Bizarre Taste in Food

"Reporter: So, Mr. Presley, what do you do every morning when you wake up? Elvis Presley: Simple. I get out of bed, get dressed, and make a Peanut Butter-Banana-Bacon Sandwich."

- An Interview with the King of Rock

Bizarre Taste in Food is when a character, main or minor, does something irregular to their meal that becomes a defining trait. Note that this has nothing to do with the viewer or players' taste, but the character to witness it.

Differs from Cordon Bleugh Chef in the sense that the food is not inedible because of the cook. Its when the character does something minor to the food that completely transforms it.

Typically after doing so, the Cloud Cuckoo Lander will try the food and proclaim that it tastes better, much to the chagrin of the others.

Has overlap with Wacky Cravings when a character is pregnant.

Anime & Manga

 * Bleach: In one of the early episodes, Orihime is talking about strange food she eats.
 * Later, it's revealed that Rangiku also enjoys her bizarre cooking.
 * In Gintama, one of Toushiro Hijikata's defining character traits is his love of mayonnaise. He tends to put so much of it on his food that it becomes unrecognizable. Multiple characters remark on it as being rather disgusting.
 * Jesse from Pokemon has a tendency to enjoy food that others find inedible. Misty is a hopeless cook, and May once made PokeBlocks so bad that only a Munchlax could eat them; Jesse found both girls' fare delicious. Possibly on a related note, Jesse herself is a lousy cook.
 * In One Piece, the meal that Apis fixes for the crew hardly seems appetizing or even edible, and most of them only eat it to be polite. Luffy, however, sees nothing wrong with it. Then again, it's hard to find a food Luffy doesn't like.

Comic Strips

 * A Garfield strip had Garfield douse Jon's scrambled eggs with ketchup, much to Jon's disgust.
 * Zippy the Pinhead enjoys Ding Dongs with taco sauce. Creator Bill Griffith recounted how he had the combo available, as a joke, at a book signing - and gave away a lot of them!

Film

 * The Breakfast Club: during lunch Allison removes the pimento loaf from her sandwich and adds sugar and mashed up Chocolate Frosted Sugar Bombs. (Also her sandwich uses one slice of white bread & one slice wheat.)
 * In UHF, Weird Al's character puts a hot dog weiner into a twinkie, puts cheese whiz on it, and dunks it in his drink.

Literature

 * The aliens in the Roswell High series put Tabasco sauce on almost all their food and combine flavors in ways that would make Earthlings vomit. This was carried over into the TV show based on the books (see below).

Live Action TV

 * This trope is played with in Star Trek: Deep Space Nine. The Ferengis cannot believe that Hu-mans enjoy root beer, and occasionally insult other Ferengis by implying that they enjoy root beer.
 * The Eleventh Doctor's taste for fish sticks dipped in custard in Doctor Who.
 * Fringe Observers will cover their food in peppers and douse it in Hot Sauce before eating it.
 * Subverted and invoked in an episode of The Voyage Of The Mimi. One character prepares a sandwich and describes all the ingredients in it. It's so disgusting it makes the person she's talking to throw up. It turns out she wasn't really planning on eating it - she just thought that inducing vomiting might be a good way to help the other character stop feeling seasick.
 * Dawn, the little sister of Buffy the Vampire Slayer, was notorious for this.
 * The aliens in Roswell put Tabasco sauce on almost all of their food and even bake it into brownies.
 * M*A*S*H has many examples:
 * In "The Sniper", Radar risks running to the mess tent during the crisis for a ketchup on rye sandwich. "With butter and lettuce!" he adds.
 * Speaking of which, Hawkeye fixes him, B.J., and Father Mulcahy some rather odd sandwiches, with peanut butter, jelly, lettuce, mayonnaise, ham, more mayonnaise, turkey, more mayonnaise, cheese, and even more mayonnaise.
 * In another episode, Charles dates a Korean B-girl, who likes meatloaf topped with vanilla pudding.
 * In "Big Mac", the 4077th is preparing for a visit from General Douglas MacArthur, and is told that the General eats the exact same meals as the troops. "Does he like his ice cream on top of his beef stew like we do?" asks Hawkeye.
 * Colonel Potter likes raisin cookies; the ones with the stale raisins.
 * Klinger claims he likes garlic pie.
 * Most everyone at the 4077th does not like the chow in the mess hall, but in one episode, a visiting surgeon from the 8063rd claims it's good, saying that the food at his camp is bad. That's where Hawkeye currently is, although when he comes back at the end, all he has to say about the place is that everyone thought he was boring.

Video Games

 * In Uno Undercover Agent, a seven- or eight-year-old character made lunch for her family of four. When her mother said that the sandwiches were delicious and asked what was in them, the kid replied "Mayonnaise, sardines, tomato and half a stick of gum."
 * In the Nancy Drew games, recurring character Professor Hotchkiss is fond of things like roast beef with caramel sauce or curried waffle sandwiches.

Web Original

 * It is yet undiscovered just how The Nostalgia Critic can eat sugar-frosted burrito-stuffed, lard-filled, liposuction-butter hotpockets all the time and still stay as skinny as he does.
 * Mortimer from Newheimburg likes his pizza loaded down with every topping, including breadsticks.

Real Life

 * Elvis Presley and his peanut butter, banana, and bacon sandwiches.
 * President Ulysses S. Grant liked pickles - for breakfast.
 * Barbara Ehrenreich, in her book Bait and Switch: The (Futile) Pursuit of the American Dream, describes with some degree of awe watching a fellow job-searcher help himself at a buffet to "a mound of lettuce, covered with canned fruit salad, topped by a desiccated gray hamburger patty and dripping with Thousand Island dressing".
 * Leaked emails featured Hillary Clinton requesting "a hot dog with no bun" for lunch. This resulted in several theories it was Spy Speak for something because an already corrupt campaign doing something illegal under a codename was more likely than someone actually ordering a bare hot dog -- as someone watching their carbs (like a diabetic) would.