the malaysian one is not quite correct. real malaysian don't normally eat that noodle in the morning,it's more of a dry noodle.the one depicted here is more of a dinner thingy. If it's rice, then the rice is cooked with coconut milk to give off a creamy flavour and not to forget spicy gravy.
Excuse me guy. Pls check this out. The traditional breakfast for Vietnamese is called " Pho". This link is an image about it cheers http://www.dinhduong.com.vn/files/u19/pho_24.jpg
The german one isn`t accurate either. Our Breakfast is pretty much the danish one, except for different bread rolls (ours are really crunchy). Well I mean three kinds of sausages and pumpernickel without Butter, that`s more of a stereotype than a brekki;-)
Being English I can confirm that's a decent looking full English on the plate in #1. Just get rid of the cup of hot chocolate and replace it with a mug of hot tea and totally bin the orange juice and your spot on, oh and add some fried bread and toast;).
in Turkey and Bulgaria .. normally this type of breakfast is served in the hotels
Some people here eat in the morning soup with in-gradients : milk, garlic, hot chili peppers, stomach offal, oil and drink 1-2 liters beer with that :)
Bolivian Salteñas are more of a mid-morning snack than breakfast. Breakfast is usually Tea, coffee, fresh bread, and maybe fruit. regardless though, they kick ass!
The Korean breakfast represented there is BiBimBop, mostly eaten as lunch or dinner. While Koreans don't particularly have a distinction between breakfast, lunch, and dinner, we don't eat such heavy meals for breakfast.
The Brazilian one is quite right, but Brazil is very, very big and different regions have different versions. The traditional popular breakfast is a little simple with just bread, butter, and coffee (black or with milk). Children can have Chocolate on their milk. Ham is for the rich people and cheese is almost alway very white and light.
In Greece we traditionally ate "trahanas" for breakfast. It's a wheat-based soup, similar in looks to the Icelandic breakfast above. Unfortunately, these days most Greeks don't eat breakfast at all, they just drink coffee. Kids are lucky if they get some milk too.
I don't know one Canadian who would eat all that food for breakfast. More apt to run into Tim Horton's and grab coffee/tea and a breakfast bun or doughnut. Or juice and cereal at home.
the malaysian one is not quite correct. real malaysian don't normally eat that noodle in the morning,it's more of a dry noodle.the one depicted here is more of a dinner thingy. If it's rice, then the rice is cooked with coconut milk to give off a creamy flavour and not to forget spicy gravy.
Excuse me guy. Pls check this out. The traditional breakfast for Vietnamese is called " Pho". This link is an image about it cheers http://www.dinhduong.com.vn/files/u19/pho_24.jpg
The german one isn`t accurate either. Our Breakfast is pretty much the danish one, except for different bread rolls (ours are really crunchy). Well I mean three kinds of sausages and pumpernickel without Butter, that`s more of a stereotype than a brekki;-)
Being English I can confirm that's a decent looking full English on the plate in #1. Just get rid of the cup of hot chocolate and replace it with a mug of hot tea and totally bin the orange juice and your spot on, oh and add some fried bread and toast;).
in Turkey and Bulgaria .. normally this type of breakfast is served in the hotels
Some people here eat in the morning soup with in-gradients : milk, garlic, hot chili peppers, stomach offal, oil and drink 1-2 liters beer with that :)
Bolivian Salteñas are more of a mid-morning snack than breakfast. Breakfast is usually Tea, coffee, fresh bread, and maybe fruit. regardless though, they kick ass!
The Korean breakfast represented there is BiBimBop, mostly eaten as lunch or dinner. While Koreans don't particularly have a distinction between breakfast, lunch, and dinner, we don't eat such heavy meals for breakfast.
The Brazilian one is quite right, but Brazil is very, very big and different regions have different versions. The traditional popular breakfast is a little simple with just bread, butter, and coffee (black or with milk). Children can have Chocolate on their milk. Ham is for the rich people and cheese is almost alway very white and light.
In Greece we traditionally ate "trahanas" for breakfast. It's a wheat-based soup, similar in looks to the Icelandic breakfast above. Unfortunately, these days most Greeks don't eat breakfast at all, they just drink coffee. Kids are lucky if they get some milk too.
I don't know one Canadian who would eat all that food for breakfast. More apt to run into Tim Horton's and grab coffee/tea and a breakfast bun or doughnut. Or juice and cereal at home.
But lot of them sounds great and consistant! (Have to try the American one one day)
And where is the Dutch? Bread with cheese lol
cheers
http://www.dinhduong.com.vn/files/u19/pho_24.jpg
Some people here eat in the morning soup with in-gradients :
milk, garlic, hot chili peppers, stomach offal, oil and drink 1-2 liters beer with that :)
cheers
http://newyork.seriouseats.com/2009/06/saravanaas-nyc-indian-breakfast-food-sara
vana-bhavan-murray-hill-manhattan.html
Children can have Chocolate on their milk.
Ham is for the rich people and cheese is almost alway very white and light.
Oh well, it's just 2 slices of bread with cheese, meat or jelly and coffee..
asi+Goreng+Indonesia.JPG
Indonesian breakfast