I had pretty good baguette in London.
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Look at this Scotch egg! Edmonton, Alberta, Canada.

Do döner kebabs in Austria count as a Turkish food?
No, it counts as German food
I had a blintz in Bali.
Sounds like a 1930s tap dancing song.
Or a 70s rock song
🎶 Bali Blintz Bali Blintz Bali Blintz Bali Blintz 🎵
I had an excellent home-made lasagne in a restaurant in Gent, Belgium.
Can I ask in which one? I'm planning to go to Gent soon
Certainly! It was: 't Vosken, Sint-Baafsplein 19. I'll try to upload a photo.

Indian food in the UK. I don't think this will surprise anyone, though.
I moved to New Zealand six months ago, and I have had exactly one truly bad meal since I've been here. I haven't eaten any Maori food, so I guess all the food I've eaten has been from another country.
The one that surprised me the most was KFC. We moved from one state away from Kentucky, and we had to come here to have truly good KFC.
I was expecting the Chinese food to be good here, but it's really good. So is the Korean, Indian, and Malaysian food. The fish and chips are good. The burgers are great, even from McDonald's. The absolute best was Filipino food from a tiny little restaurant in a random strip mall near Sylvia Park. That food changed my life.
In fairness, I have had a couple of "fine" meals—as in, "well, nothing special, but it was fine."
The one bad meal was Pad Thai made by Thai people at a Thai restaurant down by the beach. It was just way too sweet, which makes me wonder if they saw me and made it "for a white guy" or something.
I had some really good Chinese takeaway noodles in Athens. Bonus: 500mL Heineken’s were a €1.50.
puerto rico is not really a country, but it did have the absolute best hummus pizza I've ever had. the food there in general was top notch.
Hummus... Pizza? That's a new one for me. Where is that popular/from?
I’d describe it as a Mediterranean fusion food. It’s not common, but when you see it, it’s typically an option at trendy artisanal pizza places.
Vietnam has amazing French food. Especially top tier baked good like croissants. Up there with the best in Paris.
I had something in Germany they told me was from Austria that was just ham steaks with eggs and potatoes in an incredible red sauce.
I don't remember what it was called, nor where it actually originated from. But fuck, I wish I knew what that sauce was because the rest of it was super simple and something I can get easy at home. It's not the same without the sauce, tho. It wasn't spicy, it wasn't BBQ and it wasn't ketchup. It was just pure deliciousness.
I had something in Germany they told me was from Austria that was just ham steaks with eggs and potatoes in an incredible red sauce.
It sounds a bit like Tiroler Gröstel but with Gulasch Sauce. Gulasch is usually it's own dish, but you could use it as an addition to another dish.
I've had some really good fried chicken in Vietnam, one of the best burgers ever in Singapore, and conversely, terrible Mexican food in Spain, lol
Singapore has some of the best food for sure. Absolutely world class across nearly any cuisine. Say what you will about their economy/politics, but that kind of variety is really hard to find.
I dunno, London has that sort of variety ... but is also a capitalist hellhole :-/
I'd throw San Francisco in there as well, but I don't think either really match Singapore in that regard. I think it's a combination of having been a gigantic financial and trade hub for centuries (I see London and San Francisco more as endpoints, honestly) and the pressure/post colonial culture from the island state's government to curate their image/culinary scene.
It's a very unique crossroads and set of circumstances which I have not seen anywhere else in the world.
Edit: "an" to "a"
London was, in some ways, a hub thanks to the Empire. Less so now, but it does have variety, much more than any other European city IME
You can get stuff like jellyfish salad, jerk chicken, Lebanese food, etc, with little effort.
Also, it's legal to take durians on the London underground, so that's one up on Singapore :-P
Lol the durian debate continues! Yeah, the variety is definitely true of London. It has more of an organic sort of variety that I would compare with San Francisco, New York, or Hong Kong.
I think what really hit me was the overt curating I saw in Singapore (which also has a chilling/freezing effect on the small restauranteur) All the restaurants I went to were completely amazing and, like anything in that city, way more costly than in any other country I'd visited that trip. Singapore, at times, felt a bit gauche and decadent with how great/polished everything was.
I also think it's interesting to see what permeates these trade hubs in terms of food. I will say that I did not catch any Caribbean fare in Singapore, although I wouldn't be surprised given its imperial past. International hubs for technology, finance, and pretty much anything else miss out on varied cuisines if they're sufficiently culturally or geographically insulated (looking at Paris and Shanghai from my experience lol).
Yeah, the careful curation of everything put me off, over all ... I'd rather stick with provincial but real, personally (she says while getting a tattoo in a Vietnamese alley)
I've only passed through Shanghai - what's it like?
Had the most amazing burger in Japan. I'm not sure what they put in their food, but EVERYTHING there tastes amazing.
Does doner kebab in England count?
Went to an Italian-irish-indian restaurant in a small town on the Shannon. I think it was just the restaurant family that normally ate the Indian food, but they let us order it and it was great.
I had amazing ramen in Estonia. It was run by a Japanese lady though so I'm not sure that counts.
We loooooooove gelato in Italy. It is magical to my husband and me.
We have tried to find an acceptable substitute in the US, but nothing is "right". I don't know if it's the geographical influence on the taste of our dairy, or USDA standards for keeping ice cream a bit too cold. We haven't found a place here that's advertising "gelato" that gets anywhere close to the experience of gelato in Italy.
But we randomly stopped at a gelateria in Akhihabara, Tokyo. Low expectations, but we wanted a snack. And that was hands down the best gelato we've ever had outside Italy. 5 stars.
Sushi in Singapore, and Indian food (Tikka Fahl, iirc) in Czech Republic
Had the best Indian food, in Australia.
I've had excellent Thai food in the US.
I've also had pretty bad Thai food too. 😔
https://www.oregonlive.com/topic/typhoon%20discrimination%20case/index.html
Curry with nan in Japan
Namaste in Niamey, Niger has the best Indian food I've ever had, bar none.
The best pupusas I've ever had were not in El Salvador, but rather a little shop in Toronto (now closed, RIP).
dang that vietnamese chili shrimp i shared in travel from osaka is probably right up there.
i have not had as good pizza in italy as i have had in several countries, but I prefer a strong, thick tomato sauce, which is very light in Italian pizzas that I've had, although the Italian fired crust is consistently better.
i prefer indian momos to chinese jianjiao: less oily, more consistently flavorful and healthy.
Where are sandwiches from!?! Because I don't know if I've ever enjoyed a sandwich as much as I enjoyed the Colombian barbecue chicken patacones that use plantains as bread. holy crap that is good and enough food for three days.
The Japanese have perfected the cheese cake, way more decadent without losing any of the flavor.
oh dang though, you know what, a Venezuelan living in Colombia made the best sushi I've ever had, and the best salmon belly sashimi I've ever had.
I had one of the best seafood alfredo pasta dishes of my life in Cambodia. Just a random place down the street from our hotel in Siem Reab and I happened to see someone else order it or I'd have gotten another likely amazing plate of Nasi Goreng.
I also had insanely good sushi in Istanbul. Idk if this one really counts because I went with a local friend from university who showed us around, but I was still surprised since it wasn't a super pricey or ritzy kind of place and had a lot of locals working alongside some Japanese chefs.
I had an AMAZING ramen bowl in NY, I think the name of the restaurant is Ivan ramen, it was the best food I've ever had, not just the best ramen ever, I highly recommend it if you find yourself in NY, hopefully when the orange in power is no longer in power
Brasil everything, pizza, hamburgers, sushi, pasta. They add their own style to international food and it's awesome.