Showing posts with label aliens. Show all posts
Showing posts with label aliens. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 10, 2010

What's in the Water?

What’s in the Water?




Having looked at the metaphor of water in sci fi, it’s time to move on to what’s in that water, including creatures, aliens, humanoids, dolphins, undersea kingdoms and cities. There’s at least an equal number of films, series and novels on engineered humans and dolphins, as there are sea creatures.

There’s a phenomenon in this genre where sea creatures are present in space, either as theory or as satire. There’s also a lot of amusing stuff here as well, depending on your humour (especially if 1950’s films make you giggle.)



Good creatures:

Considering how much we use the sea there aren’t many good creatures in it in sci fi. Penguins are downgraded to villains in Batman and fish are evil in Darius+. But there are a few goodies:

Sealab 2020 (1972) featured an underwater facility where the crew looked after the ocean and its inhabitants.

seaQuest DSV Darwin is a sentient, speaking dolphin who helps the ship.

Star Trek: The Way Home Kirk has to find whales in the past to bring to the present to save the planet from an alien ship.

Cocoon A group swam around the Atlantis site, attracted to the aliens. Present in the opening scenes as the aliens landed.

The New Adventures of Ocean Girl has a sacred whale called Mandrool.



Bad Creatures

Most of the animals we envisage coming from the sea are evil, often having been created from pollution or scientific experiments. They usually want to dine on human beings or take over the planet, regularly stomping through cities in their attempts. It’s a lot like plants again, writers don’t like anything non-human.

Generally bad creatures are large and live alone in the water or near the water using it to approach humans e.g. The Host.

20,000 Leagues Beneath the Sea (novel 1870; films 1907, 1916, 1954; Game 1998) A giant squid attacks the Nautilus.

Frankenfish (2004) had a monster mutated fish killing people in the bayou.

Godzilla In the 1998 film this creature was formed by undersea nuclear testing and later returned to the sea to lay eggs.

It Came from Beneath the Sea (1955) A giant octopus from the Mindinao trench followed shipping to San Francisco.

The Phantom from 10,000 Leagues (1956) showed a monster created from radioactive rocks in the ocean.

Leviathan (1989) Deep Sea creatures are adversely affected by genetic modification.

Primeval (2006), season one episode four, featured monsters living in the water, who initially appeared from the vortex , in a pool.

Silurians ( aka Sea Devils) in Doctor Who (The Silurians/Warriors of the Deep/The Hungry Earth) are reptilian creatures living under the sea, often shown with a third eye. They repeatedly tried to take over the Earth as they originally owned it. Started in season 7, 1963 and continues until the present season.

Snakehead Terror (2002?) shows monstrous crocodilians living in a lake where they are disturbed.

The Beast from 20,000 fathoms (1954) Although this beast is a defrosted dinosaur it is a rhedosaurus which returns to the ocean.

The Creature from the Black Lagoon (1955) A half human, half marine creature plays tricks on a group of tourists.

SeaQuest DSV dagger redux (1994) A genetically engineered creature, released by the Marauder to eat the skin off seaQuest was beaten off against undersea rocks.

SeaLab 2021 Happycake (2000) A giant variety of squid which found the happycake oven.

Red Dwarf: Nanarchy (circa 1995) A despair squid nearly destroyed the crew.

Hyperdrive: A Gift from the Glish (2006) The whale people of Jorrain are really rude.

The creatures in Surface initially appear to be small and cute, with only one example, but there are others that multiply to take over the oceans.



An interesting digression from the good creature/bad creature dichotomy is shown in Deep Shock (2002) where electric eels melting the ice caps are ancient inhabitants of the Earth. Seen as a threat by the authorities who bomb their home, they are valued as an intelligent species by a scientist and her military partner and saved.

It’s odd how relatively few giant squids there are in sci fi, especially when there are lots of giant spiders, maggots, turtles (Gamera), flies, claws, gila monsters, leeches, and behemoths.



Humanoids

For humans to live in the sea, or even work in it, they must be genetically engineered, usually with gills. Startide Rising has humans working with dolphins on a starship using equipment in the water compartments. This would be time consuming when alternatives exist.

Engineered ‘tritons’ are described in the pulp sci fi story Crisis in Utopia by Norman L. Knight in 1940.

The same idea is presented again by Knight, writing a novel with James Blish in 1967 called A Torrent of Faces.

