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World Hum Selects the Eight Best Cities for Street Food

cart with rolls stacked in itWhen I was 22, I spent the summer in Indonesia. I was fresh out of college and looking for a little life experience before finding a job and getting down to the business of supporting myself and paying off those college loans. It wasn't an easy trip, but I've always been grateful to have had the experience of it. When I search back through my memories of that summer, one of the themes that surfaces first is food.

I particularly remember a fried chicken breast that a friend and I split early one morning. We had been on a bus all night and stopped in a tiny town for water, bus fuel and bathrooms. When we sleepily asked about food, we were taken to a three-sided tent, where an elderly woman fired up an oil-filled wok. Working quickly, she dropped a whole chicken breast (skin, bones and entire chest structure intact, nothing like the single plump chicken breasts we know here) into the the wok, moving it around occasionally with a handmade spider. When it was done, she wrapped it in a handful of banana leaves, we paid her the equivalent of $.85 and hurried back to the bus. It was delicious.

If you're the kind of traveler for whom the food is one of the most important parts of the journey, you should check out the World Hum's new feature on the Eight Best Cities for Street Food (congrats on your snazzy new look, World Hum!). Their contributing editor Terry Ward has compiled her street food memories from all over the globe, offering a collection of tempting and tasty tidbits that may just convince you that it's time to start planning another trip, just for a bite of the food she describes.

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Filed under: On the Blogs

How to husk corn and eat cheese in France

french cheeseAlthough not at the same time. The folks over at World Hum feature lots of wonderful information on traveling and things you should know before flying off to a new country. In a recent feature, a Terry Ward walks you through how to behave and what to expect when eating with your new French friends.

For those of you who are challenged when it comes to getting all the husk and silk off an ear of corn, wikiHow has some guidance for you, along with step-by-step instructions to ensure that you do it correctly. My favorite piece of wisdom from their article is how they instruct you to deal with any little critters you might find in your corn, "While they look unpleasant, there is no need to discard the ear. Just cut away the damaged portion." Waste not, want not!

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Filed under: On the Blogs

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