AITAH for Telling My Roommate to Stop Cooking Smelly Food in Our Shared Apartment?
Living with roommates can be a great way to save money—but it also comes with challenges, especially when personal habits start clashing. In today’s AITAH scenario, we explore a case where food, culture, and boundaries collide in a shared living space.
Let’s dig into this spicy situation.
The Conflict: Aromas vs. Agreements

A 25-year-old man—let’s call him Sam—posted on Reddit’s r/AITAH community about an awkward but escalating issue with his roommate, Ravi.
According to Sam, Ravi recently started cooking more frequently—mainly traditional South Asian dishes like curries, lentils, and sautéed spices. The meals, while flavorful, left a lingering smell in the apartment that Sam said “made it hard to breathe or relax.”
Sam tried to be polite. He mentioned the smell once in passing and asked if Ravi could maybe “air out the place” more. Ravi brushed it off and continued as normal.
Things came to a head when Sam brought friends over one evening, and one of them joked about the apartment “smelling like a spice shop.” Embarrassed, Sam confronted Ravi again, more directly this time. He told him to “stop cooking stuff that makes the whole place reek.”
Ravi got defensive, saying Sam was being culturally insensitive. He explained that this was his traditional cuisine, and he wasn’t doing anything wrong by cooking food he enjoys.
Sam, feeling unheard, turned to Reddit to ask: AITAH for telling my roommate to stop cooking smelly food?
The Clash: Cultural Respect vs. Personal Comfort



