What are some of your unpopular opinions about food?
Replies
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RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »Crafty_camper123 wrote: »
Maybe they mean as a topping? In which case, I'm in agreement: I have a similar view about two starches at the same meal.
I think it is mellow mushroom that has a pizza with potatoes on it. It is quite horrible. You can't rule out carbs on a pizza because the tomato sauce has carbs. Pineapple though should not be on a savory pizza either.
Agreed, the tomato sauce and any veggies would be a "carb" topping. I have seen pies that have pasta as a topping - either a baked ziti pie or a buffalo mac & cheese pie, and I'd agree that's ridiculous. I've never seen potato on pizza but that would also be bizarre. So I'd agree that fruit or starchy carbs on a pizza is wrong.
One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
I mean, I love you, and I'm sorry, but... no.
Teehee. I'm trying to decide if it's a midwest thing or if it was just my little work group, lol. We all loved it, got it every week.
Afterthought: Pickle pizzas seem to be a thing around here, lately. I dunno if that's Michigan/Midwest, or just a growing thing. Usually dill pickles, alfredo sauce, dill weed, maybe extra garlic, and optionally chicken.
Just for the record, I have yet to see mashed potatoes on a pizza, OR dill pickles, and I live in the midwest.
On the other hand, I remember when there was a restaurant here called the Mashed Potato Club (see old NYT article, I guess it fit their brief of "things in the midwest to tell people about": https://www.nytimes.com/1997/01/08/garden/mashed-potatoes-for-the-brave.html).
The weird thing was that it was not too far from Boystown and the decor was very reflective of that, and the servers tended to be hot guys in tight shirts. Funny for a place called Mashed Potato Club, as it was already into the Atkins/carb phobic era back when I went a few times.
From the article:
"The menu lists the 10 most popular combinations. At the top is one of spinach, goat cheese and sun-dried tomatoes; a topping of macadamia nuts, raspberries, whipped cream and chocolate is eighth....
The 64-seat restaurant uses 200 to 400 pounds of potatoes each night, with reds outselling sweets 5 to 1.
Mr. Kovach, who spent more than two decades working in restaurants before opening his own, could recall only one topping combination that made him wince.
''Someone ordered red potatoes topped with peanut butter, horseradish and sour cream,'' he said. ''I'm glad I didn't have to eat it.''
Appetizer-size portions of potatoes are $4.50, entrees are $6.50. Toppings are priced from 75 cents for items like pepperoncini, pickles, onions or carrots to $7.95 for crab. Entrees not based on potatoes are $9.95 to $19.95. Major credit cards are accepted, but reservations are not."1 -
RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »Crafty_camper123 wrote: »
Maybe they mean as a topping? In which case, I'm in agreement: I have a similar view about two starches at the same meal.
I think it is mellow mushroom that has a pizza with potatoes on it. It is quite horrible. You can't rule out carbs on a pizza because the tomato sauce has carbs. Pineapple though should not be on a savory pizza either.
Agreed, the tomato sauce and any veggies would be a "carb" topping. I have seen pies that have pasta as a topping - either a baked ziti pie or a buffalo mac & cheese pie, and I'd agree that's ridiculous. I've never seen potato on pizza but that would also be bizarre. So I'd agree that fruit or starchy carbs on a pizza is wrong.
One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
I mean, I love you, and I'm sorry, but... no.
Teehee. I'm trying to decide if it's a midwest thing or if it was just my little work group, lol. We all loved it, got it every week.
Afterthought: Pickle pizzas seem to be a thing around here, lately. I dunno if that's Michigan/Midwest, or just a growing thing. Usually dill pickles, alfredo sauce, dill weed, maybe extra garlic, and optionally chicken.
Defo oddball: Local food-truck pizza guy used to camp out at a brewpub I go to, and I'd buy his pizzas occasionally. One night after dark, I was walking back to my car when he called out "Hey, Ann - wanna try something?". After verifying that it was vegetarian, I said yes, without knowing what it was (remember, it was dark: he was holding out a small slice to me, but I couldn't see it).
Peanut butter and jelly pizza. So, so, transporting good! Melty peanut butter, melty jelly, nice chewy fast-bake handmade brick-oven-fired crust. Not on the menu: He was just playing.
You anti-peanut-butter folks wouldn't like it, nor pizza purists. More for me!
