JohnL wrote: ↑Thu May 23, 2019 12:08 pm
sungfw wrote: ↑Thu May 23, 2019 9:08 amThankfully, in my opinion, the explosion of interest in "real" food, with its championing to unapolegetically authentic ethnic cuisines, over the last 15-20 years is increasingly relegating "Westernized" menus to the dustbin of history.
Such things aren't necessarily going away - in some cases, they're starting to be recognized as a cuisine unto themselves, separate from but influenced by their ethnic roots. Various different "fusion" cuisines seem to be proliferating.
The food may not be going away, but the practice of having two menus, with the authentic menu being the "secret" one, is—or appears to be—dying. I can think of half a dozen Chinese restaurants in Durham, NC alone that have replaced their Westernized menu over the last 5 years or so with a bilingual version of their formerly "secret" menu, updated to include a few perennial "traditional" "Chinese" favorites (sweet and sour pork/chicken/shrimp, Kung Pao chicken/beef/shrimp, General Tso chicken/beef/shrimp,
etc.).
I've noticed the same thing happening across the country when I'm traveling and revisit restaurants that used to have two menus.
Fusion cuisine has its place, and some of it can be quite exquisite. (Szechuan salt-and-pepper soft shell crab or
char siu braised pork belly tacos, anyone?) But it's nice to be able to walk into a Chinese restaurant and order straight off the menu and be served something that at least approaches authentic instead of some bastardized abomination from La Choy hell.