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Laporkan kesalahan penerjemahan
A ton of stuff in the us, for instance, is like a week or a month out of date by the time you get it. Even when it's produced locally. Same issue with brie that tastes like ammonia (piss.)
It's a bit challenging as a food, but the good stuff is good.
nottwo! not twue!
Maybe like Grits or something idk. We eat weird stuff too.
From the pictures, it looks like old-ass beans that were sitting in the back of your fridge for 3 weeks.
fermented soybeans with some sticky stuff on it (that looks like melted cheese). I tried the frozen supermarket edition... It's Japanese.
Apparently it's the highest source of vitamin K2 available, and some other good stuff.
Not to naysay this idea, because it does tend to be true. People like the things that comfort them, make them nostalgic, fit their preconceived routines, etc.
Just, not every culture is as locked into one kind of cuisine as your average island nation is. Which includes landlocked islands who are food deserts, like NK. Or places where shwarma and pita are staples because they're the only thing you can definitely find everywhere, for example.
It was probably on a boat for a month, then in storage and transfer for a few weeks before the market put it out. Same basic issue as domestic production in transport societies with very long-distance agricultural centers, like the US. Nobody's really importing natto from okinawa to Nagano, for example, but most US food travels that much or more.
Typically it has a 1-3 month life frozen, and Japan rarely produces the 3 month variety.
Very healthy food, but if you eat more than a kilo or so a day bad stuff can happen.