City Under the Sea (1957) and Beyond the Silver Sky (1961 by Kenneth Bulmer both describe artificially engineered humans living under the sea.

The Space Swimmers (1963) by Gordon R. Dickson and Ocean on Top (1967) by Hal Clement also describe artificially altered people.

Humans however, can live in the sea but generally need to be adapted to sea life with gills:

Gill girl and guy in Dark Angel Gill Girl; Gill men in The City Under the Sea (1965); Piccolo in seaQuest DSV.

Does Princess Neri have gills in The New Adventures of Ocean Girl ? or the original Neri (Ocean Girl 1994-7)? She should have.

The Mariner in Waterworld (1995) has natural gills to survive after the melting of the polar ice.

A departure from the idea of engineering humans is presented in 1974 in the novel The Godwhale by Thomas J. Bass with a cyborg whale.



Humans and Dolphins

seaQuest supposed that dolphins could be given equipment to allow them to speak. Novels that examine this idea are:

The Jonah Kit by Ian Watson, 1975

A Deeper Sea by Alexander Jablokov, 1992

Into the Deep by Ken Grimwood, 1995





Undersea Kingdoms and Cities.

Atlantis is an enduring themes, presented in many ways, but there have been other cities and kingdoms imagined under the sea.

Old novels on Atlantis include:

The Crystal City Under the Sea by Andre Laurie in 1895

The Sunken World by Stanton A. Coblenz in 1928

The Maracot Deep by Arthur Conan Doyle in 1929

They Found Atlantis by Dennis Wheatley in 1936

The Deep Range was a novel by Arthur C. Clarke in 1957.

Undersea Quest described underwater colonization in 1954. This became a trilogy, by Frederik Pohl and Jack Williamson.


Films and series include:

Atlantis (Stargate Atlantis: The Lost Continent/Atlantis: The Lost Empire/Atlantis: Milo’s Return/Lost Atlantis);

City Beneath the Sea (1963)

Gungan City (Star Wars: The Phantom Menace, 1999);

Landau Munitions Depot (SeaQuest DSV Brothers and Sisters);

Rapture (Bioshock, 2007/8) In this game the player kills genetically altered inhabitants to restore the balance. Not very edifying.

Undersea Kingdom (Undersea Kingdom) Another Atlantis story with the villains wanting to take over Earth.





Space Leviathans

Another odd thing I’ve noticed is how many marine creatures end up in space:



Ben Bova includes ‘leviathans’ in his book Jupiter. These huge creatures save an Earth probe by pushing it up out of danger.

Doctor Who: The Beast Below A whale powers the City of London through space.

Farscape: Moya as a space Leviathan kept in control, as was her son Talyn.

The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy : A whale appears in space over Magrathea.

Terry Pratchett: An enormous turtle flies through space supporting four elephants who hold up Discworld.

Treasure Planet has a fleet of space whales.

Star Trek: The Next Generation Galaxy’s Child has a space whale baby which imprints on the Enterprise.

Raft by Stephen Baxter: A fleet of space whales saves the hero, Rees.



Aliens in the Water

Occasionally aliens set up camp in Earth’s oceans, waiting for us to discover them or to attack us:



Atomic Submarine from 1959 had an alien ship at the North Pole attacking submarines.

Abyss : Aliens have an underwater base that glows, but had not been found as it was very deep.

Sphere : Some kind of space ship lurked in the depths, making dreams come true for those who found it.

Sundiver and Startide Rising by David Brin in 1983 has a dolphin commander, Crideiki, hide his ship in the ocean of another planet.





Conclusions:



I’ve learned that sci fi writers don’t like the sea much, but they don't actually hate it. Any body of deep water brings fear of the unknown. As usual there are more monsters and villains than good guys, and lots of suspicious engineered humanoids. But, probably thanks to the lack of films and series in this genre, there’s not the same feeling of hatred there is to trees and other vegetation in sci fi.

But it really is time to rethink our ocean stories. With the collapse of the Gulf Stream and the melting of the polar caps there have been some stories coming out of the ocean, but there should be more.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Sci fi Cafe

Someone once said to me that there was no food which didn’t have a negative impact on your health, so you may as well go ahead and live on sweets! She was referring to health problems caused by fat, salt and sugar. These days we have a heap more problems to worry about, things such as:
• Is genetically modified food safe in the long term?
• Which foods have antibiotics in them?
• How many heavy metals does seafood contain?
• Which foods are contaminated by pesticides?
• Which foods have MSG in them?