I haven't heard of pickle pizzas, although I might have just skipped over them because I'm not a pickle person. I would die for a peanut butter and jelly pizza though.
If you ever get to Lansing on the right day/time, call up Detroit Frankie and ask him to make you one. Bet he will, no actual death required. He keeps moving around, but you should be able to find him online.
As a bonus, he's charmingly eccentric.0 -
RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »Crafty_camper123 wrote: »
Maybe they mean as a topping? In which case, I'm in agreement: I have a similar view about two starches at the same meal.
I think it is mellow mushroom that has a pizza with potatoes on it. It is quite horrible. You can't rule out carbs on a pizza because the tomato sauce has carbs. Pineapple though should not be on a savory pizza either.
Agreed, the tomato sauce and any veggies would be a "carb" topping. I have seen pies that have pasta as a topping - either a baked ziti pie or a buffalo mac & cheese pie, and I'd agree that's ridiculous. I've never seen potato on pizza but that would also be bizarre. So I'd agree that fruit or starchy carbs on a pizza is wrong.
One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
I mean, I love you, and I'm sorry, but... no.
Teehee. I'm trying to decide if it's a midwest thing or if it was just my little work group, lol. We all loved it, got it every week.
Afterthought: Pickle pizzas seem to be a thing around here, lately. I dunno if that's Michigan/Midwest, or just a growing thing. Usually dill pickles, alfredo sauce, dill weed, maybe extra garlic, and optionally chicken.
Defo oddball: Local food-truck pizza guy used to camp out at a brewpub I go to, and I'd buy his pizzas occasionally. One night after dark, I was walking back to my car when he called out "Hey, Ann - wanna try something?". After verifying that it was vegetarian, I said yes, without knowing what it was (remember, it was dark: he was holding out a small slice to me, but I couldn't see it).
Peanut butter and jelly pizza. So, so, transporting good! Melty peanut butter, melty jelly, nice chewy fast-bake handmade brick-oven-fired crust. Not on the menu: He was just playing.
You anti-peanut-butter folks wouldn't like it, nor pizza purists. More for me!
I haven't heard of pickle pizzas, although I might have just skipped over them because I'm not a pickle person. I would die for a peanut butter and jelly pizza though.
If you ever get to Lansing on the right day/time, call up Detroit Frankie and ask him to make you one. Bet he will, no actual death required. He keeps moving around, but you should be able to find him online.
As a bonus, he's charmingly eccentric.
Tell him Ann sent ya.4 -
I can't stand how some people insist on "organic" or "non-GMO" products as if you are not eating healthy because you are just eating "regular" food. I also despise quinoa, kale, and beets.3
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Troutrouter1968 wrote: »I can't stand how some people insist on "organic" or "non-GMO" products as if you are not eating healthy because you are just eating "regular" food. I also despise quinoa, kale, and beets.
I am meh on all three of those foods, but I agree with you about the "regular" food. There was a small health food store in my neighborhood that had these huge ugly "conventional" signs on anything that wasn't organic...with a warning type label. Not exactly conducive to sales. So dramatic!2 -
Faux-meat (burgers, chicken, etc.) is not helping the environment. You can tell yourself that while ordering an Impossible Burger while driving your SUV through the BK drive-thru if it makes you feel better, but... no5
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RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »Crafty_camper123 wrote: »
Maybe they mean as a topping? In which case, I'm in agreement: I have a similar view about two starches at the same meal.
I think it is mellow mushroom that has a pizza with potatoes on it. It is quite horrible. You can't rule out carbs on a pizza because the tomato sauce has carbs. Pineapple though should not be on a savory pizza either.
Agreed, the tomato sauce and any veggies would be a "carb" topping. I have seen pies that have pasta as a topping - either a baked ziti pie or a buffalo mac & cheese pie, and I'd agree that's ridiculous. I've never seen potato on pizza but that would also be bizarre. So I'd agree that fruit or starchy carbs on a pizza is wrong.
One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
I mean, I love you, and I'm sorry, but... no.
Teehee. I'm trying to decide if it's a midwest thing or if it was just my little work group, lol. We all loved it, got it every week.
Afterthought: Pickle pizzas seem to be a thing around here, lately. I dunno if that's Michigan/Midwest, or just a growing thing. Usually dill pickles, alfredo sauce, dill weed, maybe extra garlic, and optionally chicken.
