altima_neo,
@altima_neo@lemmy.zip avatar

What? I’ve never seen anyone rag on Indian food.

At worst, the way they eat it, but never the food.

Very_Bad_Janet, (edited )

I'm American and I can't think of a comedy show that makes fun of Indian food. Can you name one of them so I can check it out?

I'd say most medium to large sized cities in the US have Indian restaurants, so it's not so unusual.

Thisfox,

Friends did, Big Bang Theory does all the time, but yeah pretty much every yank comedy contains some negativity towards Indian food. I don’t watch much comedy, but it seems to be a meme in their shows.

Harpsist,

Big bang theory.

Rag “you’re talking about a subcontinent that hasn’t had a solid bowl movement…”

jaidyn999,

Where Sheldon tells an Indian woman how to cook curry ? Ok.

prowess2956,

Is that a comedy show?

intensely_human,

Technically yes

shani66,

Enough of your wild theories, we are trying to answer this question need in reality

AllonzeeLV,

My problem is with a specific, hyper common ingredient of Indian food: Cumin

I’m sorry, but garlic, onion, cloves, etc don’t even come close to the clinging, pervasive staying power of cumin.

I don’t like to smell what I cook or eat for days after the fact.

RoquetteQueen,
@RoquetteQueen@sh.itjust.works avatar

This has never made sense to me. I love the smell of food. When people apologise for the smell of garlic on their clothes, all I can think is “Why?? You smell delicious.”

Swiggles,

Isn’t it also super common in Mexican cuisine?

I love cumin and it is probably in my top 5 of most used spices in the kitchen. You would hate me!

CanadaPlus,

It gets the same jokes as Mexican food usually here. Really, some people’s guts just can’t handle any amount of spice, and poo jokes are always a hit.

gatelike,

bland shows catering to bland tastes, maybe?

Fondots,

I haven’t seen too many shows make fun of Indian food, but to be fair my taste in TV often isn’t very mainstream and doesn’t tend to include a lot of comedy, so I may not be the right one to answer this.

When I do see it, usually I see them joking about the smell, and I can kind of get that. Don’t get me wrong, I love Indian food, I love the flavors and smells and all that goes with it. But all of those wonderful spices can create a powerful smell, it can kind of cling to clothing and such, if you live in an apartment it’s very likely you’ll smell when your neighbors are cooking Indian food, etc. and I can get how that can be annoying or unpleasant for some people. Honestly, if I was constantly smelling Indian food wafting into my apartment through a shared vent or something, I’d probably get sick of it too.

There’s also the fact that a lot of Americans just have a very bland palate, and all of the spices, not to mention heat, can be very overwhelming to people who aren’t accustomed to it. Personally when I see these jokes, and again, my experience may not be typical, it tends to be more at the expense of the American having boring taste in food than actually making fun of Indian food itself.

And since I mentioned that people may not be accustomed to it, let’s not forget that America is a big, diverse country, and not every part of America has a big Indian population, which means a lot of the country doesn’t necessarily have a lot of exposure to indian food. I do happen to live in an area with a lot of Indian families, but you only need to drive maybe about an hour away for your options to dry up pretty quickly. I have friends who genuinely do not have any Indian restaurants anywhere near them, and their grocery options are sometimes kind of limited which may get in the way of making it at home if they wanted to (and not everyone is a great cook or willing to risk messing up dinner with unfamiliar recipes) And that much spice and flavor when you’re not used to it can be a bit off-putting. I’m a fairly adventurous eater, but I didn’t grow up eating Indian food (my mom is one of those kinds of people who thinks a McChicken is too spicy,) and I know the first time I had Indian I wasn’t quite sure what to make of it, I didn’t dislike it, but I had to have it a couple times before I really came to appreciate it.

Personally, in my circles the people who don’t like Indian tend to be the odd ones out that get made fun of, but again I’m not necessarily representative of America in general, that’s just been my own experience. I even know some people who love indian food but can’t/shouldn’t eat it due to all of the spices and such not sitting well with their stomachs (and there may be a discussion to be had about many American’s bland, super-processed diets having negative effects on their gut microbiomes possibly making it harder for their systems to handle certain cuisines, but that’s well outside of my depth to really go into, I’m a foodie, not a nutritionist, so take my speculation with a heaping helping of some coarse finishing salt)

trk,
@trk@aussie.zone avatar

let’s not forget that America is a big, diverse country

We just did a 5 week trip in the US which was LA, drive to Vegas, fly to NYC, then drive 5000k to the middle of Texas, and man… I keep hearing about all this diversity but that joint is the same all over. Having some mountains in the background instead of a desert, and having a majority RAM 2500s instead of majority Teslas is not the “diversity” I’d been led to believe existed. It’s all just chain stores, tipping, and bad coffee anywhere you go.

