It's got a bad rep because of its alleged pungent odour but that is so not true. The real culprit is the cheaper yellow-fleshed variety common in Malaysia in Indonesia. In Thailand it is known as Chani and generally looked down upon. It smells indeed rank and does not taste as good as the superior type, the more expensive Mong Thong, the Golden Pillow.
Its creamy flesh reminds of fruity custard but, really, is just incomparable to anything else. It is delightfully sweet but the Thais can't seem to have enough, they eat it with sweetened sticky rice boiled in coconut milk!
Recently I have seen writings by gormless individuals trying to bust the "myth" that combining durian with alcohol is dangerous. Whatever your "research" may say, I myself have had a near-death experience when I gulped down a can of beer half an hour after gorging on a durian. That was one of the most unpleasant physical experiences. Despite it was 30 degrees in the street, I was covered in sticky cold sweat. I felt sudden weakness like I was about to faint and there was nothing to do about it because both the fruit and alcohol had already been in the system. Creepy. So NEVER mix alcohol and durian!
All durian does smell but the perception of the smell varies. 90-98 people out of 100 find the odor of durian offensive, a few people (probably including yourself, and definitely including me) do not find it bad, another small group finds that really fresh durian has no bad smell but slightly old (still not bad) smells (that group includes my wife). Mong Tong is actually the most common and inexpensive durian, mass grown in Thailand. It has one unique attribute, the flavor of it has rich nutty overtones. BTW: Indonesian and Malay durian is usually better and NOT cheaper than Thai.
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