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What foods have you only started to eat in later life?

(62 Posts)
Sazz1006 Thu 03-May-18 14:44:44

At the tender age of 61, I have started to eat beetroot for the first time in my life! I think I was put off by the vinegary stuff being put on our school dinner plates with mashed potatoes that stained the potatoes pink and have never eaten it until recently.
The other things I really would like to like and am revving myself up for trying are boiled or poached eggs. They look so tempting but I just can’t bring myself to eat egg white! I quite enjoy scrambled egg or the occasional omelette.
Anyone else liking a type of food for the first time?

annodomini Tue 08-May-18 08:39:37

I've always disliked beetroot, but recently I had some in a salad with goats cheese and thought it was a perfect partnership. However, I still can't face the pickled variety.

Lovetopaint037 Tue 08-May-18 08:03:53

Swiss chard from M &S. dark green leaves and coloured stalks. Really lovely.

icanhandthemback Mon 07-May-18 22:43:47

I've just started enjoying ginger as long as it's not too strong. I am finding that I am not enjoying mushrooms as much as I used to, nor tomatoes.

SueDonim Mon 07-May-18 21:46:45

I tried fresh turmeric root this weekend. I have to say, it didn't have the flavour of dried turmeric but maybe I didn't use enough.

I do have indelibly yellow-stained finger nails, though, from preparing it without wearing gloves. Good thing I'm going to get my nails painted on Wednesday! grin

Jalima1108 Mon 07-May-18 20:55:40

I ate liver when I was a child and when a young adult - but I cannot eat it now.

Blondiescot Mon 07-May-18 20:43:22

Liver! I loathed it with a passion as a child - my mother used to try to force me to eat it and I avoided it like the plague for years until we went on holiday to Turkey and I was persuaded to try some there. I loved it - the way they cook it is so different - and now I even do it that way sometimes at home (when I can find really fresh lambs' liver, not an easy task now that there are so few "proper" butchers around now).

Craicon Mon 07-May-18 15:25:13

Re: goats cheese. My friend keeps goats and makes her own soft goats cheese that is creamy and delicious. One thing she’s told me is that the strong ‘goaty’ flavoured goats cheese is due to the male goats being allowed to mix with the female goats and their odour permeates they milk.
My friend only keeps the female goats and so borrows the males from other farmers just for breeding. They don’t stay out in the fields with the ladies.
I used to buy Rosary goats cheese in Waitrose when in the UK as this is similar to my friend’s goat cheese and has a slight fresh lemony tang to it.

Craicon Mon 07-May-18 15:17:21

I’ve reported the spammer.

Ahoua994 Mon 07-May-18 15:09:52

Message deleted by Gransnet. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

SueDonim Sun 06-May-18 23:32:35

I'm sensing the Emperor's new clothes here, Petra!

petra Sun 06-May-18 21:46:11

SueDonim
Your right. I bought a stater kit and couldn't wait to taste this 'miraculous food'
Its yogurt

SueDonim Sun 06-May-18 18:30:45

I've just today tried kefir. It tastes exactly the same as my home made yogurt!

travelsafar Sun 06-May-18 16:45:10

Tomatoes. As a child i never liked them. But as i got older i tried tinned ones and liked those. Then i graduated to cooked fresh ones and i still to this day cook them, leave them to go cold and eat them with salads.Yesterday for the first time ever i ate three cherry tomatoes.I disguised them with salad cream but i ate them. I hope to go on to larger ones this summer as i grow them every year in the greenhouse.

lovebeigecardigans1955 Sun 06-May-18 16:27:21

Asparagus, lettuce, green beans - not very adventurous am I?

petra Sat 05-May-18 22:52:11

NonnaW
If you liked the raw oysters try cooking them. Make a tempura batter and deep fry.
Another favourite of ours is Octopus stew. Cooked very very slowly, delicious.

Cold Sat 05-May-18 18:53:26

There is such a huge increase in foods available these days - but these days I really like

- the huge variety of grains - quinoa, bulgur, giant cous cous

- Japanese food like sushi and yakiniku

- Thai food

- different types of pickled herring (after moving to Scandinavia)

Eglantine21 Sat 05-May-18 18:45:12

Well I tried chickpeas a couple of days ago. I spent all of yesterday in the loo. Won’t be doing that again?

ginny Sat 05-May-18 16:02:41

Lots of things that were not available when I was a child. I’ll try most things. The main thing I eat now that I hated as a child are salad items , lettuce, radish, cucumber etc.

SueDonim Sat 05-May-18 14:38:32

Try this, Kookim. www.gransnet.com/info/acronyms

kookim Sat 05-May-18 14:17:43

Please help I am beginning to feel stupid. I am having difficulty with all these initials for words. It takes me longer to work out what some of them mean than it would for me to read the actual words. I always thought I was fairly good at the English language.

paddyann Sat 05-May-18 00:36:07

my diet has become much more limited as I've got older .I became vegetarian in my early 30's and didn't eat any meat until I hit 50 ,then I found most meats difficult to digest so have very small amounts but only rarely.Never eat fowl ..never have ..of any kind .Dont eat goats cheese and only limited cheese maybe once every couple of weeks.Little dairy though I do make an effort as my late mum avoided it for weight reasons all her life and had crippling osteoporosis in later years .I find my diet is quite limited now through choice though it has not made a difference to my weight though I'm doing the 16/8 diet plan .I'm losing very little very slowly ,I do need to lose weight because of a herniated disc.All advice welcomed

LynneB59 Fri 04-May-18 22:00:56

There are lots of foods I DON'T like... offal, rabbit, any pork products (pork pie, ham, pork, bacon), shellfish, lamb, avocado, olives, Feta cheese, burgers, sausages, margarines, chips, liquorice.

Breda Fri 04-May-18 21:53:34

G&T - discovered it about 12 months ago!

Sazz1006 Fri 04-May-18 21:27:42

I’ve boiled many an egg for husbands 1 and 2 and 2 sons but just never eaten them! When I was a very little girl (about 3) I was at an ‘auntie’s’ as we always called our parent’s friends and was offered a fried egg. I politely refused saying ‘no thank you, I don’t like eggs flat on a plate’ and since then fried eggs have always been known as ‘eggs flat on a plate’

LynneB59 Fri 04-May-18 18:44:17

At the age of 61, you've never had a boiled egg?! What a sheltered life! I'm 59 and I've tried most foods, but I recently ate Kangeroo steak for the first time. Not bad, but I prefer beef.