically everything low. Moroccan is the only African cuisine covered – probably it isn’t popular enough outside Africa. Ethiopian would be my guess for the next African cuisine that should be on the chart, maybe Egyptian. Emirati cuisine on the chart surprises me – I don’t remember ever seeing it.

    • magic9mushroom says:

      >Re: the chart, cultures usually like their own food best, and if not, they rate it close to highest (perhaps I missed an exception).

      I mean, there are two really-obvious effects here. First, if the Japanese (for instance) didn’t like Japanese food then to at least some extent they wouldn’t eat it and we wouldn’t be calling it Japanese food. Second, food that your body’s not used to is weird and/or fucks with your body, and, well, the Japanese are used to Japanese food.

      >Japan rates basically everything low.

      I think the *specific* factor with Japan is that Japanese cuisine is extremely short on meat and dairy and extremely long on seafood and rice (the traditional Japanese meal is literally rice + seaweed and fish soup + variable “side dishes”). This means that almost every culinary tradition is extremely “heavy” by Japanese standards, and indeed you see Swedish and British cuisine – probably the two most famously “heavy” traditions – get extremely-low ratings in Japan.

      (Well, that’s the more “real” specific factor. There’s probably also some contribution from “racism is still a big thing in Japan and this is probably biasing their survey answers”.)

  7. greg kai says:

    I don’t think using restaurants as main data point for ranking national cuisine is a good idea. This depends so much on your budget and then restaurants usually have their own nationality, the nationality of the chef/owner, the “food nationality” served is more important than the country you are in (Yes, this also count, Chinese restaurant is not the same in US, Europe or China, but this only add to the problem of using restaurants as main data).

    Much better to use the average food served when visiting friends, street food, cantina….basically the regular meal local people will have any non special week day.
    With this in mind, for me US < South America << Asia, and in Asia I like Thai and Japanese, then India and China. I'm Belgian so will say nothing about Europe, too biased.

    US food, for me, is not bad but quite bland. It lacks traditional cuisine, so what you get is kind of fusion of french, italian and mexican food mostly, with a few other influence mixed in. It could have been great, but it tends to be more bland than the originals (UK influence? UK in Europe is….hum, I said I will not speak about Europe :-) ) and you also get more overprocessed sweetened industrial junk than in most other places, which is really the main problem.

    Meat is usually good, but not as good as in south america.

  8. ConnGator says:

    Does France even have H-Marts or Grand Asia? If not, fail.

    Regarding original American food, there is a ton: New California, Cajun, Southern (soul and non-soul), Tex-Mex, etc.

    • bugsbycarlin says:

      This!

      H-Mart and 99 Ranch alone make Europe feel sad on a food basis. Also HEB and Central Market and Publix and Wegmans.

  9. cumulo nimbus says:

    This survey is about cuisine. You can’t say American cuisine is best because of the cuisine from other countries happens to be available in abundance in America. That’s not the same thing as American cuisine. If you like Lebanese food in New York that is a vote for Lebanese cuisine, not for American cuisine. And I say this as a Brit who rather likes American cuisine, which I take to mean enormous burgers and those sandwiches they dip in gravy in Chicago and so on.

    Incidentally there is nothing wrong with British cuisine at all, even if you were to omit everything that ethnic minorities have contributed (i.e ‘Indian’ cuisine in the UK bears no resemblance to Indian cuisine in India). George Orwell wrote an essay about this in 1946…

    https://www.britishcouncil.org/research-policy-insight/insight-articles/defence-english-cooking#:~:text=In%20addition%2C%20no%20one%20who,said%20to%20have%20given%20British

    …when the diet was particularly monochrome due to rationing (the British have never been healthier, or more bored). But our food culture is functional. Outside of a Sunday lunch in a pub or fish and chips, it is impossible to find a modest restaurant in any town or city which does any kind of food Orwell would recognise. I suppose there are a million places that do cooked breakfasts but most of these would horrify the non-British.

    The sad thing is that no foreigner, unless they know a white British family enough to be invited to their home in places which aren’t London or the other main cities, can possibly gain access to things like Scottish steak pies (eaten at funerals and at New Year), steak and kidney puddings, stilton, yorkshire puddings, excellent rather then generic fish and chips, Eccles cakes, bakewell tarts, pork pies of the best type, gravy in the northern English style, shepherd’s pie, roast potatoes and horseradish, bacon sandwiches with brown sauce and so on. If they did they would approve of British cuisine rather more than evidently they do.

    I draw the line at jellied eels, however.

    • magic9mushroom says:

      Shepherd’s pie is quite easy to get in Australia; a bunch of fast-food places sell it, and going to any supermarket will get you a frozen version.

    • bugsbycarlin says:

      “And I say this as a Brit who rather likes American cuisine, which I take to mean enormous burgers and those sandwiches they dip in gravy in Chicago and so on.”

      Sure, but have you tried local versions of our other ten or fifteen region specialties, like cajun food, Texas barbecue, California fresh, soul food, pacific northwest fish, avant garde pizza, Oregon bread and jams, or our fancy steak types?

      (I lived in Britain and Germany and have tried a decent number of regional specialties in those places)

      • bugsbycarlin says:

        regional ^

        In my experience “meh American food, I like it but it’s one note” tends to be said by Europeans who have never visited, or visited for 3 weeks and eaten at a bunch of burger places. Apologies if you’re in a different category, but I find Europeans who live here, from Texas to California, to have a much higher opinion of our food.

  10. _as_text says:

    Well, the equation changes a lot if you’re vegetarian. For me there is nothing even remotely close to Indian cuisine. Unlike literally everything else on this list (with the exception of some parts of Italian) it is designed from the very bottom up to be vegetarian. My experience is that every year I find myself more and more impressed by how deep that design is.

    Also, if you have a meditation/religious bent like me, Indian cuisine is the best in terms of maintaining energy balance in your body and taking care of any psychosomatic issues you might have. Somehow a bowl of dal tadka over rice just *seems* more restorative than any pasta might. I can’t imagine anyone saying ‘I take refuge in spaghetti’ with a straight face but with dal it makes intuitive sense to say so.

    • TheZvi says:

      I love taking refuge in pasta! Used to do it all the time. Only reason I do not do it more is the calories add up fast, but yeah, that’s totally a thing. I think a lot of that is what you are used to. I like good Dal but it has very different associations for me.

  11. Anonymous-backtick says:

    Agree with most of this (down to specifically calling out American Mongolian food as great) which makes the few places I don’t oddly jarring. In particular Indian food should be down in F tier with Haitian and deli food, or at best D tier. Putting Indian in A tier and Thai in B tier makes very little sense, since Thai food is largely just Indian food without the things that make Indian food so shit (dairy where dairy doesn’t go, heavy use of cumin and similar overpower-the-rest-of-the-dish seasonings meant to hide spoiled meat, too much of the menu is vegetarian, etc.)

    French restaurants in America are also very very good food. Coq au vin, roast duck, desserts good enough that even I order dessert, etc. — A tier. Can’t comment on French restaurants in France.

    As minor adjustments, Italian I’d put in A tier instead of S, and S would be cajun + Mongolian + steakhouse + Chinese-in-major-American-cities. (You say that Chinese food isn’t very sensitive to ingredient quality, but that merely implies you have not had Chinese food in medium-sized or small Midwestern cities/towns.)

    A tier would also get German, southern American homestyle, and barbecue, and I might bump several other American subgenres down to B.

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