{"id":21268,"date":"2019-10-17T08:00:29","date_gmt":"2019-10-17T15:00:29","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/moneyppl.com\/?p=21268"},"modified":"2024-05-01T01:56:35","modified_gmt":"2024-05-01T08:56:35","slug":"luxury-foods-only-millionaires-can-afford-to-eat","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/dev.moneyppl.com\/luxury-foods-only-millionaires-can-afford-to-eat\/21268\/","title":{"rendered":"Luxury Foods Only Millionaires Can Afford To Eat"},"content":{"rendered":"
News outlets like to pick on Millennials for eating avocado toast and drinking Starbucks coffee. Meanwhile, wealthy foodies are going above and beyond to spend outrageous amounts of money on once-in-a-lifetime experiences. <\/span><\/p>\n We’re going to cover some of the most expensive foods in the world. Be sure to read until the end to see which food item costs <\/span>one million dollars. <\/span><\/em>Check out these<\/span> <\/span><\/em>46 luxury foods only millionaires can afford to eat. Maybe you have tried some, or you can one day.<\/span><\/p>\n Suppose you’re used to buying a large shaker of Morton salt for pennies a pound. With a 26 oz. container typically costing as little as 89 cents, $40\/lb. for salt most likely seems outrageous. However, it’s a fairly reasonable price given the special nature of the Japanese seaweed salt called Amabito No Moshio. This salt has a long history in Japan. People have made it using the same traditional method for hundreds of years. It is laborious and expensive to produce. While the $40 price tag is high, you can find it in smaller quantities online. That way, it is reasonably accessible to try a fun addition to your favorite dishes.<\/span><\/p>\n You may know Amabito No Moshio as seaweed salt. It’s the earliest known sea salt produced and consumed by humans, with evidence of its origin being over 2,500 years ago. Historically, people have mined salt in most of the world, while evaporating sea salt is a (relatively) more recent endeavor. People make the salt in an incredibly labor-intensive process that involves spreading seaweed on the beach between storms and rinsing the sheets in saltwater pools. They boil the brine with the seaweed bits, making a unique dark green, flavorful seaweed and ash-infused salt.<\/span><\/p>\n Don’t panic; this isn’t the guinea pig of your childhood or that you see in the window at your local Petco. Cuy<\/span>, the Spanish word for guinea pig meat, has been an Ecuadorian and Peruvian delicacy for hundreds of years. People make it from a wild guinea pig native to the area. It is much larger and more aggressive than the domesticated guinea pig we think of as children’s pets. They prize it as traditional meat that’s ecologically sustainable. Despite its seeming connection to the adorable pet, it is becoming increasingly available at South American restaurants throughout the United States.<\/span><\/p>\n One Houston, Texas, restaurant called Andes after the South American mountain chain is now offering a special two-person dinner of <\/span>cuy<\/span><\/em> for $60. Two people who can comfortably share the roasted <\/span>cuy<\/span><\/em> should hopefully banish any final thoughts of the pet guinea pig from your mind as these animals are far larger and far less timid and cute than their domesticated relatives. <\/span>Cuy<\/span><\/em> is a surprisingly healthy choice, boasting more protein and lower cholesterol than even white meat chicken. Traditionally, <\/span>cuy<\/span><\/em> is served fried whole with corn and potatoes. While some consider the meat a bit stringy, others praise the crispy fried meat as a delicacy.<\/span><\/p>\n In China, shark fin soup is eaten during special occasions like weddings. If you’re looking to try it in the United States, you’re going to have difficulty getting ahold of it. In New York City, you can try a bowl of shark fin soup, but it will<\/span> set you back $65<\/span><\/a>. While it may seem appealing and exciting to eat shark fin soup, you might want to avoid this one if you are pregnant, nursing, or immunocompromised. Sharks contain a<\/span> dangerous amount of mercury,<\/span><\/a> so it might make you sick since mercury accumulates in fatty body tissues.<\/span><\/p>\n If you’re willing to take on the mercury risk, you may also be facing legal challenges in the effort to find shark fin soup in the United States in the coming years. The soup is essential in Chinese culture as a symbol of prosperity and a source of various health benefits. However, animal rights proponents in the United States are working to ban shark fin soup throughout the country as the soup’s popularity drives the shark fin trade, which harms shark populations. In particular, New York is eyeing legislation to outlaw the soup in any of the state’s restaurants.