Defo oddball: Local food-truck pizza guy used to camp out at a brewpub I go to, and I'd buy his pizzas occasionally. One night after dark, I was walking back to my car when he called out "Hey, Ann - wanna try something?". After verifying that it was vegetarian, I said yes, without knowing what it was (remember, it was dark: he was holding out a small slice to me, but I couldn't see it).
Peanut butter and jelly pizza. So, so, transporting good! Melty peanut butter, melty jelly, nice chewy fast-bake handmade brick-oven-fired crust. Not on the menu: He was just playing.
You anti-peanut-butter folks wouldn't like it, nor pizza purists. More for me!
I haven't heard of pickle pizzas, although I might have just skipped over them because I'm not a pickle person. I would die for a peanut butter and jelly pizza though.
If you ever get to Lansing on the right day/time, call up Detroit Frankie and ask him to make you one. Bet he will, no actual death required. He keeps moving around, but you should be able to find him online.
As a bonus, he's charmingly eccentric.
Heck yeah, I might have to chance it the next time I take my GR-AA loop to visit old friends.1 -
Iced tea is bleh. Tea is meant to be hot.5
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I can live without bacon.
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Soda is gross it makes me feel ill1
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The concept of "all you can eat" buffets is sickening.9
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Also, Chinese takeout is grossly overpriced.1
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RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »Crafty_camper123 wrote: »
Maybe they mean as a topping? In which case, I'm in agreement: I have a similar view about two starches at the same meal.
I think it is mellow mushroom that has a pizza with potatoes on it. It is quite horrible. You can't rule out carbs on a pizza because the tomato sauce has carbs. Pineapple though should not be on a savory pizza either.
Agreed, the tomato sauce and any veggies would be a "carb" topping. I have seen pies that have pasta as a topping - either a baked ziti pie or a buffalo mac & cheese pie, and I'd agree that's ridiculous. I've never seen potato on pizza but that would also be bizarre. So I'd agree that fruit or starchy carbs on a pizza is wrong.
One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
I mean, I love you, and I'm sorry, but... no.
Teehee. I'm trying to decide if it's a midwest thing or if it was just my little work group, lol. We all loved it, got it every week.
Afterthought: Pickle pizzas seem to be a thing around here, lately. I dunno if that's Michigan/Midwest, or just a growing thing. Usually dill pickles, alfredo sauce, dill weed, maybe extra garlic, and optionally chicken.
Defo oddball: Local food-truck pizza guy used to camp out at a brewpub I go to, and I'd buy his pizzas occasionally. One night after dark, I was walking back to my car when he called out "Hey, Ann - wanna try something?". After verifying that it was vegetarian, I said yes, without knowing what it was (remember, it was dark: he was holding out a small slice to me, but I couldn't see it).
Peanut butter and jelly pizza. So, so, transporting good! Melty peanut butter, melty jelly, nice chewy fast-bake handmade brick-oven-fired crust. Not on the menu: He was just playing.
You anti-peanut-butter folks wouldn't like it, nor pizza purists. More for me!
I haven't heard of pickle pizzas, although I might have just skipped over them because I'm not a pickle person. I would die for a peanut butter and jelly pizza though.
Pickle pizzas are SOOOO good! Pickles are one of my favorite foods so on a pizza they are amazing. They give it that tangy flavor similar to banana peppers.
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Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »RelCanonical wrote: »Crafty_camper123 wrote: »
Maybe they mean as a topping? In which case, I'm in agreement: I have a similar view about two starches at the same meal.
I think it is mellow mushroom that has a pizza with potatoes on it. It is quite horrible. You can't rule out carbs on a pizza because the tomato sauce has carbs. Pineapple though should not be on a savory pizza either.
Agreed, the tomato sauce and any veggies would be a "carb" topping. I have seen pies that have pasta as a topping - either a baked ziti pie or a buffalo mac & cheese pie, and I'd agree that's ridiculous. I've never seen potato on pizza but that would also be bizarre. So I'd agree that fruit or starchy carbs on a pizza is wrong.
One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
I mean, I love you, and I'm sorry, but... no.
Teehee. I'm trying to decide if it's a midwest thing or if it was just my little work group, lol. We all loved it, got it every week.
Afterthought: Pickle pizzas seem to be a thing around here, lately. I dunno if that's Michigan/Midwest, or just a growing thing. Usually dill pickles, alfredo sauce, dill weed, maybe extra garlic, and optionally chicken.
