Buzz Rules
To Infinity and Beyond
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2005
- Messages
- 14,195
Chinese
vs Japanese
cuisine. Which reigns supreme? Americanized versions included.





There is a Thai place near me that I drive past when I go into town. I've never tried Thai food and looking at the menu made me a bit more confused than it being helpful. Anything you'd recommend for someone to try to see if it's something they'd like?Neither are my favorite, though I haven't actually had much Japanese food to judge by (we ate at Teppanyaki in Epcot a couple times when I was a kid, but that's it). I'd pick Thai over both of them.
PHO is one of my favorite things in the world.I'd like to add Vietnamese as a choice, and hands down, would select that over Chinese or Japanese.
Can't go wrong with pad see ew. Or if you like a little more spice, drunken noodles (pad kee mao). Both are made with the wide, flat rice noodles, a soy sauce based sauce, vegetables, and optional meat. Drunken noodles also has some chilis and Thai basil. I also love Thai iced tea, but it's got a lot of sugar in it.There is a Thai place near me that I drive past when I go into town. I've never tried Thai food and looking at the menu made me a bit more confused than it being helpful. Anything you'd recommend for someone to try to see if it's something they'd like?
Thanks for the help! Certainly nice to have a jumping off point.Can't go wrong with pad see ew. Or if you like a little more spice, drunken noodles (pad kee mao). Both are made with the wide, flat rice noodles, a soy sauce based sauce, vegetables, and optional meat. Drunken noodles also has some chilis and Thai basil. I also love Thai iced tea, but it's got a lot of sugar in it.
We only had one Vietnamese restaurant in town and it closed during covid. We do have Chinese, Japanese, Thai and Korean but I miss Vietnamese (closest one is 15 minutes away).I'd like to add Vietnamese as a choice, and hands down, would select that over Chinese or Japanese.