Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, Did you think they were the same?
Come back.
Op here. No, I think you misinterpreted the question. My question is not if they are the same, I am a native Washingtonian so I know they are not the same. My question pertains to why many people on both sides know so little about the other when we are not that far in distance. Is it a lack of interest in knowing about the life and culture on both sides? The distance? The differences? Etc..
How much do you actually know about DelMarVa and its traditions if you are from the DMV area and vice versa. Kind of how Bakery Pizza is well known outside of Rhode Island in the surrounding New England area but some of the things like Orange Crushes are not locally as you get further from the Bay. Smith Island Cake, if you polled people in the DMV, how many would know what is is? It’s not served in the DMV area all too often. Things like that.
Liar. A native Washingtonian would never use the term 'DMV'. Never. Ever.
Except that Black natives would. Though in my experience, white natives, who typically grew up WOTP, know very little about them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scrapple
Isn’t scrapple originally Pennsylvania Dutch?
No it's from West Virginia and then migrated to PA.
But where do they hold the Apple & Scrapple festival?
Anonymous wrote:I grew up in Baltimore, have lived on the Eastern Shore (still have lots of family there and go several times a year) and have spent the past 20 years living in the DC area. I've heard of all of the things on this thread (though have never eaten muskrat). What surprises me more than DC not knowing about DelMarVa is how little DC people know Baltimore and vice versa. And they have no interest. Both cities offer so much, are so close and yet they feel worlds away from one another.
I was talking to my uncle who lives in Baltimore recently and told him he should come to DC for the day. He said he hadn't been to DC since the 8th grade. He's 74.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:fried soft shell crabs
oyster dressing
parker house rolls
hot crab dip
All of that is just east coast southern and not specific to “Delmarva”
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scrapple
Isn’t scrapple originally Pennsylvania Dutch?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Scrapple
Isn’t scrapple originally Pennsylvania Dutch?
No it's from West Virginia and then migrated to PA.
But where do they hold the Apple & Scrapple festival?
Anonymous wrote:DH and I (late 50s) are Fairfax County natives and our parents (and my way back to my great grandparents) all grew up in Washington, DC proper.
I call my parents’ hometown Dee Cee or maybe Washington. The DMV is dept of motor vehicles.
DH and I rarely visit DC. Maybe once a year for an event or if we have guests who’d like a tour.
I’ve given zero thought to “Delmarva” although I’ve spent every summer on and around Delaware beaches.
DH and I aren’t alone in our shared hatred of the entire state of Maryland - the drivers, the infrastructure, and with very few exceptions the state’s overall grubby grittiness. We joke that any time we drive into MD we feel vaguely queasy and a bit car sick. I could never live in Maryland because I fear the nausea would be ongoing. I think there’s a reciprocal “rivalry” between VA and MD. My friends and family from equivalent suburban MD expressed surprise/discomfort/unease when visiting VA ‘burbs (“you have the same stores we have!” or “I can’t find my way around here - can you help?”).
Delaware? Sure. Sign me up and would move there in a hot minute. Love the tax free shopping.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, Did you think they were the same?
Come back.
Op here. No, I think you misinterpreted the question. My question is not if they are the same, I am a native Washingtonian so I know they are not the same. My question pertains to why many people on both sides know so little about the other when we are not that far in distance. Is it a lack of interest in knowing about the life and culture on both sides? The distance? The differences? Etc..
How much do you actually know about DelMarVa and its traditions if you are from the DMV area and vice versa. Kind of how Bakery Pizza is well known outside of Rhode Island in the surrounding New England area but some of the things like Orange Crushes are not locally as you get further from the Bay. Smith Island Cake, if you polled people in the DMV, how many would know what is is? It’s not served in the DMV area all too often. Things like that.
Liar. A native Washingtonian would never use the term 'DMV'. Never. Ever.
Tell me you’re white without telling me you’re white.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, Did you think they were the same?
Come back.
Op here. No, I think you misinterpreted the question. My question is not if they are the same, I am a native Washingtonian so I know they are not the same. My question pertains to why many people on both sides know so little about the other when we are not that far in distance. Is it a lack of interest in knowing about the life and culture on both sides? The distance? The differences? Etc..
How much do you actually know about DelMarVa and its traditions if you are from the DMV area and vice versa. Kind of how Bakery Pizza is well known outside of Rhode Island in the surrounding New England area but some of the things like Orange Crushes are not locally as you get further from the Bay. Smith Island Cake, if you polled people in the DMV, how many would know what is is? It’s not served in the DMV area all too often. Things like that.
Liar. A native Washingtonian would never use the term 'DMV'. Never. Ever.