Defo oddball: Local food-truck pizza guy used to camp out at a brewpub I go to, and I'd buy his pizzas occasionally. One night after dark, I was walking back to my car when he called out "Hey, Ann - wanna try something?". After verifying that it was vegetarian, I said yes, without knowing what it was (remember, it was dark: he was holding out a small slice to me, but I couldn't see it).
Peanut butter and jelly pizza. So, so, transporting good! Melty peanut butter, melty jelly, nice chewy fast-bake handmade brick-oven-fired crust. Not on the menu: He was just playing.
You anti-peanut-butter folks wouldn't like it, nor pizza purists. More for me!
I haven't heard of pickle pizzas, although I might have just skipped over them because I'm not a pickle person. I would die for a peanut butter and jelly pizza though.
Pickle pizzas are SOOOO good! Pickles are one of my favorite foods so on a pizza they are amazing. They give it that tangy flavor similar to banana peppers.
Also, pickles on peanut butter sandwiches >>>1 -
pancakerunner wrote: »Also, Chinese takeout is grossly overpriced.
Christ, so is Subway! I stopped off there last night for a kids size roast beef sandwich and the sandwich itself is almost $5. For a Barbie sized sandwich!3 -
I haven't had jelly on pizza but have had peanut butter pizza at John's Incredible Pizza and I went back for seconds! I was really surprised that it tasted good and it's not the best pizza.0
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pancakerunner wrote: »Also, Chinese takeout is grossly overpriced.
Christ, so is Subway! I stopped off there last night for a kids size roast beef sandwich and the sandwich itself is almost $5. For a Barbie sized sandwich!
AGREED! Ever since the 5 footlong was gone, Subway sandwiches are are way overpriced considering it is a fast food place.0 -
pancakerunner wrote: »Also, Chinese takeout is grossly overpriced.
I'll strongly disagree with this one.
At any of my local places, I get a portion big enough for two meals for about $10.
How many restaurants can beat that?
Also, in the restaurant business, there is a very slim profit margin. Food cost/waste, rent/mortgage, utilites/maintenance, trying to pay employees a living wage, etc. If anything, Chinese takeout is grossly UNDERpriced.6 -
Noreenmarie1234 wrote: »pancakerunner wrote: »Also, Chinese takeout is grossly overpriced.
Christ, so is Subway! I stopped off there last night for a kids size roast beef sandwich and the sandwich itself is almost $5. For a Barbie sized sandwich!
AGREED! Ever since the 5 footlong was gone, Subway sandwiches are are way overpriced considering it is a fast food place.
https://www.vice.com/en_us/article/ev7d8j/now-that-the-dollar5-footlong-is-dead-can-we-admit-that-subway-sucks1 -
My unpopular opinion - most cereal is gross! Especially anything in nuclear ☢️ color options like lucky charms.....Lol 🤢2
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One of the local places here has an "Idaho" pizza that's topped with mashed potatoes (as the "sauce") cheddar, and bacon. I love it.
@RelCanonical
Hmm - I think any base for mashed potatoes must be worth a try! (And I come from the hub of NYC pizza land..) 😉0 -
Safari_Gal_ wrote: »My unpopular opinion - most cereal is gross! Especially anything in nuclear ☢️ color options like lucky charms.....Lol 🤢
I agree. Hard to recall the last time I had or even truly craved cereal... of the cereals that are out there my favorites are shredded wheat, grape nuts, Kix and Crispx. Sweet cereals are no bueno2 -
So this isn't about food, but food related I guess...
I find Trader Joe's highly overrated.5 -
pancakerunner wrote: »So this isn't about food, but food related I guess...
I find Trader Joe's highly overrated.
I agree with you re: Trader Joe's. I feel like a lot of their food selection is similar to Big Lots or Dollar Tree, just with "fancy" options and nicer packaging. No thanks. I do shop there on occasion for a handful of items but I don't see the major appeal.1 -
Safari_Gal_ wrote: »My unpopular opinion - most cereal is gross! Especially anything in nuclear ☢️ color options like lucky charms.....Lol 🤢
I like steel cut oats (warm), but hate cold cereal and always have. When I was little I would have to eat them if staying at someone else's house often enough but otherwise never did. It's not just the sugary ones, I also don't like the non sugary ones. With milk it just seems like a soggy unappealing mess and when people say they like it dry I just can't comprehend why.
