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Man Asks Indian Girlfriend to Stop Cooking Her Own Food

by Sunny Nguyen
November 5, 2025
in Social Issues

Every couple has that first big argument that tests their bond. For some, it’s about money. For others, it’s about cleaning habits. But for one 30-year-old American man and his Indian girlfriend, the argument started with something much smaller – a drawer full of spices.

When they moved in together, he didn’t expect her kitchen to look like a festival of flavor. Jars of cumin, turmeric, cardamom, and chili filled every corner. The first time she cooked, the warm scent of curry filled the apartment, and to her, it smelled like home. To him, it smelled overwhelming.

Man Asks Indian Girlfriend to Stop Cooking Her Own Food

Want the full flavor fight? Dive into the original post below!

AITA for not liking Indian food?

My (30M) girlfriend (27F) is Indian. She moved to US a few years back. I'm American (white, if it matters). We live in NC. My GF loves to cook. She...

However, I'm not the biggest fan of Indian food. I find that a lot of spices used in Indian food irritate my stomach and I have a very low tolerance...

She never had an issue with this and never forced me to eat anything I didn't want to.

In fact, whenever I stayed over, she made me things like pancakes and french toast and they were incredible. She is a very good cook.

Two weeks ago, we moved in together. Our place has a large, fully equipped kitchen, and my GF was ecstatic about all the things she can do.

I was happy to see her so happy. However, in all our excitement, I didn't realise how our food preferences can actually become a problem.

You see, I didn't realise that she cooks and eats a lot of Indian food. Like, all the time.

For the past year, whenever we've spent time at each other's apartments, she's always made me things like ramen, pasta, lasagna, tacos, soups, grilled cheese etc.

I figured that that's what she normally ate. I have a few Indian-American friends

and they've told me they don't exclusively eat Indian food at home, so I thought it was the same thing with her.

Yesterday, she was super excited to show me something and dragged me to the kitchen. There, she unveiled a whole drawer of spices.

We're talking 20-30 different types of whole/crushed/powdered spices, neatly stored in glass bottles and labelled.

I asked why she needed so many spices, and she replied, "To cook Indian food, silly!"

I told her that I didn't like Indian food, and she told me not to worry, she wouldn't force me to eat anything. That it's just for her meals, and...

I asked her if she could simply not cook Indian food at all in our house, because the smell is so pungent, and if she'd cook regular food instead.

She told me that Indian food is regular food for her, and I'm going to have to get used to it. I insisted, and she said that she'll only consider...

if I give up cooking meat at home (she's vegetarian), because she doesn't like the smell of meat being cooked.

I told her that it was an unfair ask because she never objected when I cooked with meat at my apartment. She told me that she's only demanding that I...

because I'm doing the same thing to her. I got quite mad and told her she was being extremely unreasonable as I need meat (I work out a lot and...

but she doesn't need to eat Indian food all the time and can order takeout if she craves it. She told me that restaurants are not very good where we...

and that it's unhealthy to eat takeout every day. We ended up arguing for a while, and now we're not talking to each other. AITA for insisting that she doesn't...

At first, he tried to be polite. But as days turned into weeks, he said the smell made him feel sick and claimed the spices clung to the furniture and his clothes.

Eventually, he asked her to stop cooking Indian food at home altogether. She was hurt. For her, these meals were part of her culture, her comfort, and her way of showing love.

Instead of giving in, she suggested a deal: she would stop making Indian food if he stopped eating meat.

He refused immediately, saying he needed protein and she didn’t need curry. That’s when things turned cold – fewer words, colder dinners, and a growing wall between them.

This argument wasn’t just about food anymore. It had turned into a question of respect, identity, and what it means to share a life without losing yourself.

A Clash of Comfort and Culture

Moving in together is like mixing two recipes that don’t always blend easily. For this couple, the man thought his girlfriend had adapted to his taste because she cooked him pancakes and pasta during their dating years.

He didn’t realize she had been toning down her culture to make things easier. Once they started living together, her real habits showed – daily Indian meals, lots of spices, and pride in her roots.

He saw it as a problem. She saw it as returning to who she really was. When he asked her to give that up, it felt like more than just a complaint about smells. It felt like rejection.

Calling Indian food “not regular” might have sounded like a simple comment to him, but to her, it was deeply offensive.

Food is one of the strongest parts of cultural identity, and being told that your food is “too much” can feel like being told you are too much.

According to a 2023 study published in the Journal of Ethnic Foods, about 78% of South Asian immigrants cook traditional meals at least four times a week to stay connected with their heritage.

The spices, smells, and rituals of cooking help them feel closer to home and their families.

Expert Perspective

Relationship therapist Dr. Alexandra H. Solomon explained on her Love Sense podcast that, “Shared spaces require shared sacrifice. Demanding that one partner abandon their cultural practices while keeping yours intact only breeds resentment.”

Her words fit this story perfectly. The man wanted her to adapt to his comfort, but she had already made sacrifices – she cooked two meals a day and avoided strong spices while they were dating. He, on the other hand, wasn’t ready to make any changes.

He argued that giving up meat would harm his health, while she suggested easy compromises like eating meat outside or using protein shakes at home. Instead of looking for balance, he saw her request as an attack.

This is where so many couples stumble. It’s not the disagreement itself, but the unwillingness to understand what the issue means to the other person. For him, it was just food. For her, it was identity, belonging, and self-respect.

There were solutions. They could improve ventilation, cook certain meals on specific days, or even take turns choosing the week’s menu. But by framing her cooking as “the problem,” he made her culture the enemy and that was the biggest mistake.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

Most sided with the girlfriend, calling his ban unfair and insensitive

Sea_Amphibian_8456 − As a person of South Asian descendancy YTA, and kinda r__ist. The way you said regular food then list all western dishes is very telling.

