Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is a perfect encapsulation of why everyone hates DC urbanites.
Why? There are literally no good restaurants in DC when you compare to European or other world cities.
Why on earth would an DC person ever be ever the slightest bit snobby?
You might want to work on grammatically understandable sentences before you start throwing shade.
English isn’t my first language, but thanks for the discrimination!!
DP. You’d be a more sympathetic victim if you hadn’t written off an entire diverse city’s food scene. DC isn’t Paris, but you are very small minded if you sincerely think DC has no good restaurants compared to other major cities.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is a perfect encapsulation of why everyone hates DC urbanites.
Why? There are literally no good restaurants in DC when you compare to European or other world cities.
Why on earth would an DC person ever be ever the slightest bit snobby?
You might want to work on grammatically understandable sentences before you start throwing shade.
English isn’t my first language, but thanks for the discrimination!!
DP. You’d be a more sympathetic victim if you hadn’t written off an entire diverse city’s food scene. DC isn’t Paris, but you are very small minded if you sincerely think DC has no good restaurants compared to other major cities.
Are you kidding me?! Forget Paris, all food in the US is over processed, bland, cardboard tasting crap. You get better food in a small European town in the middle of nowhere than a supposedly “fine” DC dining establishment. So the idea that people here are mocking some suburban restaurant is laughable when food in DC is equally bad. Americans are so clueless yet arrogant, it’s hysterical!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My in laws and all their friends.
My in laws love Bonefish. Also Olive Garden. I’d take Bonefish 100 times if I never had to eat at OG again.
I like Olive Garden. It’s not fine dining, and it’s not authentic Italian cuisine, but for a chain, it’s decent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not like the people eating there are claiming its gourmet food. Do you never eat at Chick-fil-A, or pizza, eat at a bar?
No, actually, I don't. Well, I will drive some distance to dine at the handful of DOC pizzerias around here. But not Mod PIzza or whatever you're asking about
https://americas.pizzanapoletana.org/en/
The Associazione Vera Pizza Napoletana is an international organization officially established on June 1984 by a group of Neapolitan people representing some of the oldest families of pizza makers and the most famous Neapolitan pizzerias, seeking to cultivate the culinary art of making Neapolitan pizza. Later on, the association was officially established by the Italian government as a denomination of control (DOC), a designation that made AVPN a legal entity able to give special designation to pizzerias who meet strict requirements that respect the tradition of the art of Neapolitan pizza making.
Hahaha, a food snob bragging about traveling miles for pizza. Amazing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It’s not like the people eating there are claiming its gourmet food. Do you never eat at Chick-fil-A, or pizza, eat at a bar?
No, actually, I don't. Well, I will drive some distance to dine at the handful of DOC pizzerias around here. But not Mod PIzza or whatever you're asking about
https://americas.pizzanapoletana.org/en/
The Associazione Vera Pizza Napoletana is an international organization officially established on June 1984 by a group of Neapolitan people representing some of the oldest families of pizza makers and the most famous Neapolitan pizzerias, seeking to cultivate the culinary art of making Neapolitan pizza. Later on, the association was officially established by the Italian government as a denomination of control (DOC), a designation that made AVPN a legal entity able to give special designation to pizzerias who meet strict requirements that respect the tradition of the art of Neapolitan pizza making.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This thread is a perfect encapsulation of why everyone hates DC urbanites.
Why? There are literally no good restaurants in DC when you compare to European or other world cities.
Why on earth would an DC person ever be ever the slightest bit snobby?
You might want to work on grammatically understandable sentences before you start throwing shade.
English isn’t my first language, but thanks for the discrimination!!
DP. You’d be a more sympathetic victim if you hadn’t written off an entire diverse city’s food scene. DC isn’t Paris, but you are very small minded if you sincerely think DC has no good restaurants compared to other major cities.
Are you kidding me?! Forget Paris, all food in the US is over processed, bland, cardboard tasting crap. You get better food in a small European town in the middle of nowhere than a supposedly “fine” DC dining establishment. So the idea that people here are mocking some suburban restaurant is laughable when food in DC is equally bad. Americans are so clueless yet arrogant, it’s hysterical!
Anonymous wrote:It’s not like the people eating there are claiming its gourmet food. Do you never eat at Chick-fil-A, or pizza, eat at a bar?
Anonymous wrote:Grill fish in dupont? Or is this a different place
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bang bang shrimps!!
Enough salt, sugar and deep-fry fattiness to convince the unsophisticated people who never eat fish that they love shrimp!