There is a 6,300 member Facebook community dedicated to loathing cilantro—appropriately titled I Hate Cilantro.
“It’s disgusting,” he replies, taking huge swigs of water. “I’ve never had anything this bad in my life.” I roll my eyes and keep eating. Oh well, I think. More for me.is the pungent stems and leaves of the coriander plant. California produces the most domestically-grown cilantro every year, but other states have cilantro farms too—Washington, Oregon, and Arizona. Cilantro is sometimes referred to as Mexican or Chinese parsley.
It turns out, my husband isn’t alone in his hatred of the tiny green leaves that are often added to Indian, Mexican, and Asian dishes for flavor. There is a 6,300 member Facebook community dedicated to loathing cilantro—appropriately titledLauren Kennedy, a married mother of two, started the group in 2007 as a joke. She told Scary Mommy that she was the only person in her family who hated cilantro, and she wanted to find like-minded people.
Member Selke Brewer refers to cilantro as “Satan’s Sprinkles” and states that to her, cilantro tastes like dish soap and pennies. Meg McKibben says cilantro is the “Devil’s lettuce.” Kate Holbrook Griesser replied that in Dallas where she lives, she’s seen cilantro everywhere—including in margaritas–and refers to it as “horrible little green a-hole herb.” Shelly Richey Miller, also residing in Texas, told me cilantro is the flavor of “soap, sadness, and hate.
. I wanted to call BS on this—mostly out of spite for my husband’s reaction to our dinner–but further research convinced me that cilantro-aversion is legit, and for some, it can be an actual phobia.
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