Anonymous wrote:A couple of ice cubes in a glass of white or rose wine in the dead of DC summer is a guilty pleasure of mine though.
Anonymous wrote:I hate truffle flavored anything- good call.
Anonymous wrote:Hot honey on pizza
boiled vegetables
ice in wine
Weak coffee
Truffle oil everywhere
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest food crime is Thanksgiving Turkey. Such a terrible tasting bird!
DCUM pre-Thanksgiving has many turkey defenders.
DCUM post-Thanksgiving: The "what's your favorite thing you ate during the holidays" questions, I don't recall 1 response for Turkey, or thanksgiving food for that matter. I don't get why people eat stuff they would not normally eat because the food brand marketing department told them its "traditional". Eat the prime rib twice. You'd rather eat that anyway.
I like roasted turkey. I always buy one on sale after the holiday. But then, there are a LOT of people who don't know what they're doing, and make them tough/ gamey/ dry. Then they try to blame it on the bird, not on their own lack of skill.
There are just so many better options for meat. I was recently at a 3 Michelin starred restauarant and one of the 16 courses was a riff on Thanksgiving dinner. It was...ok
By all accounts it was juicy, salty, and succulent in every way and I think the chef is fairly skilled to get those stars. Still...it's turkey.
I’ll take “things that never happened” for $200 Alex
Why do you lie?
Anonymous wrote:Hot honey on pizza
boiled vegetables
ice in wine
Weak coffee
Truffle oil everywhere
Anonymous wrote:Fish sticks in their entirety
Dinosaur shaped chicken nuggets
Tilapia in any form
Any food product that contains over 35% of your daily sodium allowance,
Any beverage with more than 150 calories (looking at you Starbucks)
Chalky-spoiled tasting Greek yogurt.
Any vegetable that comes out of a can (legumes excluded)
Anonymous wrote:[twitter]Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest food crime is Thanksgiving Turkey. Such a terrible tasting bird!
DCUM pre-Thanksgiving has many turkey defenders.
DCUM post-Thanksgiving: The "what's your favorite thing you ate during the holidays" questions, I don't recall 1 response for Turkey, or thanksgiving food for that matter. I don't get why people eat stuff they would not normally eat because the food brand marketing department told them its "traditional". Eat the prime rib twice. You'd rather eat that anyway.
Who exactly is making prime rib for Thanksgiving, feeding an army? At $25-$30 a pound, I couldn't serve that at our family Thanksgiving. I think that is why turkey is the main meal - you are feeding so many people, and the bird is cheap!
“Prime rib” is how we colloquially refer to a rib roast. It’s not typically actually prime grade, and usually goes on sale around the holidays. I paid $6.99 a pound this year. Still more expensive than turkey but not $30 a pound.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest food crime is Thanksgiving Turkey. Such a terrible tasting bird!
DCUM pre-Thanksgiving has many turkey defenders.
DCUM post-Thanksgiving: The "what's your favorite thing you ate during the holidays" questions, I don't recall 1 response for Turkey, or thanksgiving food for that matter. I don't get why people eat stuff they would not normally eat because the food brand marketing department told them its "traditional". Eat the prime rib twice. You'd rather eat that anyway.
I like roasted turkey. I always buy one on sale after the holiday. But then, there are a LOT of people who don't know what they're doing, and make them tough/ gamey/ dry. Then they try to blame it on the bird, not on their own lack of skill.
There are just so many better options for meat. I was recently at a 3 Michelin starred restauarant and one of the 16 courses was a riff on Thanksgiving dinner. It was...ok
By all accounts it was juicy, salty, and succulent in every way and I think the chef is fairly skilled to get those stars. Still...it's turkey.
I’ll take “things that never happened” for $200 Alex
Why do you lie?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cheese and seafood mixed. No thanks.
Mmmm tuna melts
Same. I will say, that's the only application of cheese to seafood that I like though.
Salmon and sour cream on a bagel is pretty good. Yes, sour cream is a cheese.
No, sour cream is not a cheese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest food crime is Thanksgiving Turkey. Such a terrible tasting bird!
DCUM pre-Thanksgiving has many turkey defenders.
DCUM post-Thanksgiving: The "what's your favorite thing you ate during the holidays" questions, I don't recall 1 response for Turkey, or thanksgiving food for that matter. I don't get why people eat stuff they would not normally eat because the food brand marketing department told them its "traditional". Eat the prime rib twice. You'd rather eat that anyway.
Who exactly is making prime rib for Thanksgiving, feeding an army? At $25-$30 a pound, I couldn't serve that at our family Thanksgiving. I think that is why turkey is the main meal - you are feeding so many people, and the bird is cheap!
Turkey is the main meal because it was marketed to be the main meal
https://thecounter.org/thanksgiving-turkey-advertising-origins/
There are plenty of better options at that price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Cheese and seafood mixed. No thanks.
Mmmm tuna melts
Same. I will say, that's the only application of cheese to seafood that I like though.
Salmon and sour cream on a bagel is pretty good. Yes, sour cream is a cheese.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Biggest food crime is Thanksgiving Turkey. Such a terrible tasting bird!
DCUM pre-Thanksgiving has many turkey defenders.
DCUM post-Thanksgiving: The "what's your favorite thing you ate during the holidays" questions, I don't recall 1 response for Turkey, or thanksgiving food for that matter. I don't get why people eat stuff they would not normally eat because the food brand marketing department told them its "traditional". Eat the prime rib twice. You'd rather eat that anyway.
I like roasted turkey. I always buy one on sale after the holiday. But then, there are a LOT of people who don't know what they're doing, and make them tough/ gamey/ dry. Then they try to blame it on the bird, not on their own lack of skill.
There are just so many better options for meat. I was recently at a 3 Michelin starred restauarant and one of the 16 courses was a riff on Thanksgiving dinner. It was...ok
By all accounts it was juicy, salty, and succulent in every way and I think the chef is fairly skilled to get those stars. Still...it's turkey.
Anonymous wrote:Speaking of prime rib, my unpopular food crime opinion is that it’s heinous to eat a piece of flabby mushy rib roast when perfectly seared rare ribeye steaks could be had.