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Classmate Mocked Her for Bringing ‘Weird Ethnic Food’ — So She Served Her a Loaf of Bread to Prove a Point

by Sunny Nguyen
October 14, 2025
in Social Issues

Every school cafeteria has its characters – the loud ones, the picky eaters, and sometimes, the ones who think their plain peanut butter sandwich makes them food critics.

For one student, lunchtime turned into a daily battle when a classmate couldn’t stop mocking their homemade ethnic meals. From teasing about the smell to calling it “gross,” the comments stung.

But instead of arguing, this clever student cooked up a plan so satisfying it could make karma drool. One ordinary day, they packed a boring sandwich, traded it with the mocker’s lunch, and let her stew in her own judgment. What came next?

Classmate Mocked Her for Bringing ‘Weird Ethnic Food’ — So She Served Her a Loaf of Bread to Prove a Point
Not the actual photo

A priceless look of disgust and a cafeteria full of silent witnesses.

Classmate is mad I'm "forcing" her to eat ethnic food? Go eat a loaf of bread?

This happened about a year ago now when I was in high school. My calculus class was very chill.

About 20 kids who were all friendly with each other, a laid back but enthusiastic teacher,

and a light enough workload that we could afford to goof off in class but still learn and do well.

At some point in the year I got really into cooking. It's my stress reliver.

My family couldn't possibly eat the amount of food I was made so I started bringing it into school and "hosting" Friday parties in my calc class,

with my teacher's approval of course. Now, I'm Vietnamese and I live in a predominately white town.

This is only important because it meant that most kids from town only ate American or European foods, and weren't used to eating other ethnic foods.

Last year around Lunar New Year, I wanted to bring in some Vietnamese foods to celebrate.

It is a very important time of year for my family. I ended up making a bunch of Bánh Da Lợn, a steamed layer cake and a traditional Vietnamese dessert....

ome of my friends from class found out I was going to bring in a traditional dish and brought in their own traditional dishes from their own cultures,

whether they celebrated Lunar New year or not. We had different Indian, Korean, Filipino, and Spanish desserts.

It was great and I was really excited that my friends wanted to celebrate with me.. Apparently this was an issue for one girl in my class.

I would say Bánh Da Lợn is an acquired taste, so when not a lot of people ate it I wasn't offended.

I knew not everybody would like it. There was a lot of other food anyways.

During our lunch period one of my friends (who wasn't in our class but knew I brought food in)

overheard a girl from my class complaining about the food while on the lunch line.

Apparently she was saying really negative things about how I "forced everyone to eat weird Chinese foods."

Later that day I texted her just saying I heard she didn't like the food and wanted to know why.

I don't really care when people don't like the food (I make it for myself and bring it in when I have extra anyways),

but her calling it "weird Chinese foods" (when she *knows* I'm Vietnamese) didn't sit right with me.

Welp, she texted back that it was rude of me to bring in weird ethnic foods that nobody would have liked except for me

and said I should know better since most of the class was white.

I told her that I bring in food to share because I feel like it and that I don't have an obligation to cater to her tastes.

If she has an issue with it, she literally does not have to eat it, and other people can bring in food too so

if she wanted to she could bring in something more to her tastes.

After that she just told me that I shouldn't bring in ethnic and foreign foods and stick with American foods, "because we're in America."

Excuse me??? Like??? How much you wanna bet if I brought in jambalaya, which originated in Louisiana,

she would call it a "weird foreign food.". Fine. She only wants to eat American foods? Then she can eat American foods.

The next week I brought in a bunch of Oliebol, a Dutch doughnut, and started passing them out at the beginning of class.

When I got to her desk I pulled out a loaf of Wonder Bread and plopped it on her desk, saying

"Sorry but these are Dutch, too ethnic. Here you go, all American cuisine."

Later she texted me asking wtf my problem was, so I told her that almost every single food

I brought in this year was ethnic and that it pissed me off she only had an issue when it wasn't European.

She's entitled to not liking Asian foods but if you're going to complain about it being ethnic,

then you better have that same attitude when the ethnic food is white.

And especially don't call another person's culture weird.. She didn't complain about the food again..

Also, before anyone comments: white bread isn't the only American cuisine out there.

Here's a short list of what I've enjoyed making: tater tots, jambalaya, fried chicken, many types of pies, smores, and Philly Cheesesteaks.

America is a very diverse place, and that's reflected in its food. Happy eating!

Edit: thank you all for the awards and the love in the comments!

I really didn’t expect any of it. don’t worry, i’ll cook for you all some day!

Expert Opinion

Cafeterias may seem harmless, but for many students, they’re ground zero for casual bullying. In this case, the Redditor faced constant taunts for bringing traditional homemade meals, flavorful, colorful, and completely different from the usual school fare.

The classmate, convinced she was the queen of “normal” lunches, never missed a chance to mock those dishes. But instead of firing back, the Redditor decided to let a simple switch do the talking.

On the day of the prank, they brought a plain sandwich, nothing fancy, just bread and cheese and made a casual trade with the classmate. The twist? The classmate opened the lunch bag only to find a box of the very same food she’d called “weird.”