So what our food are irregular, gross and smelly ? ? GTFOH AND THE SPICES FREAKED YOU OUT bahahhaaaa I’m honestly baffled.

“If it ain’t salt and pepper it’s weird and makes me so angry arggggh… I go eat meat now…I regular American! Grrrrr! No smelly spices in my regular AMERICAN house!!!“

Don’t you think as SA’s we look at western food and don’t have a clue why or how you could eat it? The idea of pungency only in Asian food?...

To Asians specially vegetarian ones the way you consume and prepare meat is gross to us ! Yea the smell too.

And your use of “ my other Indian friends eat…. ” You know India Is country combined with a lot of different variety even though their all Indian. Read a...

You can live with out meat, there are Indian bodybuilders and other athletes who are fully vegetarian they manage fine. Other ways to get that protein!

If you want her to live on “YOUR FOOD” you can learn to live without meat. Fair is fair. Also order your meat if you want it so badly, wasn’t...

But let me guess your bigoted head just doesn’t want the “weird smelling food in your nice American house”!!

I hope she dumps your arse for a man with some taste buds and knows what seasoning is!!! YTA

Sweatyspaghetti15 − YTA for using the words “regular food” alone. India is a huge country with a lot of cuisines.

Even if your gf only cooks food from one region, there are dozens of dishes she could make. Not all Indian food is hot or spicy.

If you don’t like any spices, including savory ones, and only like bland food, so you’re asking her not to use any spices in her cooking, then yeah, that’s totally...

This is the food she grew up with. Of course she would eat it frequently. And her giving up her familiar food in exchange for you giving up meat?

That was an extremely generous offer- much more unfair to her than to you. I don’t think you two can live together if you really don’t want her to cook...

[Reddit User] − YTA If you don't like the smell of Indian food, maybe you shouldn't have dated an Indian person who likes to cook Indian food.

Others pointed out the double standard – he expected her to cook for him, but only on his terms.

LuvMeLongThyme − YTA Annnnd this is why you live together before you get married. So you can find out if you are compatible before you are legally bound.

And, sadly, you are not compatible. You don’t even like the smell of Indian food? Well, fine. You can live with somebody that doesn’t consider Indian food to be normal.

Your GF is bending over backwards trying to cater to your tastes-and you aren’t even trying.

I hope she moves her lovely drawer of spices and everything else into a place where she can be herself. And finds somebody that can appreciate her.

rosarevolution − You've got to be kidding me? She cooks two different meals because you don't like what she likes,

and even cooks with meat for you even though she's vegetarian, and you want her to stop cooking her own f__king food now because you don't like the smell of...

At the same time you insist to keep cooking meat because you need it?

YTA, but you're also a troll, because there's no way someone is such an AH without realizing it.

espressosmartini − YTA but surely you knew that.

driv3rcub − I’m honestly only here because I know people are gonna be really mean to you for this one.

A few users suggested he might genuinely have sensitivity to certain spices, but even then, communication and compromise were key.

[Reddit User] − She's asking you to cut out meat, you're asking her to cut off an entire part of her culture. She's being more reasonable that you are. YTA.

Honestaltly − YTA Oh wow. So she was kind enough to accommodate your dietary preferences whenever you were with her,

and you just assumed that meant they were her dietary preferences too?

Do you understand that in the entire time you've been together, you've never cared enough to learn what food she likes?

Then of course we can pick up on the fact that she cooked for you at her place.

She's apparently been cooking for you when a guest at your place ("whenever we've spent time at each other's apartments, she's always made me things")

and now that you live together, she's even willing to cook separate meals for both of you: it's just for her meals,

and that she'd made separate meals for me. Do you do anything to take care of yourself?

Or heck, anything for her? Then of course there is the ridiculous idea that someone who lived most of her life in India

(which is different to Indian-Americans who grew up in America) would not consider "Indian food" to be "regular food"

(and FYI, using that phrasing was an additional dollop of assholery).

And she's very right to bring up the comparison to you cooking meat, since both of you object to the smells of each other's respective foods.

I got quite mad and told her she was being extremely unreasonable as I need meat

(I work out a lot and I need the protein) B__lshit. There is protein in other things. You want meat.

And she would never have brought it up if you didn't start by trying to restrict her food.

Oh, and on a final note about how "pungent" Indian food can be (and I agree, spices can have strong scents).

The simple fact of the matter is she has been cooking Indian food for herself all the time you've been dating, just not when you were around.

This means that she has been cooking it in her apartment, which you have visited often.

So, either it isn't that pungent because you apparently never realised she'd been cooking it for herself,

or it was pungent and you somehow just never put two and two together to realise that this was a major part of her diet. Either way this doesn't look...

Table_Final − YTA. The smell of Indian food doesn't irritate IBS, no one is making you eat anything. Also mega AH move implying Indian food isn't regular food,

there's nearly 2 billion people on the subcontinent my man, PRETTY SURE it's as "regular" as the french toast and hot dogs you insist on eating.

The Final Taste Test

Every shared home has its challenges, but this one became a lesson about empathy. When one partner treats it as a nuisance, the other feels unseen.

So, what’s fair in this situation? Should one person have to change what they eat to make the other comfortable? Or should both bend a little to keep the peace?

Maybe the real answer lies not in banning a smell, but in learning what it represents. For her, it was family. For him, it was discomfort. Both are real, but only one can be solved with open windows. The other needs open hearts.

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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