Lots of the food we eat is now toxic to parts of the community – some people have allergies, others are susceptible to cancer. But most people put these issues in the too-hard basket and continue to eat as if there are no problems. Sci fi writers are just as prone to do this as anyone else.


How does Sci Fi Present Food?
Sci fi most often shows ordinary humans eating ordinary food, sometimes it shows aliens eating their own food, or humans eating each other, it rarely shows complex issues such as the slow poisoning of the food chain.


Ordinary Food
Science Fiction films and television shows present food most often in the form ordinary people eat it. This raises an ethical question: should sci fi be showing how real people eat or should it be showing how we should eat? When the O’Brien’s shared the cooking on Deep Space Nine Keiko’s cooking was very healthy, but so unappetising Miles wouldn’t eat it, and his stodgy food was presented as better, even though Keiko complained about it. This is an extreme example of sci fi’s attitude.
Food in sci fi is a signifier of comfort and stability, think of the family dinners in Kyle XY or Deanna Troi’s love of chocolate in The Next Generation. It’s also a sign of group cohesion, think of Chianna’s dinner in Farscape.

There are more references to food in the Star Trek franchise and sci fi products aimed at a younger audience, than in sci fi action. Food often sets a normal scene that will be disrupted by something unusual so that we move from the known to the unknown seamlessly. It’s no surprise sci fi presents a lot of unhealthy food choices.

What unhealthy food does Sci Fi show us eating?

First of all you have to realise that food names can be specific to place, for instance ‘fondant’ to an Australian means a kind of icing, but in the English context in Doctor Who seems to mean a dessert.
As well as this semantic problem some food items may belong in several categories, or be on their own e.g. is a dumpling really a cake? I’ve done my best, making sure unhealthy goes into unhealthy – after all, eggs may be good but not when eaten with chips!

Burgers Blue Moon Burger (Roswell: Blood Brother); Burger (Dinotopia: Contact ); Cheeseburger (seaQuest DSV: Whale Song/ Iron Man); Eclipse Burger (Roswell: Crazy); Hamburger (My Favourite Martian: Pilot/ Aliens in the Attic ); Sweet Burger (Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties );

Cake Banana Cake (Doctor Who: Fear Her); Birthday cake (Beware! The Blob/ Kyle XY Blame it on the Rain ); Blueberry Muffin (Red Dwarf: Back in the Red); Cake (Hyperdrive : Clare); Cheesecake Split (Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties );Cupcakes (Star Gate: Off the Grid / Stepford Wives 2/ Kyle XY: The List is Life); Danish (Torchwood: Meat ); Data cake (The Next Generation: Phantasms); Donut (Transformers the Movie/2 ); Double layer chocolate fudge cake (seaQuest: DSV: By Any Other Name); Dumplings (Flash Gordon: Life Source); Icoberry Torte (Deep Space 9 :Sanctuary ); Strawberry Shortcake (Enterprise: Horizon);

Chips: Beta carotene Chips (Earth Final Conflict: Keys to the Kingdom ); Chip butties (Red Dwarf: Back to Earth ); Chips (Doctor Who: World War II/Doctor Who: The Parting of the Ways ); Cold Chip Sandwich (Sarah-Jane Adventures: Revenge of the Slitheen ); Eggs, Ham and chips (Torchwood: Random Shoes];Fish and Chips (Doctor Who: Last of the Timelords/ Doctor Who: Turn Left );

Chocolate: Delvian Chocolates (Deep Space 9 : Improbable Cause ); Chocolate Bar (Stargate:SG1Bane);Chocolate Cake (The Next Generation: Parallels); Chocolate Caramels (BG2: Exodus ); Chocolate Eruption (Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties);Chocolate Ice cream (Bionic Woman: 200Faceoff);Chocolate Sundae (The Next Generation: The Price); Chocolate Walnut Cookies (Stargate:SG1: Forever in a Day); Choco Poppers (NTZ A Little Peace and Quiet); Eskimo Bar (Jupiter Moon); Kai Winn chocolate soufflé (Deep Space 9 : Life Support); Milky Way (Slaughterhouse-5 N ); Plain Chocolate (The Next Generation: Liaisons /Hyperdrive: Weekend Off ); Starbars (Silver Sun); Three Musketeers Candy Bar (Slaughterhouse-5 Novel );

