Anonymous wrote:Why are you psychos imagining that the organizers are not accepting of OPs food? OP is the one who's insecure feeling that her cooking is boring.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't have another culture, what are you bringing to the school multicultural potluck? Just a regular side dish? I tried to sign up for chocolate chip cookies and the organizers told me it should be a traditional food from my household.
I'm really trying here, but these events come up multiple times a year and there doesn't seem room for people who don't have other cultures. I mean we're mostly British and German but it's been a couple hundred years and we have no ties to any of that food. I don't even feel like we have regional foods from the US that my family regularly eats (they did not want regional US foods though). I sort of felt like chocolate chip cookies were one of my family's specialties. If we don't have one, should we just pick someone else's culture and make a dish?
I'm from Germany. Would you like me to link some fairly easy recipes for you that are authentic and often used?![]()
OP here- no that seems fake and inauthentic to me. Why is there so much emphasis on multiculturalism in schools? I don't really see this anywhere else and it just seems divisive. Only in America is American culture not a culture. I know Europeans definitely think we have American food and our own culture.
Anonymous wrote:Tell your school person to suck a bag of d’s and take your chocolate chip cookies!
Anonymous wrote:Chocolate chip cookies is fine!! I don't know why your school has a fit about it. I'm a first generation immigrant and I try hard to find foods that I enjoy that would appeal to a wide palate.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:There's this weird mythos around it. I had an Irish immigrant granddad and I don't remember him ever eating traditional Irish food. He did really love Arby's, though.
You never saw him eat a potato or drink beer?
Anonymous wrote:There's this weird mythos around it. I had an Irish immigrant granddad and I don't remember him ever eating traditional Irish food. He did really love Arby's, though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't have another culture, what are you bringing to the school multicultural potluck? Just a regular side dish? I tried to sign up for chocolate chip cookies and the organizers told me it should be a traditional food from my household.
I'm really trying here, but these events come up multiple times a year and there doesn't seem room for people who don't have other cultures. I mean we're mostly British and German but it's been a couple hundred years and we have no ties to any of that food. I don't even feel like we have regional foods from the US that my family regularly eats (they did not want regional US foods though). I sort of felt like chocolate chip cookies were one of my family's specialties. If we don't have one, should we just pick someone else's culture and make a dish?
I'm from Germany. Would you like me to link some fairly easy recipes for you that are authentic and often used?![]()
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you don't have another culture, what are you bringing to the school multicultural potluck? Just a regular side dish? I tried to sign up for chocolate chip cookies and the organizers told me it should be a traditional food from my household.
I'm really trying here, but these events come up multiple times a year and there doesn't seem room for people who don't have other cultures. I mean we're mostly British and German but it's been a couple hundred years and we have no ties to any of that food. I don't even feel like we have regional foods from the US that my family regularly eats (they did not want regional US foods though). I sort of felt like chocolate chip cookies were one of my family's specialties. If we don't have one, should we just pick someone else's culture and make a dish?
I'm from Germany. Would you like me to link some fairly easy recipes for you that are authentic and often used?![]()
OP here- no that seems fake and inauthentic to me. Why is there so much emphasis on multiculturalism in schools? I don't really see this anywhere else and it just seems divisive. Only in America is American culture not a culture. I know Europeans definitely think we have American food and our own culture.