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Spending $90 on a single cookie sounds outrageous, until you see the work of<\/span> Antolpo<\/span><\/a>. The owner creates one-of-a-kind works of art that just so happen to be edible. These cookies are highly beautiful. You might even feel guilty about eating them. It would not be the sort of cookie you casually buy with a cup of coffee. Each one of their handcrafted pieces is typically wrapped in plastic before going inside an elegant gift box. While $90 may seem like a lot at first, consider how much you would pay for an original painting or drawing for a similar size.<\/span><\/p>\n The baker lives in Japan, and there’s no physical bakery where people can buy these cookies. Every item is custom-ordered via email and the creator ships their cookie creations locally. So if you want to try it, you’re going to have to take a trip to Japan and maybe smuggle some back on the plane with you. The incredible works of art undoubtedly take upwards of a couple of hours each to prepare, so the more intricate designs are easily worth the high price tag for the cost of labor the artist puts into each edible work of art.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n One of Canada’s signature dishes is poutine made out of french fries covered with cheese curds, meat, veggies, and a rich, savory gravy. The<\/span> Buzzfeed Worth It<\/span><\/a> crew showed up to try the $100 Poutine at<\/span> Poutineville<\/span><\/a> in Montreal, Quebec. The massive Canadian feast, called the Heart Attack, comes in at a whopping 15 pounds and will take an entire crowd of people to eat it in one sitting. Even though this poutine is expensive, it may be worth splitting among several friends who love poutine. It’s delicious and worth spending more than your average $5 to $10 poutine.<\/span><\/p>\n Unlike many of the expensive items on this list, this poutine isn’t costly because of its ingredients. People make it with the traditional, unassuming ingredients of any classic poutine. That includes French fries, fresh cheese curds, chicken, bacon, ground beef, onion, green peppers, ham, and homemade savory gravy. What sets this dish apart and makes it so expensive is the dish’s sheer size and weight.<\/span> Clocking in at 15 pounds, the Heart Attack could honestly be a reasonably priced night out with friends. Why? This dish could easily feed enough people to make it a standard $15 to $20 dinner.<\/span><\/p>\n Another very unique item on the luxury food list is Bird’s Nest Soup. A delicacy throughout Asia, including Indonesia, Malaysia, and Thailand, the soup has historically been considered an aphrodisiac. Many unassuming western foodies may hear bird’s nest soup and think it’s a colorful euphemism for the “noodles” in the soup. However, the name is entirely literal. This soup centers around the nests of a type of swift that use their saliva to cement together twigs and other materials to build small bowl-shaped nests. Just one pound of the nests can sell for as much as $4,000 in the United States.<\/span><\/p>\n When cooked in the special broth that gives the soup its flavor, the nests turn into a texture similar to noodles, only reportedly a bit more gelatinous. The bird’s nests are surprisingly nutritious, being too high in protein while low in fat. The soup reportedly has undertones of a simple chicken noodle soup with a texture similar to the thickness of Chinese egg drop soup, a popular take-out item that many Western readers will be familiar with. Are you afraid of eating a bowl of bird spit that was also once a bird’s home? If not, bird’s nest soup is quite delicious.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Who <\/span>doesn’t<\/span><\/em> love a creamy milkshake? It just might help hit the spot with your sweet tooth, but some people are willing to spend $100 on dessert. The<\/span> most expensive milkshake<\/span><\/a> in the world is sold at Serendipity 3 in New York City. They make this milkshake with some of the finest ingredients worldwide: Jersey milk, Tahitian vanilla ice cream, Devonshire clotted cream, 23k gold foil, and more. All of this is in a glass covered with Swarovski crystals. As you might imagine, the only people who have paid that much for the milkshake are social media influencers and celebrities.<\/span><\/p>\n Fans of the Quentin Tarantino film <\/span>Pulp Fiction<\/span><\/em> may well remember Vincent Vega’s, played by John Travolta, outrage and shock at the $5 shake ordered by Mia Wallace, played by Uma Thurman, at the fictional Jackrabbit Slim’s retro restaurant. While he eventually conceded that he still wasn’t sure it was worth $5, it was pretty [bleeping] good. Imagine his surprise if he learned about the $100 shake, especially since it doesn’t have bourbon or anything in it as the incredulous gangster asked of the $5 shake. For context, a $5 shake in 1994, the year of the film’s release, would be about a $9 shake today, which, while expensive, doesn’t hold a candle to $100.<\/span><\/p>\n One of the most expensive cheeses in the world is also arguably the grossest depending on your tolerance for bugs. Casu Marzu is made only in Sardinia, Italy, where cheesemongers make large wheels of sheep’s milk cheese and then set them outside in the sun to give flies open access to them. The desired cheese flies lay eggs in the wheels of cheese, which hatch into maggots that burrow into and eat the cheese to sustain themselves before turning into adult cheese flies and repeating the whole process. Before you ask, yes, eating the maggots with the cheese is part of the experience.