Desserts and Biscuits Blueberry Pancakes (Kyle XY: Blame it on the Rain ); Blue Jelly (SGA The Game ); Blue String Pudding (The Clangers); Bread Pudding Soufflé (Deep Space 9 : Homefront ); Caramel apples (Lois and Clarke: The Green, Green Glow of Home ); Crepes (Kyle XY:To C.I.R With Love ); Croissants (The Next Generation: Attached / Doctor Who: Turn Left); Fondant Supreme (Doctor Who: The Happiness Patrol); Jell-O (SGA Michael ); Macaroons (SG Line in the Sand); Mrs. Angela’s Rhubarb Surprise (Doctor Who: Forest of the Dead); Nepco Wafers (Jeremiah: To Sail Beyond the Stars); Peach Cobbler (The Next Generation : Liaisons ); Popcorn (Lois and Clarke: The Green, Green Glow of Home/ Stargate Atlantis: Doppelganger/Earth Final conflict: Through Your Eyes );
Strawberry Fondant Surprise (Doctor Who: The Happiness Patrol ); Suet pudding (Goodnight Sweetheart: Who’s Taking You Home Tonight? );
Tellurian Mint Truffles (Deep Space 9 : The Assignment ); Waffles (BG1980 The Super Scouts );

Hot Dogs Chilli Rock Dog (Roswell: Crazy); Chipolti (Babylon 5 : Knives); Hot dog (Deep Space 9 :Starship Down/ Flash Gordon: Random Access/ Aliens in the Attic );



Ice Cream: Banana Split (The Next Generation : Suddenly Human); Double double chocolate fudge (Lois and Clarke: : The Man of Steel Bars );Fudgy Budgy Cone (Dark Angel: Dawg Day Afternoon); Hot Fudge Blast Off (Roswell: The Morning After); Hot fudge Ice Cream (SG1 Holiday): Plain Ice Cream (Torchwood: Meat /Close Encounters of the Third Kind);Ice Cream Sundae (seaQuest DSV: Vapors ); Mint Chocolate Ice Cream (Red Dwarf: Pete);

Pasta: Angel Hair Pasta (Enterprise: Regeneration); Angel Hair with Tomato and Basil (Lois and Clarke: The Rival ); Pasta al Fiorella (The Next Generation: Birthright); Pasta Boudin (Deep Space 9: Paradise Lost ); Pasta Carbonara (BW2007: Everything Will Change );Pasta Special (Dinotopia: Marooned); Spaghetti (Kyle XY: Does Kyle Dream of Electric Fish? );

Pie Asteroid Pie (Roswell: We Are Family ); Blueberry pie (The Next Generation : Pre-emptive Strike); Men in Blackberry Pie (Roswell: The Balance); Pie (SG1 Urgo /Tripods: England); Shepherd’s Pie (The Infinite Worlds of H.G. Wells); Sweet Potato Pie (X-Files: Jose Chung’s From Outer Space);


Pizza: American Feast (Torchwood: Everything Changes); Double Cheese Pepperoni (FG Assassin ); Jubilee Pizza (Torchwood: Everything Changes ); Mr. Pink Pizza (The Incredible Hulk 2008); Pepperoni Feast (Torchwood: Cyberwoman );Pepper Undefined Pizza (Earth Final Conflict: Truth/ Doctor Who: Rose/ Stargate: Atlantis: The Return/ Heroes: Four Months Later/ Iron Man/ The Incredible Hulk 2008/ Torchwood: Meat/V2009 episode 3);

What else do you notice? Americans eat pizza, sweet pies, pasta, hot dogs and burgers, while Brits eat pizza, Shepherd’s pie, chips


Healthy Food

What we consider healthy to eat differs from person to person. Many people choose to be vegetarian and will think meat and poultry are not healthy choices, but compared to the above they are very nutritious! Take heart from the fact that most of the sandwiches are vegetarian, or close to it ( we have to assume Worf would have something alive on his wrap). The soup is vegetable based as well.

