More accurately the title is Ten Foods, Drinks, and Destinations to Try Before You Die. I don’t presume that you are about to die, but let’s consider our mortality with a generous measure of humor. As Marcus Aurelius said, “Death smiles at us all. What can a man do, but smile back?” Or, as Seneca said, “Bibamus. Moriendum est,” “Dying is unavoidable. So let’s go get wasted.” A Christmas Bucket List!
I’ve had one shot. In a New York scotch bar. $30. Which is overpriced. A fifth of 25-year-old Macallan will run you about $600, but if you ever taste it, you’ll want more, never mind the price. It’s like drinking a campfire that hugs you and wants to be your friend.
If you want scenery, I recommend Loch Morlich in winter. It’s southeast of Aviemore. Snowy, with plenty of shallow streams to listen to (where do you think the distilleries bottle their whiskys?).
It has nothing to do with the clap. It is also called Plum Duff, and it is a dessert pudding with dried currants, custard, and rum. In the best restaurants, they add a generous douse of your favorite rum on top. As Robert Newton’s Long John Silver says, “That be what gives it the flavor! Ha haargh!”
Churrasco is no one dish, but a particularly Brazilian and Argentinian style of serving meat. These two countries are internationally known for great steaks, but have equally great pork, lamb, mutton, chicken and seafood. Some restaurants serve all you can eat, sliced fresh off the grill, along with corn, rice, and fresh fruits, especially mangoes. Belem is nicknamed “City of the Mango Trees.”
If you’ve always wanted to see the Amazon Jungle but don’t want to get eaten when you go into it, Belem is perfect. It is on the coast, but only 20 to 30 miles inland, you can charter cheap ferries down the Para and Tocantins Rivers. They are not technically tributaries of the Amazon River, but they are part of its estuary, and with just a short jaunt in a schooner, you can see all the jungle you ever wanted.
And you can’t imagine how deep, dark, and wild it is. Familiar with the Goliath Bird-eating Spider? You can see them climbing the trees at the edge of the water, from 50 feet away.
You can be assured of seeing the Amazon macaw, one of the most famous parrots in the world. Flocks of them flying over the rivers all the time, from jungle to jungle.
Pizza was invented in Napoli (Naples), by the poor class who had money only for bread dough, tomatoes, and cheese. So they put it all together and baked it.
Today, the most traditional pizza in America is still in New York City, but if you want it truly traditional, Napoli is the only choice. Any quaint, family-owned-and-operated restaurant in the city will serve you pizza to die for.
The reason pizza is the best in Napoli is because the tomatoes are San Marzano, grown on the south slopes of Vesuvius, in extremely fertile, volcanic soil, and the mozzarella cheese is made from the milk of the Campanian water buffalo, or “Mozzarella di Bufala Campana.”
How do you make pizza better? A view of Mount Vesuvius.
The Greeks know how to have fun, and if you can’t decide which you like more, mountains or a beach, just settle for both. Photographers have noted that they rarely employ their polarizing filters to enhance the colors of their photographs in the Aegean Sea. The ocean is nowhere bluer than it is around Greece. The woods and hills have their colors, and you’ll need sunglasses to handle them.
Lamb roasted on a spit outside is a Grecian tradition, and you haven’t lived until you’ve tried it cooked by Grecian grandmothers. It is typically rubbed with apples several times during cooking, and served with ghanoush, vegetable-stuffed grape leaves, Greek red wine, and homemade baklava (not that junk you’ve eaten in most American restaurants). There are plenty of quaint beachfront restaurants in Stavros, in the shadow of the Akrotirian mountains. You’re free to climb them and see the ruins of the 5th or 6th Century Catholic monastery founded by St. John the Hermit.
Before, during and after supper, as you will be eating with friendly strangers, locals and tourists, you’ll be encouraged to drink ouzo, a Greek liquor that tastes like aniseed. Then you can join everyone in a dance around the fire on the beach in the sirtaki, the famous dance at the end of Zorba the Greek, with Anthony Quinn, which was filmed in Stavros.
Vienna is world famous for its desserts, and sachertorte, at the Sacher Hotel, is world famous among the world famous desserts. It is dry chocolate cake, with apricot jam between layers, and dark chocolate icing on the top and sides. The only place outside Vienna where you can find it is a Sacher shop in Bolzano, Italy.