<\/span><\/p>\n Casu Marzu is a deeply divisive cheese, even among cheese lovers. The EU has banned its import and sale outside of Italy due to the idea that it is technically just spoiled, bug-infested food. However, some cheese fans argue that it is an extraordinary cheese and that it is incredibly delicious despite, or even perhaps because of, the maggots in the wheels. If bug-eating ever becomes wider spread and more acceptable, maybe Casu Marzu will see a renaissance and become an even more expensive specialty cheese. After all, most of us already eat at least some moldy cheese, why not bug-infested cheese?<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Sometimes, a warm bowl of ramen hits the spot. It also just might bring back memories of your days being a broke college student. In Japan, ramen is taken far more seriously than what you can make from a 25-cent pack at home. In Japan, ramen is a heavy, full meal that often features fresh ingredients and rich flavors. The Fujimaki Gekijyo restaurant serves its<\/span> Five-Taste Blend Imperial Noodles<\/span><\/a>, which costs $110 per bowl. It’s also exclusively made for people who know the restaurant owner personally to ensure people want and appreciate the exclusive noodles.<\/span><\/p>\n The expensive, luxurious ramen dish comes flavored with a rich Chinese-style stock and a spicier stock flavored after Thailand’s famous tom yum soup. For the uninitiated, tom yum is a delicious hot and sour soup that features lemongrass, fish sauce, chili peppers, and kaffir lime leaves, resulting in a fragrant, floral, and spicy experience. The restaurant that serves the fancy ramen is an omakase, a menuless restaurant that requires experience with the owner’s less exclusive restaurants. While this may sound strange to Western readers, it is not uncommon to find this type of restaurant in Japan.<\/p>\n <\/p>\n Whether you’re at a baseball game or wandering around a city, hot dog vendors are usually a cheap option to get something to eat for $1 to $5. The most<\/span> expensive hot dog<\/span><\/a> in the world is available at a food truck called Tokyo Dog in Seattle, Washington, and it costs a whopping $145. The “Juuni Ban” is made with smoked cheese bratwurst, Maitake mushrooms, butter Teriyaki grilled onions, foie gras, Wagyu beef, black truffles, caviar, and Japanese mayonnaise. Since both hot dogs and food trucks are often associated with processed low-class foods, it’s hard to imagine who’s lining up for a $145 hot dog.<\/span><\/p>\n While the hot dog has the unfortunate reputation of being one of the modern era’s most processed, disgusting foods that barely resemble real meat, its origins are far more interesting. It’s believed hot dogs originated from sausages sold by German immigrants in the 19th century United States. People say the bun started as a convenience for consumers without gloves to protect their hands from the hot sausages. Germany has long been famous for its sausages or bratwursts and is considered the modern sausage’s birthplace. Hot dogs have become synonymous with meat byproducts far more recently with cheap hot dogs. Even if you’re a terrible cook, the chances are that you have made a $1 box of Kraft’s macaroni and cheese at some point in your life. While a proper homemade mac and cheese, especially made with love by mom, can be hearty and delicious, it’s not exactly a dish you would imagine ordering at an upscale restaurant. At Barton G. in Hollywood, however, you can get the most expensive macaroni and cheese dish you have ever tasted. The dish is a full lobster stuffed with macaroni and cheese, topped off with truffle shavings. It’s a whopping $195 and serves two to four people.<\/p>\n Buzzfeed Worth It<\/span><\/a> featured this dish on their YouTube channel. It’s impressive and worth the money. Luckily for you, <\/span>the recipe<\/span><\/a> for the Barton G mac n’ cheese has been posted online if you’re willing to go through the trouble of making it. While the black truffle shavings would be especially hard to get and expensive, to find a regular lobster macaroni and cheese wouldn’t set you back that badly. That is especially true if you’re on the East Coast, where lobster is still relatively plentiful and less expensive than regions like the Midwest, where it’s still a more uncommon, luxurious food item.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n Mushrooms are usually very cheap. You can get an entire carton for $1 to $2 at the grocery store. However, the<\/span> Matsutake mushrooms<\/span><\/a> are not your garden (or forest) variety of fungi. If you want to buy a small wooden basket, it will cost $200. The larger mushrooms can go for as high as $1,000 per pound. Matsutake mushrooms are scarce in Japan, and they have been disappearing from the country due to a bug infestation. So they have become more and more valuable as the years went on. Japan now imports most of its Matsutake from China and the US, where it grows in the Pacific Northwest.