Sandwiches, wraps and rolls : Avocado sandwich (Beware! The Blob);
Burrito (4400 Becoming / (Hyperdrive: Asteroid);
Cheese and Pickle sandwiches(Torchwood: Meat);
Galaxy Melt (Roswell: Four Square); Galaxy Sub (Roswell: Meet the Dupes/1); Peanut Butter and Jelly Sandwiches (seaQuest DSV: Brothers and Sisters );
Sandwiches (The Next Generation : Samaritan Snare/ Beware! The Blob );
Tuna Sandwich (Stargate:SG1:Rules of Engagement );Tuna Salad Sandwich (The Day the Earth Stood Still 2 );
Watercress sandwiches (The Next Generation : Journey’s End ); Worf Wrap (Roswell: To Serve and Protect);

Soup Bunya Chowder (Babylon 5: A Distant Star);
M15 soup (Goodnight Sweetheart: Who’s Taking You Home Tonight?); Mock Oyster Soup (Goodnight Sweetheart: Who’s Taking You Home Tonight?);
Pepper soup (Doctor Who: The Unicorn and the Wasp);
Tomato Soup (Voyager: The Caretaker);
Vegetable Soup (The Next Generation : Attached );

Poultry Chicken (Doctor Who: The End of Time); Chicken a la Sisko (Deep Space 9: Shattered Mirror ); Chicken Drumsticks (Lexx: Bad Carrot ); Chicken Enchiladas (Lois and Clarke: Honeymoon in Metropolis );Chicken Legs (Doctor Who: Forest of the Dead); Chicken Soup (My Favourite Martian: There is No Cure for the Common Martian); Chicken Tikka (Goodnight Sweetheart: Who’s Taking You Home Tonight? ); Curried chicken and rice (Deep Space 9: Blaze of Glory);
Tofu Chicken (Stargate: Atlantis: McKay and Mrs Miller );
Turkey (Doctor Who: Voyage of the Damned);
Vindaloo (Red Dwarf);


Vegetables Asparagus (Deep Space 9: By Inferno’s Light/ SQDSV By Any Other Name); Aubergine and seaweed curry (Dinotopia: The Cure); Broccoli (Earth 2:Natural Born Grendlers);
Carrot (Doctor Who: The Waters of Mars ); Corn on the Cob (Voyager: The Caretaker); Corn on the Cob/Cream Corn (Lois and Clarke: The Green, Green Glow of Home );
Heavenly Hash Special (Roswell: Monsters);
Potato Casserole (The Next Generation : The Wounded );
Swede (Doctor Who :Last of the Timelords);
Tuber (Stargate: Atlantis: The Game );

Salad Endive Salad (Deep Space 9: Whispers); Greek God Salad (Roswell: The End of the World);

Fruit Apple (Battlestar1980: The Super Scouts/ Doctor Who: The Eleventh Hour ); Bananas (Doctor Who: Midnight ); Citrus Fruit (Stargate: Atlantis: The Game );
Power Fruits (Blackstar); Strawberry (Lexx: Nook/Firefly/ Stargate: Atlantis: Brainstorm );

Fish and other Seafood Anchovies (Doctor who: The Unicorn and the Wasp); Blackened redfish with creamed spinach and sautéed beets (Deep Space 9: Equilibrium); Blowfish Sushi (Lois and Clarke: Vatman ); Caviar (The Next Generation : Sins of the Father );
Fish fingers and custard (Doctor Who: The Eleventh Hour );
Gumbo (Quantum Leap: Southern Comforts; Frankenfish );
Kelp buds (The Next Generation : The Wounded );
lobster (The Invaders: The Peacemaker);
Plankton Loaf (The Next Generation: The Wounded);
Redfish (Deep Space 9 : The Visitor); Redskin Basket (Roswell: River Dog);
Sea Berries (The Next Generation : The Wounded ); Shrimp Creole (Deep Space 9: The Abandoned); Smoked Salmon (Torchwood: Adam );Sushi (Bionic Woman: 2007: The Education of Jaime Sommers); Squid (Deep Space 9: Blaze of Glory );

Eggs
Egg Salad (Quantum Leap: The Color of Truth ); Eggs (Goodnight Sweetheart: As You Wave Me Goodbye);
Frijola Frittata (Roswell: Wipeout! );
Green Eggs with Moonrock Hash (Roswell: The Convention);
Sweet and Sour Tortillas (Roswell: To Serve and Protect );