cecinestpasunbot,

Most places in the US developed in a similarly shitty way thanks to the logic of American capitalism. That doesn’t necessarily mean there isn’t ethnic and cultural diversity.

trk,
@trk@aussie.zone avatar

If you say so! Place was the same from coast to coast from our outsiders perspective.

mjsaber,
@mjsaber@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

America - where you can get any kind of fast food you want, as long as it’s a hamburger.

-Neil Gaimen

pan_troglodytes,

odd, never heard of comedy making fun of foreign food.

I personally enjoy a fair bit of Indian food, it’s quite varied.

Veraxus,
Veraxus avatar

Maybe it’s that I don’t watch much comedy, but I’ve literally never seen anything dump on Indian. There is nothing more delicious than Indian. Nothing. Not even Mexican food. I do not say that lightly.

clutchmattic, (edited )

Eh, however on the Mexican side, it became kind of tradition to associate Taco Bell with uncontrollable, debilitating, liquid diarrhea

Veraxus,
Veraxus avatar

Taco Bell is about as Mexican as Mac & Cheese. When I talk about Mexican food, I am talking about Mexican food.

RBWells,

Do they? I don’t watch much TV and nobody I know makes fun of Indian food, it’s awesome.

Drusas,

Indian food is very popular in the US and I have never heard anybody rag on it ever. Don't know what kind of media you must be consuming.

TechNerdWizard42,

It’s so common people don’t even see it. But it’s the same thing as Mexican food. The perception is it is spicy and will give you diarrhea.

I firmly believe this is because American people in general don’t understand what spices are. Spiced does not mean spicy hot. Spiced is flavourful and they just can’t have that. I have dined with Americans that truly believe black pepper is too spicy. We had a Starbucks chai which is absolutely terrible, and they’ve said “it’s too spicy”… What? Their brains equate flavour to spicy heat to bad.

It’s stupidly infuriating.

phillaholic,

Spiced does not mean spicy hot.

Yea but like… it’s way hotter than most other American food by default.

TechNerdWizard42,

No it isn’t… It has more spices. It does not have more capsaicin. Indian food by default is NOT spicy hot. It is spiced. You can get it spicy hot but that’s not default.

It’s like saying fried chicken is spicy because you can order it with a hot sauce coating. In reality just that style of preparation is spicy.

phillaholic,

You can argue semantics until you go blue in the face. If you’re not used to spicy food or hot food, or food that produces a similar feeling in the mouth, you have to be careful with Indian food. Your tolerance level isn’t everyone else’s.

mdhughes,
@mdhughes@lemmy.ml avatar

Leave the Midwest. Coasts and Southwest, we eat spicy foods, tho also most of them are very hot.

agent_flounder,
@agent_flounder@lemmy.world avatar

I honestly can’t think of seeing anything like that.

If anything we might make fun of some of us who can’t take anything spicier than mashed potatoes.

Dang. Now I’m hungry for some saag paneer.

TexMexBazooka,

Dunno what you’re talking about there champ

SHamblingSHapes, (edited )
@SHamblingSHapes@lemmy.one avatar

What is the punchline you see in American media about Indian food?

The stereotype of Indian cuisine is that it sometimes has really strong flavor, sometimes a strong smell to match. Those are not bad things.

I don’t have any overall negative associations with Indian food. There are certainly dishes that don’t appeal to me, but if anyone wanted to go to an Indian restaurant for dinner, I would say “yes, please”.

Edit: I see some comments about “spicy diarrhea” jokes. I see those as a function of people not acclimated to spicy food, not that the spicy food itself is bad. I’m impressed by people who can eat full spicy level Indian food. I would be on a toilet for a day if I ate fully spicy level; that’s my problem, not the fault of Indian cuisine overall.

lukecooperatus,

No amount of acclimation will stop an ulcer from reacting badly to spicy food. There are plenty of people who love spicy hot food but physically can’t eat it, unfortunately.

Ithorian,
@Ithorian@hexbear.net avatar

Indian food is the best on earth! In addition to what trabpukcip said Indian food smells a lot more strongly than the average american garbage, so if you’re heating up indian food at work the whole place knows what you’re having for lunch. Thats a big part of what gets joked about.

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