Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mayonnaise on beef is absolutely lower class. I grew up in France and we would never do that. It's fine for pommes though. Or hard boiled eggs.
Also French and I disagree. Béarnaise and aïoli are mayonnaise-based and go very well with beef. But mayo alone or a more complex variation of it on a burger is fine as well. I personally don't like it, but a burger is not a "high class" food to start so it's fine. Also, the quality of mayo varies greatly, a homemade great mayo is not the same thing at all as a cheap one from the supermarket.
Aioli in France is made with good olive oil and lasts, what, a few days? Mayo in the U.S. is poison made with soybean oil and toxic preservatives that can sit on a shelf for a year.
Anonymous wrote:Burgers are already so rich and the trendy buns are buttery brioche style. Who clamors for extra fat from mayo? Acidity from a little mustard and pickles is really all a rich burger needs. Onions, tomato and lettuce if you want, I guess. I genuinely don't understand how mayo elevates a burger in any way.
Asking because we ordered an office lunch and all the burgers arrived with a mayo-based sauce on them as standard. Uh, why?!
Anonymous wrote:In England they dip their fries in mayo.
Anonymous wrote:I’m a purest. I don’t even want cheese on my burger. A bit of Grey Poupon is genuinely all you need.
Anonymous wrote:In England they dip their fries in mayo.
Anonymous wrote:My guess is that OP ate their burger with a knife and fork.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mayonnaise on beef is absolutely lower class. I grew up in France and we would never do that. It's fine for pommes though. Or hard boiled eggs.
Also French and I disagree. Béarnaise and aïoli are mayonnaise-based and go very well with beef. But mayo alone or a more complex variation of it on a burger is fine as well. I personally don't like it, but a burger is not a "high class" food to start so it's fine. Also, the quality of mayo varies greatly, a homemade great mayo is not the same thing at all as a cheap one from the supermarket.
Aioli in France is made with good olive oil and lasts, what, a few days? Mayo in the U.S. is poison made with soybean oil and toxic preservatives that can sit on a shelf for a year.
Anonymous wrote:Mayonnaise on beef is absolutely lower class. I grew up in France and we would never do that. It's fine for pommes though. Or hard boiled eggs.