Meat Bacon (Goodnight Sweetheart: As You Wave Me Goodbye/ Doctor Who: The Eleventh Hour ); Chitlins (Quantum Leap: The Color of Truth );
Fricandeau Stew (Deep Space 9: Whispers ); Jambalaya (Deep Space 9: Homefront )/Deep Space 9: The Jem’Hadar);
Lamb’s Tails (Goodnight Sweetheart: Just one More Chance );
Meatballs (Battlestar Galactica1980: The Night the Cylons Landed);
Roast Beef (Stargate:SG1: Arthur’s Mantle/ Doctor Who: Midnight );
Salisbury Steak (Stargate: Atlantis: The Game ); Schnitzel (Stargate: Atlantis: Irresponsible ); Steak (Stargate:SG1:Upgrades );

Odds and Ends
Baked Beans (Doctor Who: The Eleventh Hour); Blue Moon Queseolla (Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties);
cellular peptide cake (The Next Generation : Phantasms); Cheese (Goodnight Sweetheart: As You Wave Me Goodbye);
Fajita Fajita(Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties ); Froot Loops (Stargate:SG1: Window of Opportunity);
Goobers ( aka peanuts) (Stargate: Atlantis: Doppelganger/Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties);
Jalapeno Shooters (Roswell: A Tale of Two Parties );
Koopa special (Super Mario Brothers);
Nourishment Gel (Hyperdrive: Weekend Off );
Oatmeal (Stargate:SG1:Window of Opportunity ); Oyster Mushrooms (Dinotopia: The Big Fight);
Peanuts (Doctor Who: Midnight ); Power Bars (Stargate: Atlantis: Epiphany/ Stargate: Atlantis: Harmony );
Saturn Rings (Roswell: Blood Brother ); Spirulina (Earth 2: Memory Play);
Taquitoes with green sauce (Lois and Clarke: Vatman );
Walnuts (Doctor Who: The Unicorn and the Wasp);
Yoghurt (Doctor Who: The Eleventh Hour ); Whatsit’s (Hyperdrive: Weekend Off );
Zagnuts (Roswell: The Summer of ’47);

What you notice about healthy food is that it is dominated by sandwiches, soup, meat and chicken. There’s not a lot of imagination in the meals except for Roswell where the characters were working in a tourist cafe, making up lot of interesting names and using Mexican dishes. The Star Trek franchise doesn’t dominate this section. Deep Space 9 shows the Sisko family making traditional Southern American dishes, and presents Keiko O’Brien’s seafood choices, but not much else.
It’s interesting that fruit and salad are so under-represented. Perhaps the Killer Tomatoes had a bad influence on salad, but Lexx’s bad carrots haven’t had the same effect. At least the salad names are interesting. Even the vegetable dishes are limited and boring.

Alien Food

This involves alien animals, vegetables and fruits, sometimes made into sweets and puddings or other recognisable food formats. What’s interesting here is the limited number of series and films (forget books!) that imagine alien food:
The Star Trek franchise dominates: Deep Space Nine; The Next Generation, Voyager and Enterprise. This is a universe where there are many friendly aliens as well as hostile ones. Voyager has an alien chef finding the crew edibles on planets in the Delta Quadrant.
Farscape – This series also had friendly aliens, some of whom lived on Moya with John. Food would inevitably be a problem for such a varied group.
Babylon 5 – Once again a universe with friendly aliens with whom the crew made alliances. The aliens here deride human food as often as alien food is shown.
Stargate Atlantis and Roswell have one entry each, not surprising for earth bound Roswell, but an interesting omission for Atlantis.

So far the dominant alien food imaginers have been American. Two English series show alien food in a less positive light:

Red Dwarf has interesting alien food that sometimes crawls off the plate or attacks the crew.
Lexx has revolting alien food which the crew enjoys. But Lexx also shows humans being turned into alien food.

