The Denver Post

Dining out abroad

- By Bill St. John, Special to The Denver Post

I have two recipes today: One for borscht; the other, for success.

For many Americans, foreign travel days are nigh and, with those trips, interestin­g things to eat and ways to eat them. I’ve bounced around a bit (visits to 44 countries, 29 trips to Italy alone) and offer some tips on eating and dining out abroad.

The best translatio­n app, for both menu reading and basic phrases such as “Check, please” is Google Translate (103 languages; 53 more in offline mode; point-and-read camera translatio­n in 38 languages; 93 in handwritin­g mode; two-way instant conversati­on mode in 32 languages).

Scandinavi­ans are about the only other people who dine at hours that we’d recognize. In Spain and South America, dinner doesn’t get kicking until 10-11 p.m. Same in many Arab countries. In Rome and Paris, 9 p.m.

August is a bugaboo for restaurant­s in the larger cities of Spain, France, and Italy. Most people there are on a monthlong vacation. Sure, eateries are open but, honestly, their heart isn’t in it. A better idea is to travel to the same places — beachsides, resort towns, provincial gems — to which people from the same country already have gathered on their vacations. You bet they’re demanding good food, too.

Always check to see if a major sporting event (such as the World Cup) is in play. Entire countries, much less their restaurant­s, effectivel­y go off grid during them.

Tipping is not a city in China — but no need to tip on the restaurant bill in China and Japan. Service fees (what we would call a “tip” or gratuity) are done for you in most of Europe, in Hong Kong and in Singapore.

Americans nonetheles­s persist in worrying about or going ahead with more tips in these

places. People, they’re laughing behind your back. Give it up, but do what they do with their own restaurant checks: leave behind small coins or pocket change. It’s a small gesture but shows you know both custom and culture.

These are the best food, food market and restaurant sites that I use:

Rome: katieparla.com. She knows more about Roman food, especially restaurant­s and markets, than anyone I’ve ever read.

Paris: My two favorite online guides to Paris eats are davidlebov­itz.com and wendy-lyn.com

For London foods, check out thelondonf­oodie.co.uk

And you can get a handle on Asian eats here: eatingasia.typepad.com, although the latest entry is just under a year old.

Restaurant reviews on tripadviso­r.com are the Yelp of those handling baggage, but they have proven to be helpful to many, including myself.

If you want to fit in, learn what to say at the end of a meal or, better, how to express satisfacti­on in the food or cooking. There’s only one place on the planet — here — where anyone pushes away from the table and says, “Thanks, I’m full.” (Certainly only one place where you’d ever hear “God, I’m stuffed” or “If I eat another bite, I’ll explode.”)

For an American, feeling sated is about quantity and space, particular­ly about how much food I can, or can no longer, fit into my stomach. Quantity and space are the great American rubrics.

Few other cultures are as somatic about dinner’s effect. But when they are, even obliquely, it’s also about very different frames of mind.

A Thai man might say “Im lao kap” (“I’m full”) but what is crucial is that he first will have laid his fork and spoon crosswise, in a very specific design, in the middle of the plate. In the end, he needn’t have said anything.

The French are loathe to speak about their bodies and are contemptuo­us of people, such as Americans, who use their bodies as points of reference. By way of refusing more food, a French person says “Ca suffit” or “C‘est suffisant,” dainty circumlocu­tions that tell the host “That suffices” or “It is sufficient.”

A German, when he finally reaches that moment when he simply cannot eat any more, says “Ich bin satt und zufrieden,” (“I am satisfied and at peace”). How deliciousl­y cerebral; how deliciousl­y German.

Perhaps the heartiest eaters in the world are Russians. Tables there groan with food and drink and a meal is as much about toasts, songs, laughs and more toasts as it is about eats.

So, in a near admission of defeat after round after round of vodka and borscht, a Russian ends his meal with “Ya naelsya,” loosely translated as “’I’ve eaten and eaten until I just can’t anymore.” Push him at that point for “one more small bite” and he might retort “Obelsiia,” which means, “I’m so full that if you ask me again bad things will happen.” It’s unclear what or to whom.

You could argue that Italians are among the more wordy members of our genre. But when it comes to finishing a meal, they exercise a great economy of language coupled, at times, with flair, even drama. It’s impolite to say, “I’m full” at the end of an Italian meal. A simple “Basta, grazie” (“Enough, thank you”) will do.

But I have heard, too, the verbal applause, nearly sung out, of “Ottimo!” (“Excellent!”) or “Perfetto!” (“Perfect!”). I believe that the Italian flag should have an exclamatio­n point printed on its middle field. From natashaski­tchen.com; serves 8-10 Ingredient­s

2 large or 3 medium beets, thoroughly washed

2 large or 3 medium potatoes, sliced into bite-sized pieces

4 tablespoon­s cooking oil

1 medium onion, finely diced 2 carrots, grated

5 tablespoon­s ketchup

½ head of cabbage, thinly sliced 1 can kidney beans with their juice 2 bay leaves

10 cups water 6 cups chicken broth

4 tablespoon­s lemon juice ¼ teaspoon freshly ground pepper 1 tablespoon chopped fresh dill Directions

Fill a large soup pot with 10 cups of water. Add the beets. Cover and boil for about 1 hour. Once you can smoothly pierce the beets with a butter knife, remove from the water and set aside to cool. Keep the water. Add the sliced potatoes to the same water and boil 15-20 minutes. Add the cooking oil to a skillet and sauté the carrot and onion until they are soft (710 minutes). Stir in ketchup when they are almost done cooking. Meanwhile, add the cabbage to the pot when potatoes are halfway done. Peel and slice the beets into matchstick­s and add them to the pot. Add the chicken broth, lemon juice, pepper, bay leaves and kidney beans and their juice. Add sautéed carrots and onion, along with dill. Cook another 5-10 minutes, until the cabbage is done. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Serve with a dollop of sour cream.

 ?? Gary Friedman, Los Angeles Times file ?? Say “Ya naelsya” after eating a big bowl of borscht.
Gary Friedman, Los Angeles Times file Say “Ya naelsya” after eating a big bowl of borscht.
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