I always feel like I'm out there alone on this one!2 -
Another vote for the overall meh-ness to horribleness of cold cereal. It's a little more tolerable if it's not the multi-colored or super-sweet ones, and it's dry. The only one even remotely edible in milk is that Grape Nuts BB-sized hard granule stuff, because it doesn't instantly turn into cold, limp mush.
I buy rice krispies once in a while to make this weird savory cheese "cookie" recipe I have, but I don't actually eat it as a cereal, ever. (I did flirt with liking Cocoa Crispies as a child, but other than that, didn't like cold cereal then, either. Well, I'd eat the freeze-dried strawberries out of whatever cereal it was that had those, in the 1960s.)
I do love my daily thick rolled oats, though: Hot, with fixins.4 -
Another vote for the overall meh-ness to horribleness of cold cereal. It's a little more tolerable if it's not the multi-colored or super-sweet ones, and it's dry. The only one even remotely edible in milk is that Grape Nuts BB-sized hard granule stuff, because it doesn't instantly turn into cold, limp mush.
I buy rice krispies once in a while to make this weird savory cheese "cookie" recipe I have, but I don't actually eat it as a cereal, ever. (I did flirt with liking Cocoa Crispies as a child, but other than that, didn't like cold cereal then, either. Well, I'd eat the freeze-dried strawberries out of whatever cereal it was that had those, in the 1960s.)
I do love my daily thick rolled oats, though: Hot, with fixins.
I bought some Rice Krispies recently for exactly this purpose, having seen the recipe on Pinterest and it was so different from anything I’d come across it piqued my curiosity.
But I’ve never made them because when I looked closer the recipe called for a full 8oz of cheddar. That scared me off! Are they good enough to justify the cheese quantity?
In the meantime I’ve been chipping away at the box of cereal, with Califia Farms Mocha Almond Milk because I’ve always found cold cereal with actual milk unpalatable.
Tell me it’s worth making the cheesy crispies so I can stop torturing myself so as not to waste them! 😂0 -
BarbaraHelen2013 wrote: »Another vote for the overall meh-ness to horribleness of cold cereal. It's a little more tolerable if it's not the multi-colored or super-sweet ones, and it's dry. The only one even remotely edible in milk is that Grape Nuts BB-sized hard granule stuff, because it doesn't instantly turn into cold, limp mush.
I buy rice krispies once in a while to make this weird savory cheese "cookie" recipe I have, but I don't actually eat it as a cereal, ever. (I did flirt with liking Cocoa Crispies as a child, but other than that, didn't like cold cereal then, either. Well, I'd eat the freeze-dried strawberries out of whatever cereal it was that had those, in the 1960s.)
I do love my daily thick rolled oats, though: Hot, with fixins.
I bought some Rice Krispies recently for exactly this purpose, having seen the recipe on Pinterest and it was so different from anything I’d come across it piqued my curiosity.
But I’ve never made them because when I looked closer the recipe called for a full 8oz of cheddar. That scared me off! Are they good enough to justify the cheese quantity?
In the meantime I’ve been chipping away at the box of cereal, with Califia Farms Mocha Almond Milk because I’ve always found cold cereal with actual milk unpalatable.
Tell me it’s worth making the cheesy crispies so I can stop torturing myself so as not to waste them! 😂
I don't know whether your recipe is the same as mine, or not. Mine is high calorie, lots of cheese, maybe butter, too (been a while since last batch). It's lighter (not as dense), but overall it reminds me of how a cheese topping on something baked (casserole, say) can get a bit bubbly at the edge of a dish, then get crispy/crunchy but without burning. Very cheesy, very crisp, very rich.
Using my recipe, I've made them more than once. If I make them, it's for an event with multiple people there, and/or where I can leave any leftovers there. Does that tell you something?
If your recipe is like mine, make them small, and put paper on the cooling rack to absorb any superficial extra fat. They're rich.1 -
Cold cereal; milk; most food chains; 'Chinese' food; cookies; mayonnaise; the fad of the hour (you hear me, kale?); canned soup (it's so easy to make homemade, and much more delicious); seafood (don't like the taste or smell); huge chunks of meat not sliced or incorporated into something; sauces that are too sweet like BBQ (although the yellow Southern one is great); sweet drinks; the USA way of serving vegetables to kids--just plain on the plate: canned fruit or vegetables with rare exceptions. Food that doesn't smell good; onion; garlic; most of the middle aisles.0
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Yuk to olives2
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