I'd say Mexican and lots of South American cuisines can easily hang with Mediterranean, but that's just my opinion.
Edit: You edited that awful fast.
Then you don't know anything.
What people seem to by realize is that, like probably everywhere in he world, there are really low quality versions of everything Americans eat. Lots of Americans eat the lowest quality available in the interest of cost, not preference.
If you come to America and try some store-brand yellow mustard and then say "wow American mustard sucks" then you're only disservicing yourself.
I work for one of the most awarded specialty food companies in the world and our mustards are amazing.
Are Hershey bars lousy and waxy? Yeah. Can you find significantly better chocolate five feet away? Absolutely!
You can literally find anything and everything in American. It's a cultural melting pot. I got these grasshopper tacos not that long ago.
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You just have to know where to look and get out of your normal social circles to find it. There are TONS of ethnic enclaves all over the place. My wife is Vietnamese, so she shows me all the Asian grocery stores and restaurants around and I show her all the BBQ, burger joints, and other places.
That and Mediterranean cuisine is relatively ubiquitous in the western world. Its everywhere already so it's not much of a comparison point.I'd say Mexican and lots of South American cuisines are easily a match for Mediterranean, but that's just my opinion.
Provolone is another common one. Although not as common as the aforementioned.
In 1997 there wasn't food variety in America? What am I reading.
That and Mediterranean cuisine is relatively ubiquitous in the western world. Its everywhere already so it's not much of a comparison point.
I know I'm saying Mediterranean cuisine IS American cuisine.Not sure what your point is. The post I replied to originally stated that Mediterranean is superior to all American cuisines.
The 90"s were the boom of variety movement in grocery stores. Before then, you didn't have 15 flavors on the shelves of Poptarts with seasonal flavors mixed in every quarter. Even if they did have many flavors, your grocery store carried 3 flavors max.
Pringles were one flavor. Ranch and BBQ were exotic.Cheerios had one flavor. Broccoli was "new" and was serves slathered in processed Velveeta like cheese. I remember when Cheddar flavored chips becoming a thing. In the 80's, Cherry Coke/Pepsi was mind blowing- that was only served in bars or made at home. Look at beer aisle- Bush, Miller, and Bud were the staples, with Coors and Pabst being niche. Now days half the aisle is micro brewery beers.
LOL, I remember the day the Chicken Nugget was introduced at McDonalds- it was a exotic family event. lol.
What you are reading is how food stocked stores and marketing in America grocery stores has changed over time. It not a slight.
Who in their right mind likes German food? It's just a bunch of nasty meat. Boring food. Sure I've had some good roasts in Germany. But, I don't think cuisine that consists of mostly of Shnitzels and sausages is very good at all. Relative to America, the food is boring and bad.
So I went to a bar for lunch and got myself a fried bologna sandwich that consisted of:
A brioche roll
House-made bologna that had been brined and then fried on the flat top
A fried egg that had shaved Gouda on top
A few planks of hot kosher pickle
And for sauce, some horseradish mayo and brown mustard.
On the side were shoestring Cajun fries, and to drink I had a Southern Tier Harvest.
I love living in the states.
Damn that sounds like it can kill someone.
American cuisine is not every cuisine you can have in America lmfao
You don't go to America for Korean food. You go to Korea for Korean food.
America is known for BBQ and diner food generally. That is your cuisine. You can't just take mexican, thai, japanese food and say its American. It literally isn't.
You can't just take mexican, thai, japanese food and say its American. It literally isn't.
America is a nation of immigrants so I respectfully disagree. Our cuisine was brought here from other cultures. Cuisine evolves over thousands of years. We've been here for a couple hundred.American cuisine is not every cuisine you can have in America lmfao
You don't go to America for Korean food. You go to Korea for Korean food.
America is known for BBQ and diner food generally. That is your cuisine. You can't just take mexican, thai, japanese food and say its American. It literally isn't.
it's hard to go to the deli case?
Trader Joe's is pretty common in the US and their cheese section has dozens of varieties.
American cuisine is not every cuisine you can have in America lmfao
You don't go to America for Korean food. You go to Korea for Korean food.
America is known for BBQ and diner food generally. That is your cuisine. You can't just take mexican, thai, japanese food and say its American. It literally isn't.
