Pedantic
Legend
Not your gear bedecked top hat? Poser.That opinion is so forceful, it knocked off my fedora.
Not your gear bedecked top hat? Poser.That opinion is so forceful, it knocked off my fedora.
The American Southeast says hello. My own experiences when it comes to Southern cuisine in the US outside of the South says differently. I've even brought Austrians and Germans to the American South who thought that Southern cuisine was like a completely different ballgame when it came to their understanding of cuisine in the USA.To be fair to Americans, in the 21st century, we don't really have regional native cuisine. Sure, every region may have one or two signature dishes, but I can expect to be served the same food, generally speaking, in Bar Harbor, Maine, as I would in Kansas City (either one!) or in San Diego.
Never lived until you cook chitlins for someone not from the SE and see their minds blown.The American Southeast says hello. My own experienceswhen it comes to Southern cuisine in the US outside of the South says differently. I've even brought Austrians and Germans to the American South who thought that Southern cuisine was like a completely different ballgame when it came to their understanding of cuisine in the USA.
I have had this experience in reverse, which was pretty amusing. My British friend would say things about "American food" after visiting his expat father in North Carolina that I had to explain were not particularly indicative of food culture in Colorado.The American Southeast says hello. My own experiences when it comes to Southern cuisine in the US outside of the South says differently. I've even brought Austrians and Germans to the American South who thought that Southern cuisine was like a completely different ballgame when it came to their understanding of cuisine in the USA.
Eeeh, maybe.The American Southeast says hello. My own experiences when it comes to Southern cuisine in the US outside of the South says differently. I've even brought Austrians and Germans to the American South who thought that Southern cuisine was like a completely different ballgame when it came to their understanding of cuisine in the USA.
I agree with you on a lot of stuff, but not this. Regional variety of cuisine is a real thing, even in the USA. Yes, there are national chains that, unfortunately, people eat at...but that doesn't erase regional cuisine. Local restaurants, local flora and fauna. Local cultures and mixes of cultures. Enclaves of foreign cultures. Fusion between those various cultures. Etc. That's still a real thing regardless of how many McDonald's there are.Eeeh, maybe.
I was born in the South, my family is from the South, I went to school in the South and I have since lived and worked in the South.
There are definitely regional specialties -- I grew up eating a lot of them and have taught my kids to make them -- but a lot of that is soul food and is common throughout the Black diaspora across the US.
But no matter what, it's not a completely different cuisine. You might be having gumbo or collard greens one night this week, but the rest of the week, you're eating the exact same way you would in the Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, the Southwest or Alaska.
The South doesn't have a different national cuisine from the rest of the US. It just has a great tradition of regional specialties.
If you go eat at the Varsity in Atlanta, you're eating the same foods they're serving in Denver and Boston.
Taco Bell isn't bad, I will admit.Mexican food is the single best cuisine and it’s not even close.
I know that this thread is for "unpopular opinions" but here you're "just plain ole wrong."Eeeh, maybe.
I was born in the South, my family is from the South, I went to school in the South and I have since lived and worked in the South.
There are definitely regional specialties -- I grew up eating a lot of them and have taught my kids to make them -- but a lot of that is soul food and is common throughout the Black diaspora across the US.
But no matter what, it's not a completely different cuisine. You might be having gumbo or collard greens one night this week, but the rest of the week, you're eating the exact same way you would in the Pacific Northwest, the Midwest, the Southwest or Alaska.
The South doesn't have a different national cuisine from the rest of the US. It just has a great tradition of regional specialties.
If you go eat at the Varsity in Atlanta, you're eating the same foods they're serving in Denver and Boston.
Yep.I agree with you on a lot of stuff, but not this. Regional variety of cuisine is a real thing, even in the USA. Yes, there are national chains that, unfortunately, people eat at...but that doesn't erase regional cuisine. Local restaurants, local flora and fauna. Local cultures and mixes of cultures. Enclaves of foreign cultures. Fusion between those various cultures. Etc. That's still a real thing regardless of how many McDonald's there are.