It is served with whipped, heavy cream, which balances its dry flavor. While you’re there, pay your respects to Mozart, Beethoven, Schubert, Brahms, Strauss, et al. at the Central Cemetery. Mozart is buried somewhere in St. Marx Cemetery, but has a monument near Beethoven and Schubert’s graves.
Go see an opera or a symphony. Beethoven’s Ninth, or Mozart’s “Don Giovanni.”
Germany has its fair share of a claim to the world’s wines. Trockenbeerenauslese is extraordinarily sweet, white wine, with so much sugar in it that it’s syrupy. If you’ve had a taste of bad wine and lost your liking for it, this will get you back on track.
It is expensive, but can have as much as 300 grams of sugar per bottle, which will give you diabetes if you want it to. Alcohol content is therefore quite low as wines go, which means you can drink quite a lot before you get drunk. It makes a great dessert in itself, and goes very well with a local pretzel, a fresh, big one, with salt to cut the wine’s sweetness.
And if you’re looking for grand scenery, the Bavarian Alps might give you diabetes, too. Try the Black Forest, for starters.
Perhaps you aren’t as big a fan of mountains as you are of the tropics. Harbor Island is world famous for its pink-sand beaches, and Dunmore Town caters to tourists with outstanding seafood restaurants.
Have your fruit of the sea brought out to you on the beach in the late afternoon, and the sunset will be behind you, over the palm and coconut trees. There is a lot of quartz in the sand, and the sunlight makes it glow, lighter where it’s dry, and darker in the surf.
If you’re lucky, the wild horses will walk up out of the surf and give you a sniff.
At least one supper you eat should have the greatest wine in the world. Domaine de la Romanee-Conti is a very small vineyard, only 4 acres, and only produces about 5,000 bottles a year, but those 5,000 have a taste beyond comprehension.
Rather than try to describe the taste, since I haven’t had any, suffice to say, a very good vintage will be 20 to 30 years old and cost about $900 a glass. Or about $3,600 a bottle. Some vintages have sold at auction for $14,000 a bottle.
If you have the money, you have to try it. I prefer natural scenery with my suppers, but if you prefer art, Paris is a given. Plenty of restaurants there serve Romanee-Conti. Or you could go southeast to Grenoble, find a great restaurant, then hike into the Chartreuse Mountains. Spectacular.
For good and all, now and forever, the greatest spaghetti in the world is in Italy, and the finest restaurants are in Bologna. Its nickname is “di Grassa,” “Bologna the Fat.”
Sure, the Chinese invented the noodles, but tomato sauces are expressly Italian. New York City ain’t got nothin’ on Bologna.
I’ve been there, I’ve had several spaghetti recipes, but the best by far, you will find at Clorofilla, Strada Maggiore, 64, 40125 Bologna, Bologne. It’s almost as good as my recipe.
Bologna is a magnificently beautiful city, and not far north of some good mountain vistas. Or you could take a leisurely drive over the Appennines to Firenze (Florence) and see the original Statue of David, among other works of art.
While you’re in Bologna or Florence, be sure to catch Verdi’s Requiem Mass. When you leave, you’ll go to confession, I ain’t kiddin’ ya.







![Eleuthera Point Harbour Island Bahamas[1]](http://listverse.files.wordpress.com/2009/12/eleuthera_point__harbour_island__bahamas1-tm.jpg?w=400&h=300)






















@Dk (236):
“Did you know that a glass of wine daily is actually recommended sometimes for people who are at risk for heart disease?”
Who says you don’t need it as a medicine?
When we fall ill, we all take drugs, don’t we?
So if we can have alcohol “just for the taste of it” then we can surely have two snorts each day of ***** “just for the fun of it”,eh?
And if avoidance of a controversy is a reason for not including drugs, then I am sorry, this list doesn’t do justice to its intent.
That’s what I have been saying all long…but everybody seems to be ignoring this coz no one has an answer you see.
A wonderful list. I’ll set out on completing it immediately!
@El the erf (241): Alcohol is legal. There is nothing remotely immoral or unethical about the moderate use of alcohol.
Also, ***** is not snorted, it is smoked, you *****tarded halfwit. You sure are an expert on drug use, aren’t you?
