This has to do with with the mixture of honeys and apples being associated with Vermont in Japan, though I’m not quite sure how wildly known that is or why.
It’s because there was a book called “Folk Medicine: A Vermont Doctor’s Guide to Good Health” that kicked off a health fad called the “Vermont health system” in Japan. It included drinking apple cider vinegar and honey. The curry then appropriated the name for its health connotations.
I’m a huge fan of this style of curry, and went down a rabbit hole a few years ago learning lots of stuff about Japanese style curry.
TIL! Blows my mind as just yesterday I was buying some more S&B Gold at the store and was really curious about this brand. Cool insight.
You can get a similar vibe out of golden curry by peeling and pureeing a couple apples. I add them after the onions get soft and fry some moisture out of them before the water and tubers go in.
Like how KFC is associated with American Christmas in Japan?
https://www.timeout.com/tokyo/things-to-do/whats-the-deal-with-kfc-and-christmas-in-japan
OP’s mind is gonna be blown when they discover there are multiple different types of rice, too.
Why does it always need to be about best or most popular?
Maybe this tastes good in its own way, hits the spot in its own way, and that doesn’t diminish Indian/Thai/etc curry in any way.
Then again, I do favor Thai curry over Indian curry, which I’ve been told makes me a monster no one should listen to…
I do favor Thai curry over Indian curry, which I’ve been told makes me a monster no one should listen to…
What? Why, though???
I also prefer Thai curry, because Thai food is incredible. I mean, so is Indian food, but everyone has their own favorite flavor profiles.
Not to be confused with Vermont Carry, which is Constitutional or “permitless” carry of handguns.
If the cheese and syrup have taught me anything, it’s that everything made in Vermont is better.
I’ve had real Canadian maple syrup and it’s better than New Hampshire’s but not better than Vermont’s. Sorry, not sorry.
I’ve not actually had real Swiss cheese, though. Just the cheese we have here in the states that we call Swiss cheese, which is really just a single type of Swiss “invented” cheese but since it’s not actually made in Switzerland doesn’t really count. Because it’s based on bacterial cultures, it really does matter where it’s made. Wisconsin cheese is very good, but I can’t think of anything better than extra sharp Vermont cheddar. Ideally, I’d have both on the same board. 🤤
Cheese from protected origins aside, it’s actually pretty common for cheeses to be made in a fashion where the specific origin doesn’t matter in the modern world. For repeatability the bacteria involved for a certain style will often be isolated and artificially introduced into the dairy to ensure different batches have uniform characteristics. This also ensures the changing conditions don’t result in the cheese suddenly being different.
As a result it’s perfectly possible to use bacterial cultures from anywhere to make cheese somewhere else.
When it comes to Swiss cheese specifically, not even Switzerland claims that Swiss cheese needs to come from Switzerland. It’s usually accepted that it refers to Swiss-style cheeses. Switzerland would like the terms Emmentaler or Gruyère to be specific to Switzerland.
That very few countries agree with that request is a different matter.
In any case, “real Swiss cheese” makes about as much sense as “real Italian cheese” in reference to mozzarella.
If you’re celebrating Vermont cheese, you need to get out to Wisconsin. I’m a Minnesotan so it does pain me to say that they’re better than us at something, but Wisconsin cheese lives up to the hype.
I don’t know if that hold true here judging by the picture on the box. It looks like brown gravy.