Travel
Related: About this forumIn Sicily, Tasting Seafood With a Skeptical Son
So heres the plan, I told my 8-year-old son, Luke. Were going to different restaurants every day and eat new things every meal.
"What do they eat in Sicily?
A lot of fish.
Cant you write about something else?
I am a passionate angler and writer on the oceans, and Sicily had been for me the coveted fishy bulls-eye at the center of the Mediterranean, a place where seafood is brought to table transformed by an ancient mélange of European and North African cookery. My son, though, has a landlubbers palate and a tendency toward the plain. But when opportunity arose to journey to Sicily, I decided it was time to escape our child-imposed culinary straitjacket.
On the advice of the cookbook author Nancy Harmon Jenkins, I chose four distinct centers of Sicilian cookery: Palermo, Trapani, Catania and the hill towns around Ragusa. Along the way my partner, Esther, and I would offer Luke tiny bribes: a soccer game in Palermo, a salt marsh with flamingos in Trapani, a hike up to Mount Etnas caldera. But the center of it all would be seafood, and lots of it.
http://www.nytimes.com/2015/10/18/travel/sicily-seafood-restaurants.html?
packman
(16,296 posts)I will do nothing but sing praises to you and the food. Hell, I'll even go Dutch on you.
Kids - I remember taking my nephew to a fairly high scale restaurant and urging him to try something different to broaden his palate. He order a creamy chicken dish and ran to the restroom to throw up after a few bites. Put a damper on the entire evening.
elleng
(136,833 posts)from NYTimes!
We did a fair amount of traveling when our kids were young, including 1 month around France before my older daughter's first grade. She ate ALL of my escargots in Paris and asked for MORE! NOT the same for her sister, who has more 'simple' tastes!!! They're both now feeding my little/baby grandkids and having fun, I think.
CTyankee
(65,279 posts)we eat a LOT of fish and seafood here (a blessing of living in New England) so I have developed a definite taste for it.
The other thing they eat in Sicily is their island's "dish": Pasta Norma (pasta with eggplant). Wow...