<\/span><\/p>\n Mushroom foraging is big business, and with it has come some big trouble and big turf wars. A travel blog called <\/span>The Mushroom Hunters: On the Trail of an Underground America<\/span><\/em> follows several mushroom hunters on their daily business, which often involves carrying guns as they forage throughout the Pacific Northwest for mushrooms that can bring thousand dollars or more paydays. There are vast sums of money to be made for skilled foragers, and they fiercely guard the secrets of valuable mushroom hunting locations. There are even wild mushroom middlemen who clean specimens and sell them to restaurants at a considerable markup.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n While most of us don’t often eat foods that can definitely kill us, some adventurous Japanese diners make a habit out of it with the deadly Fugu pufferfish. If Fugu isn’t prepared to exact specifications, the fish’s poison can contaminate the meat, killing the diner through respiratory paralysis. Each Fugu puffer contains enough of the toxic tetrodotoxin to kill 30<\/span> <\/span><\/em>people. As many as 60 people died per year throughout East Asia from improperly prepared Fugu puffer in past decades. However, modern licensing and training requirements have led to far safer Fugu preparations and drastically reduced deaths.<\/span><\/p>\n Fugu is best served raw in incredibly thin slices that melt in your mouth. It is reported to be a delicious fish. However, the presence of a toxin, tetrodotoxin, that is 1200 times deadlier than cyanide can turn the stomach off a bit. The toxin is present in the liver, ovaries, and intestines of the fish, which is why proper handling and preparation are so important. The same cost of training and licensing chefs who can legally prepare and serve Fugu is why the fish is such an expensive dish. Despite the cost, Fugu is incredibly popular in Japan, with as many as 10,000 tons of fish consumed each year.<\/span><\/p>\n <\/p>\n When you were a poor college kid, you probably pre-gamed before going to the bar because $10 drinks were far too expensive. If you thought that was bad, imagine paying $208 for just one cocktail. It’s called the Highland Park 30 Penicillin, and it’s available at The £10 at the Montage Hotel in Beverly Hills. The drink also comes with some free snacks like bacon and cheese that complement the taste of the expensive scotch that makes up the base of the luxurious cocktail. To see more about this cocktail, watch the review on<\/span> Buzzfeed Worth It<\/span><\/a>.<\/span><\/p>\n The cocktail features 30-year aged Highland Park single malt scotch whiskey, which sells for about $1,000 per bottle. It’s no surprise, then, that each cocktail is quite expensive. The drink also features honey and lemon syrup and grated fresh ginger. The cocktail is reminiscent of an Old Fashioned, which features citrus, bitters, and whiskey or bourbon. The cheese and bacon complimentary snacks served with the $200 drink no doubt are perfect pairs for the sweet and zingy cocktail. To try your version at home, simply replace the exorbitantly expensive 30-year Highland Park with a more reasonably priced single-malt whiskey.<\/p>\n Real Kobe beef is expensive and incredibly difficult to find in the United States. Due to a 2009 ban on imported Japanese beef over concerns about Mad Cow Disease, formally known as Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease, when it infects humans, the meat can only be found at an extremely limited number of USDA-approved restaurants. However, many restaurants continue to market that they have Kobe beef for sale, charging unsuspecting diners large sums for substandard meat that is most certainly not real Kobe beef. You cannot buy Kobe beef at retail stores, so any meat market that claims to have Kobe beef is selling a lie.<\/span><\/p>\n True Kobe beef is still only available at eight restaurants in the entire United States. Why? Because of the scarcity of Wagyu cows in Japan and the ongoing USDA restrictions. Farmers cut authentic Kobe beef from a Wagyu cow, a rare heirloom breed only in Japan’s Hyogo prefecture. To be labeled Kobe and not just Wagyu, the meat must go through an extensive marbling process that makes it look like no other beef. You can cook Kobe beef to just-above body temperature to ensure tender meat that will quite literally melt as you’re eating it due to its extensive marbling.<\/span><\/p>\n46. $40\/lb. Salt<\/span><\/h2>\n
45. $60 Guinea Pig<\/span><\/h2>\n
44. $65 Bowl Of Shark Fin Soup<\/strong><\/h2>\n
43. $90 Cookie<\/strong><\/h2>\n
42. $100 Poutine <\/strong><\/h2>\n
41. $100 Bird’s Nest Soup<\/span><\/h2>\n
40. $100 Milkshake<\/strong><\/h2>\n
39. $100\/lb. Casu Marzu<\/span><\/h2>\n
38. $110 Ramen<\/strong><\/h2>\n
37. $145 Hot Dog<\/strong><\/h2>\n
\n<\/p>\n36. $195 Mac ‘N’ Cheese <\/strong><\/h2>\n
35. $200 Matsutake Mushrooms<\/strong><\/h2>\n
34. $200 Deadly Fugu<\/span><\/h2>\n
33. $208 Cocktail<\/strong><\/h2>\n
32. $250\/lb. Kobe Beef<\/span><\/h2>\n