I know I'm saying Mediterranean cuisine IS American cuisine.
American cuisine is not every cuisine you can have in America lmfao
You don't go to America for Korean food. You go to Korea for Korean food.
America is known for BBQ and diner food generally. That is your cuisine. You can't just take mexican, thai, japanese food and say its American. It literally isn't.
I mean, it's available in America but it's not distinctly New World like Mexican is. Would you also consider Mexican a European cuisine?
American cuisine is not every cuisine you can have in America lmfao
You don't go to America for Korean food. You go to Korea for Korean food.
America is known for BBQ and diner food generally. That is your cuisine. You can't just take mexican, thai, japanese food and say its American. It literally isn't.
FWIW, broccoli has been popular in the US since the 1920s.
When Italian immigrants tried to market broccoli in the US in the 1920s, they experienced push-back. Racism against Italians meant that some people saw broccoli as a strange, "foreign" vegetable.
But advertising campaigns and radio spots began to win the public over. The strangeness of broccoli became an asset; some began to see it as an exciting new vegetable.
Even after the Second World War, however, broccoli was on the margins for most North Americans, partly due to a distribution problem. Other members of the Brassica family are tougher. Cabbage stores incredibly well, either fresh or pickled, and can be shipped over distance.
But broccoli stores terribly by most traditional methods; it wilts after a few days without refrigeration, and if you try to can it you'll end up with unpalatable mush.
But you can freeze it. The rise of refrigeration after the Second World War, and the development of "cold chains" brought good quality vegetables from the field to distant eaters. (In Canada, broccoli is the now third most popular frozen vegetable, after carrots and peas.)
But the real boon for broccoli was the push for healthy eating around the 1970s. Research showed that broccoli (and its relatives) were extremely nutritious, and very high in Vitamin A among other things. So health-conscious parents made sure to serve their kids broccoli, because broccoli is good for you.
Since 1980, the eating of fresh broccoli has quadrupled in North America. Kids who were raised in the 70s and 80s are still eating broccoli, and some of them are having families and feeding it to their own kids.
My most shocking experience with bread in the US was when I had literally the best barbecue in my whole life and it was served with a gooey piece of "bread". They called it whole wheat but it was just some cheap slice of factory made toast that wasn't even toasted.
Like this:
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Thats not bread if you ask me. Serving it together with that amazing brisket was almost comical, as if they've done it on purpose to fuck with people.
It's all in good fun. You are right about your last point but that's the thing that some Europeans don't seem to understand about America. We have 10,000 kinds of everything. So naturally there is going to be loads of trash. But there is a significant amount of great stuff too. People eat Hershey's and think "this is American chocolate". Yes it is ONE but there are many others. I doubt if people picked up Ghirardelli first they'd have the same opinion.
Think about where in the USA could a gas station attendant make you a real cappuccino and bakery fresh dessert?
I've really stopped caring about the actual intent of this thread entirely and am just hungry as fuck right now...
Das ganze Deutsche Zeug...ach du Scheisse...
Use this rule eurogaf when you visit the States, "if it can be eaten, it's been cooked in grease".
Use this rule eurogaf when you visit the States, "if it can be eaten, it's been cooked in grease".
Are you saying this isn't everyday life in the US?...huh? Not everything here is fried you know.
What's the point of a response like this?
What's the point of a response like this?
To be clear, I find none of this amusing.
What's the point of a response like this?
To be clear, I find none of this amusing.
Lighten up
I find most American and European food to be really bland. I like spice and flavor. For that, I love Asian food.
Why? I've been on GAF long enough to see trends in common perspectives and memes, that when I see a thread with a title like this, any humor or playfulness is gone. The point of this thread isn't to have a light hearted discussion about the differences between European and American foods, it's to raise French, Spanish and Italian food on a pedestal while simultaneously bashing and disparaging the food culture of my country.
The difference is Mexicans is the aboriginal culture is still there to a significant extent. In the US we wiped that out pretty thoroughly unfortunately.
I get your point Snowy (I'm American too) but this thread is actually a healthy discussion all things considered. There has been very little drive by shit posting from snobby Europeans, especially now that the thread has past the initial waves of hot takes. If it still bothers you that much I'd recommend just bailing from the thread.