Furthermore, everyone is ignoring you because you are an idiot, not because you’ve brought up any sort of controversial question that cannot be answered.
well i dont know what any of thus is accept for the pizza
@El the erf (241):
“And if avoidance of a controversy is a reason for not including drugs, then I am sorry, this list doesn’t do justice to its intent.”
Read what the listmaker, flamehorse, wrote at the top of the page: “More accurately the title is Ten Foods, Drinks, and Destinations to Try Before You Die.” So it does do justice to its intent. I’m sure a regular 10 delights list would include things like *****, sky-diving, punching Michael Moore, etc. not just food.
“So if we can have alcohol “just for the taste of it” then we can surely have two snorts each day of ***** “just for the fun of it”,eh?”
Was you dropped on the head as a child? Did you once hold your breath that little bit too long? Cos seriously, snorting *****?! You’ve just invalidated all your arguments by yet again proving your ignorance. And if ***** did taste as nice as an expensive Scotch then it might have made the list. But it doesn’t, so it isn’t. Its so simple we could call it El the erf-simple.
Fantastic list!
I do think everyone should try ***** at least once before they die. And afterwards they should listen to their favourite record.
As Italian, I can assure you all we have an uncountable number of goodies that would bring to tears an ogre in bliss.
I know at least 5 pizzerias that can serve you more than 50 different kind of pizzas (wonderful pizzas!).
Also there are special restaurants that can serve you dozens of different bruschette, others have even over 100 different pastas.
Each city here has special dishes that come form our traditions and that can be even 1000 years old recipes.
(note: I am just proud of our dishes but I also love chinese food as much as indian one)
read the first post about the whisky (can’t be arsed scrolling back up to see if that’s the correct spelling) pretetious *****e, i’m scottish, love whisky and yet i have never felt the way that this ***** describes it about anything never mind some *****ing water with some barley does, ***** off
Quick post before I go…
Peru has some of the best food you´ll ever taste. Forget the churrasco (not bad), pizza or pasta (we have some incredible varieties here also) but it doesnt compare to the local food. Ceviche, tiradito, conchitas a la parmesana, lomo saltado, ají de gallina, tacu tacu… May I recommned a culinary trip to Peru? Believe me you wont regret it (save for all the extra weight you´ll gain from eating non-stop). Seriously.
Oh, and some of the best lobster and prawns I´ve had was sitting on a beach in Jimbaran Bay, Bali (Indonesia). You pick the lobsters/prawns you want to eat and they are grilled fresh. You sit on the beach with the littl tiki torches and enjoy heaven….
A D O B O …..
Everything sounds delicious, but the best meal I ever ate was in the Yucatan Jungle, on the coast. I had stopped at a small hotel, with no electricity, no phone, no kitchen. I wondered how I was going to eat.
As soon as it was falling dark, big umbrellas started to go up on the beach, with huge grills just a few feet outside them. Fishing boats started to pull up to the shore and unload their cargo to the chefs, who immediately cleaned and threw the fish on the grill.
Other men were cutting up pieces of fresh fruits, or vegetables to go on the grill, while beer waited in icy baths.
The moment something was ready it was plated and presented to you, along with a beer (well, with many beers). The freshness of everything was incredible, it was almost alive in your mouth!
I never did know what fish it was I ate, but it didn’t matter. It was the best food I have ever eaten. If I ever again find myself in the Yucatan jungle, I will find that hotel, that umbrella eatery, and experience heaven once more.
Where is ćevap? Or burek?
It;s better to call it Greek than Grecian.
Or even better Hellenic, which is the right name to define something of Greek (Hellenic) origin.
Oh, and that spotted dick thing looks absolutely disgusting…
@GTT (255): I’ve never seen a spotted dick that DIDN’T look disgusting…
Amazon macaw? There’s many species of Amazon parrots (in the Amazona genus) and many species of macaw that live in the Amazon, but there is no bird called an Amazon macaw. But there are quite a few macaws that live in northern Brazil, including the extremely familiar scarlet macaw.
I know this article is on world delights and not proper avian nomenclature, but attention to accurate details is one thing that sets Listverse apart from other list sites I enjoyed until I couldn’t handle the factual errors.
Must be nice to have the money to go around the world, eating the finest cuisine and alchohol available. *sigh*
This message was brought to you by a Pennsylvanian city boy.
