I know it's been said before, but it's probably worth noting that depending on the nature of the food poisoning, it's possible that you ingested the offending item up to a full week before you got sick. So it's difficult/impossible to pinpoint the source (though you may have your suspicions) without cross-referencing multiple people.
My worst meal was in Shenzhen at a restaurant called First Work Team. Apparently it's a chain of Chinese theme restaurants based on dining during the cultural revolution. People ate in rooms that were supposed to resemble spartan city dwellings of the period. Personally, I think the "theme" was an excuse to avoid any maintenance. I really enjoy the ramshackle hole in the wall places I've hit in China over the years (and have had some of my best meals in some of the dirtiest little caves), but our room was about 10x10, the walls were bare concrete, there were no windows, the lighting was provided by a pair of dim, exposed bulbs and the staff would occasionally peek in through a small opening in the large, wooden door. It wasn't a dining room. It was a prison cell.
Our first course consisted of some sort of starchy tuber I couldn't identify. It was boiled, completely unseasoned (by anything... literally. No salt, nothing.), and totally bland by nature. I was told this was commonly consumed during the famines when there wasn't enough rice to go around. The menu contained a myriad of pictures, as is quite common in China (even on the Chinese-only menus), except that in lieu of photographs, the pictures were illustrations of assorted wildlife in their natural habitats. After my host ordered, I attempted to ascertain what we'd be having.
"A water bird."
"Duck?"
"No... bigger."
"Goose?"
"No... like a goose. But white."
"Uh...
swan?!?"
"Yes! Swan!"
I was excited about this! I'd never had swan. It arrived, sizzling in a wok, which was set in the center of the table. It was also barely seasoned, but had been stir-fried over high heat for what I'm sure was a very long time. It was tough to the point of being almost impossible to chew, made more difficult by the fact that it was still in pieces on the bone (ordinarily, huge fan of on the bone... but not when I don't possess the jaw strength to tear it free). It was also
greasy. And as it continued to cook, more fat rendered off, and the pieces that weren't eaten right away fell into the swan grease and continued to cook, getting tougher and greasier with every moment.
When we were done, the remainder of the meat was removed from the wok, leaving swan grease at least an inch deep in the bottom. A bowl of broth was added to the grease, and then a large plate full of at least seven different varieties of swan entrails. Again, I'm all for offal. But this just wasn't a pleasant way to experience it. It was a business lunch. Politely declining was not an option.
My meals in China over the years have been, almost without exception, incredible experiences. I suppose this was also incredible in its own right, just... well... alternatively incredible.
Last edited by
Dmnkly on February 26th, 2008, 9:37 am, edited 1 time in total.
Dominic Armato
Dining Critic
The Arizona Republic and
azcentral.com