Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
You don't have to be Indian to serve rice and a potato based dish for lunch, and there's nothing wrong with it either. It doesn't matter if OP is Italian or half Navajo-half Swedish. Pasta is good enough for a quick on the spot meal that wasn't planned in advance. Not great, but certainly not deadly, unless you're an almond mom whose blood pressure spikes just thinking about a Barilla blue box. The guest probably gave her kids some fruit and nuts when they got home to balance it out. And then made a mental not to decline future lunch invitations.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
If my grandparents are from Ireland does it make the plain potato less weird?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
Anonymous wrote:I think it’s weird.
Would you serve someone bread and butter as the entire meal? Or rice with butter and call it lunch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
If my grandparents are from Ireland does it make the plain potato less weird?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
This is such a good example. Giving your guest a potato is super weird. Serving up a loaded baked potato (butter, cheese, bacon, sour cream, chives, maybe some broccoli) would actually be a meal. Buttered noodles = not a meal. Pasta with some kind of sauce = meal.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
But do you just serve your guests a potato or bowl of rice for lunch? One or the other, definitely not both, and just butter for sauce.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe she's on a low carb diet or gluten free
Then she can decline. No one is catering to adult food preferences at an impromptu playdate.
Anonymous wrote:I am Indian and we often serve rice or roti/paratha with a potato/root vegetable dish. I’ve had many questions about this.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe she's on a low carb diet or gluten free