Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Hamburgers, hotdogs, ribs, pulled pork, tacos, salads with oodles of noodles, charcuterie, platters, that are actually cheese platters, sausage and onions, quiche, pork chops, kebabs, coleslaw, corn on the cob, barbecue, chicken, grilled salmon, potato salad, fried chicken, lasagna, spaghetti and meatballs, takeout Chinese, cucumber salad,
Wow, we led very different lifestyles! We only had burgers and hot dogs a couple of times in the summer, corn on the cob maybe twice a year, we'd have some sort of baked pasta dish once a month, spaghetti and meat sauce (but not meat balls) pretty regularly, and yes, Chinese food once or twice a month.
Vegetarianism really started to become trendy in the 1980s and my parents did many strictly vegetarian meals and nights. We lived in California in the 1980s though, so maybe we were ahead of the trend on Vegetarianism.
Anonymous wrote:My typical Italian suburban dinner was nothing like my Cajun DH’s suburban dinner. Night and day differences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I still don’t get OP. Are the friends Black or something and you want to make fun of the idea of suburbia as a Whiter destination? Is it meant to be like the epicurean version of a costume dinner, a funny put on?
I know she’s white and a hipster friends wanna make fun of people who move to the suburbs
Anonymous wrote:Our city friends are leaving DC to come have dinner with us. I promise not to serve anything you mention, but what is the ultimate 1970s/80s White Folks dinner?
Meatloaf and jello salad?
Anonymous wrote:Anything my MIL makes for dinner? She's an absolute gem of a human being, but man, the culinary range is so limited. Vegetables are served steamed until they can barely retain their form, tossed with margarine. White bread. Salt is the only seasoning, and even that is used sparingly. It pains me.
Anonymous wrote:You have a lot of options!
Hamburger Helper, served with some kind of vegetable like canned corn, those take-and-bake rolls, giant glasses of milk for the kids, jug of wine for adults.
If it's tuesday, you can do taco tuesday. Buy the taco shell kit from old el paso but don't add the spices to your ground beef. Put out some mild salsa, daisy sour cream, shredded lettuce, black olives, and chopped tomatoes for topping.
I also think a giant bucket of takeaway fried chicken along with the sides (mashed potatoes, red beans and rice, corn) might work, too.
Anonymous wrote:I still don’t get OP. Are the friends Black or something and you want to make fun of the idea of suburbia as a Whiter destination? Is it meant to be like the epicurean version of a costume dinner, a funny put on?
Anonymous wrote:My typical Italian suburban dinner was nothing like my Cajun DH’s suburban dinner. Night and day differences.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:FYI - Nobody invites friends over for meatloaf. Not in the 70s, 80s, or today.
In the 80s, when guests came, we would have nice dinners like chicken caccitore, prime rib, MD crabs, turkey, lamb.
+1. Dad would grill steaks, mom would saute mushrooms, bake russet potatoes in foil, toss a salad with a pie or cake for dessert. Company gets roast beef, lamb, crab, or turkey. Never meatloaf or spaghetti.
Anonymous wrote:FYI - Nobody invites friends over for meatloaf. Not in the 70s, 80s, or today.
In the 80s, when guests came, we would have nice dinners like chicken caccitore, prime rib, MD crabs, turkey, lamb.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:dying…. 😂Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You have a lot of options!
Hamburger Helper, served with some kind of vegetable like canned corn, those take-and-bake rolls, giant glasses of milk for the kids, jug of wine for adults.
If it's tuesday, you can do taco tuesday. Buy the taco shell kit from old el paso but don't add the spices to your ground beef. Put out some mild salsa, daisy sour cream, shredded lettuce, black olives, and chopped tomatoes for topping.
I also think a giant bucket of takeaway fried chicken along with the sides (mashed potatoes, red beans and rice, corn) might work, too.
Takeaway?
Shhh that poster needs to use the word 'takeaway" to emphasize that she's not like those people whose food she's talking about...
what other word would you use? or are you saying just use “fried chicken” without the qualifier? genuinely confused (and am a NP)
NP. Takeout.
Why is it funny to say takeaway but not takeout or carryout as another poster suggested? They all mean the same to me, I assumed it was just a regional affectation (like hero versus submarine sandwich).
“Takeaway” tends to be a foreign phrase. It’s like when Americans affect the British “u” in favourite. Just stop.
+1 My friends who call it that spent ten years in the Netherlands.