@katary (6):
Fully agree that Hangi in New Zealand or Umu in the south pacific should be here, dam food tastes so much better when its cooked in the ground.
I find it really weird that I read this list today of all days, as I just tried #5, courtesy of my boss!
A lot of this stuff looks fantastic and happily nothing here makes use of questionable methods (foix gras)or endangered animals/plants. While some of it is probably expensive, it’s within reach of the average middle-class Joe.
Also, drugs work in an entirely different way than alcohol, so it’s like comparing a lizard to a bear. I know, beating a dead horse.
re: plasmatwa2 (1)
Poutine Yesss!!!! Menoum Menoum!!
Fire-Roasted Lamb is in Turkish cuisine. Please edit. Thanks.
Well, this was very entertaining, especially the comments.
I have one quibble – you shouldn’t put something on a list like this when you haven’t tried it yourself. I’m thinking of item 2. For all you know, it could be horrible!
@Sailortiger (132): Sailortiger, what do you mean we dont have milk cows? Of course we have. My father had a cow farm, and all the cows were milk cows. And milk is not expensive at all. o.O
Churrasco is typical from the south. Belem is in the north of the country, so I guess you got mixed up on this one. If you want a real, traditional, great churrasco, you should go to Rio Grande do Sul, that’s the state with the best churrasco in the country. Forget about São Paulo, they have churrasco there, but is not the same.
hahahahaahahahahaahahahha sacre bleu a ke tempos nao ouvia esa expressao
I hate being the quibbling type, but since you opened the door with identifying the provenance of noodles in the #1 entry… as it turns out Tomatoes are about as Italian as noodles are. In fact they’re indigenous to the Americas and the classic tomato sauce would be any typical Mexican Salsa (not all of which have to be spicy btw).
In any case, I love the lists and really enjoy coming to this site. Thanks for all the research!
true love of a beautiful woman.
i watched a special on the history channel that was talking a bout the history of spaggheti and there are a lot of historians that actually believe that pasta popped up in a lot of different places independently, because of the ingredients that were available and because of how. easy pasta is to make
how bout a rare strain of pot?
I’ve had Sachertorte and it’s nothing special. Nice certainly but not a must-try-before-death experience.
I’ve had pizza in Napoli, Eh.
It’s actually called “Spotted Dog” and was a popular item in the British Navy and frequently mentioned in the Aubrey/Maturin novels of Patrick O’Brien.
Churraso in Brazil is basically BBQ. The restaurants where they serve it are “Churrascarias” Traditionally, it is meat grilled on skewers over an open fire. In most places waiters come to your table and cut you slices of anything they have. They’ll keep coming until you beg for mercy. Yes, it’s all delicious and will vary from place to place.
Finally, Belem is not the place to see the Amazon. Manaus is equally accessible by air and inexpensive riverboat trips of a few hours to a week or more will show you all of the flora and fauna you like as well as the local society,
it’z very usefull information. but i expect more details..
Mical
‘It’s almost as good as my recipe.’ Completely unnecesary. Cheapened the article a little…
But, otherwise, the list items all seem very tempting to try! Especially number one-I absolutely LOVE spaghetti.
Brazilian meat and Argentine meat are not equally good… Argentine meat tops Brazilian meat any day, its not even a debatable issue
@logar Then by your definition, the history of the earth in it's entirety is a "moment"… Everything is a moment. You are technically correct, but you are practically wrong. Most people would use an alternate definition- a discernable, particular instant in time. It's like having a list entitled "10 greatest vertebrates" and having it all about accomplished humans- technically correct, but not what the readers are expectin
pişirme Oyunları
Churrasco and Chimarrão (the real Brazilian one) is from Rio Grande do Sul… But of course you can find it anywhere in Brazil… Nomnomnom!!!
this English pudding looks a bit weird but I would give it at try!! Cheers Mate
Nice list but I am not a fan of Sacher torte :/
This list is ALL OVER THE PLACE. I appreciate the list itself; the items are interesting. But there's a definite organizational problem in each entry. Some talk more about location than food, some ask random questions that aren't really relevant, and some go on tangents that don't really go anywhere.
On top of that, the author is quite a bit full of himself, don't you think?
A adjustment:
“Churrasco
Porto Alegre, Brazil”
to prevent the tourists miss this marvel.
lol at the spaghetti bolognese picture.
they look nice