The Alien Menu

Alterian chowder (Deep Space 9 : Armageddon Game) ; Andorian Tuber Root (Deep Space 9 : Second Sight);
Bok rat liver (Deep Space 9 : Soldiers of the Empire ); Breen (Babylon 5: Walkabout); Bregit Lung (The Next Generation: A Matter of Honor ); Buffalo wings (Doctor Who : Voyage of the Damned ); Bularian Canapés (The Next Generation: Journey’s End);
Chee’lash fruit (Deep Space 9 : Hard Time); Coltayin Roots (The Next Generation: Liaisons ); Crispy Grolak (Farscape: Lava’s a Many Splendored Thing);
Delovian Souffle (The Next Generation :The Child );
Feragit Goulash (Voyager: Parallax); Flaked Blood Fleas (Deep Space 9 : Rules of Acquisition );Flamed Mange Cat (Flash Gordon: Revelations); Fungilli (The Next Generation: Galaxy’s Child):
Gagh (The Next Generation : A Matter of Honor /Enterprise: Sleeping Dogs);
Gladst (Deep Space 9: Melora); Gramilion Sand Peas (Deep Space 9 : Rules of Acquisition );
Hasperat (Deep Space 9 : Rejoined ); Heart of Targ (The Next Generation: A Matter of Honor );
I’danian Space Pudding (Deep Space 9 : Babel/ Deep Space 9 : The Search);
Jelassa Berries (Lexx: Trip); Jellied Gree Worms (Deep Space 9 : Ferengi Love Songs); Jilnak (Farscape: Lava’s a Many Splendored Thing); Jumbo Romulan molluscs (Deep Space 9 : The Maquis);
Koberry Torte (Deep Space 9 : The Homecoming ); Ktarian Chocolate Puff (The Next Generation: Liaisons);
Lingta (Deep Space 9 : Looking for Par’Mach in All The Wrong Places); Lokar beans (Deep Space 9 : Rules of Acquisition); Lorvan Crackers (Deep Space 9 : Defiant);
Mantickian Pate (The Next Generation : Half a Life); Matapin rock fungi (Deep Space 9 : Business as Usual); Mobifruit (Deep Space 9 : Rejoined );
Ongilan Caviar (The Next Generation : Genesis ); Orion Wing Slugs (The Next Generation :Ménage a Troi ); Oskoid (The Next Generation : Ménage a Troi/ The Next Generation : Half a Life);
Palamarian sea urchin (Deep Space 9 : Business as Usual ); Pipius Claw (The Next Generation : A Matter of Honor ); Plomeek broth (Enterprise); Plomeek Soup (Deep Space 9 : The Maquis); Puree of Beetle (Deep Space 9 : The Assignment);
Q’lavos (Deep Space 9 : The Ship ); Q’Parol (Deep Space 9 : The Assignment ); Quadruple Chocolate dipped sweet cluster fry (Lexx: Eating Pattern)
Racht (Deep Space 9 : Melora ); Raw Slug Liver (Deep Space 9 : The Assignment ); Regava Eggs (Deep Space 9 : Destiny ); Rokeg Blood Pie (The Next Generation : A Matter of Honor );
Slug Steaks (Deep Space 9 : Ferengi Love Songs); Spiny Lobe Fish (The Next Generation: Frame of Mind ); Space Weevil (Red Dwarf: Legion);
Tarvokian Powder Cake (The Next Generation: Liaisons); Thalian Chocolate Mousse (The Next Generation: The Dauphin ); Tojal in Yamok Sauce (Deep Space 9 : Destiny ); Tube grubs (Deep Space 9 : Rules of Acquisition ); Tulaberries (Deep Space 9 : Rules of Acquisition ); Tuttleroot Soup (Stargate Atlantis: Critical Mass); Tuwaly Pie (Deep Space 9 : Shakaar);
Uttaberries (The Next Generation : Ménage a Troi); Utaberry Crepes (Deep Space 9 : Armageddon Game);
Vak Clover Soup (Deep Space 9 : Melora ); Veklava (Deep Space 9 : Rejoined); Viinerine (The Next Generation: Face of the Enemy );
Wentlian Condor Snake (Deep Space 9 : Business as Usual );
Yigrish Cream Pie (Deep Space 9 : Distant Voices);
Zilm’kach (Deep Space 9 : Melora )

What does it all add up to?

Food in science fiction equates to comfort and belonging. This connection is so strong food becomes a metaphor for these human emotions.
But food also demonstrates the differences between us and aliens. These differences can be positive as shown by Deanna Troi digging into alien desserts, or revolting as in the case of Klingon gagh.
Doctor Who gives value to plain, old fashioned cooking and fatty English foods, presumably in protest against the globalisation of food. The Doctor waxes on happily about chips and pies to encourage us to eat local, if not healthy.
Alien food gives us a chance to play with words, inventing new fruits and animals in a variety of dialects, from Andorian to Vulcan. Roswell excelled at making up sci fi names for cafe food, fitting in with the Roswell theme.
Lots of positives and lots of room to improve!