Her reaction? Pure shock. The smell, the texture, everything she had complained about was now sitting right in front of her. Meanwhile, the Redditor enjoyed their sandwich in peace as the cafeteria crowd quietly caught on. It was a moment of instant karma, perfectly plated.

Let’s face it, food is more than just fuel. For many families, it’s a symbol of love, tradition, and culture. When someone mocks that, it cuts deep.

The classmate’s teasing wasn’t about food, it was about ignorance. The Redditor’s response worked not because it was mean, but because it forced empathy.

The classmate finally experienced what she’d been so quick to ridicule, and she didn’t like it one bit.

According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 22% of students report being bullied for cultural differences, and food-based teasing is one of the most common forms.

Mocking someone’s lunch might seem harmless, but it often targets something deeply personal. The Redditor’s clever lunch swap turned that cruelty into a moment of awareness, without saying a word.

Psychologist Dr. Derald Wing Sue explained in a 2020 Psychology Today article that “microaggressions, like mocking cultural foods, can erode self-esteem, but confronting them creatively can empower victims”.

This story is the perfect example. The student didn’t fight back with anger; they fought back with humor and logic. They flipped the situation until the bully had to face her own prejudice, bite by bite.

Still, not every situation calls for a prank. A teacher-led talk or a classroom discussion about cultural respect could help more students understand that “different” isn’t “wrong.” Food connects people; it shouldn’t divide them.

Lesson Learned

The Redditor’s story isn’t just funny, it’s a reminder that sometimes, the best way to teach respect is through experience.

By swapping lunches, they showed their classmate what it feels like to be on the other side of mockery. And it worked, the teasing stopped.

For anyone facing something similar, here’s what can help:

  • Speak up early. Let people know their comments are hurtful.

  • Get support. Teachers or friends can help stop the teasing.

  • Be proud of your culture. Your food tells a story worth sharing.

  • Use humor wisely. Sometimes a light, clever response teaches the best lesson.

Bullying may start small, but small acts of courage can shut it down fast.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Many readers praised the Redditor for handling the situation with style, calling it “the tastiest revenge ever served.” 

Abblz − I like how she felt entitled enough to declare herself spokeswoman for the entire white population,

most of my favourite foods are Asian and I’d jump at the chance to taste some real home cooked dishes. What a boring person.

garretj84 − I would have loved that in high school, I was pushing 30 before I moved somewhere with even

halfway authentic Vietnamese food to try. Basic white girl gets basic white bread, sounds appropriate to me.

payday329 − When I was a kid in the Boy Scouts, we had a troop member of Indian heritage and another of Korean heritage in my patrol.

We had a council-wide campout where cooking was the theme for competitions between the troops.

We asked Giri and Eddie to fix some foods from their cultures.

I don’t remember if we won that part of the competition (it’s been over 35 years ago),

but I do remember that the food was tasty and was a break from our usual recipes.

We welcomed the different cultural foods and had them cook their family recipes on other campouts also.

Others pointed out that it wasn’t even revenge, it was education in disguise. 

hotlavatube − C'mon bring her some proper English food. .. like [steak n' kidney pie]

KTB1962 − She needs to learn the history of American cuisine.

Quite a lot of it is actually "ethnic". Now excuse me while I go enjoy my lasagna. ;)

EarnestWishes001 − I grew up in a town so white that the local (national chain) supermarket puts pasta on the Ethnic Aisle.

felthouse − Personally I'd be be very happy to eat and share your food with you, it sounds great.

A few users shared their own stories of being teased for bringing homemade cultural meals, saying they wished they’d thought of this move themselves. 

Pergamon_ − Sounds like classmate is a right _oliebol_. Loved what you did with the oliebollen! (as a native Dutch woman,

'Oliebol' = singular, also used as a weird for someone being thick, doing stupid, , 'Oliebollen' =plural.)

Keep your cooking up! Another Dutch food-hit, try stroopwafels.

bottleblondscot − stick with American foods, "because we're in America."

That's such a parochial attitude. I don't understand people like that. It is one of my favourite things to try foods from other countries.

A person I used to work with had a Chinese wife and every time they'd come back from China he'd bring in some authentic Chinese food, loved it.

Even when the rest of the office was boaking (Scot's word - gagging/feeling nauseous/being sick/vomiting) over it, I was loving the new experience.

RealityPowerRanking − I’m not a big fan of Asian cuisine. Whenever my family orders Chinese, I always get chicken rice and broccoli.

This Redditor’s lunchroom masterpiece proves that standing up for yourself doesn’t always mean fighting, it can mean flipping the script.

The classmate’s red face said it all: judgment doesn’t taste so good when you’re the one eating it. While the prank was playful, its message was powerful, respect goes a long way, especially when culture’s on the menu.

So, what do you think? Was the Redditor’s move a clever lesson in empathy or a step too far? How would you handle a classmate who mocks your food or culture? Pull up a chair and share your thoughts below!

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen

Sunny Nguyen writes for DailyHighlight.com, focusing on social issues and the stories that matter most to everyday people. She’s passionate about uncovering voices and experiences that often go unheard, blending empathy with insight in every article. Outside of work, Sunny can be found wandering galleries, sipping coffee while people-watching, or snapping photos of everyday life - always chasing moments that reveal the world in a new light.

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