Anonymous wrote:To think of any food as “low class” is to be an uneducated moron, which is the worst kind of low class.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you didn’t eat it on a bun! 😳
Exactly, because being picky and having all these wierd food things is super high class. (Total sarcasm). Could you imagine any Royal having these stupid nit-picking things. NO. 'Don't complain, don't explain'
Queen Elizabeth banned garlic from being served at meals, so your point misses the mark.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DP. Ketchup and mayo plus pickle relish makes thousand island dressing, which is delicious with a beef burger. Mayo and mustard taste better on a turkey burger. I like a little hot sauce mixed with ketchup for my fries.
Anyone else want to add their condiment concoctions?
Mayo mixed with A1 sauce — plus either dill pickles or a few capers. I use this on turkey burgers, but it would probably be even better with ground beef burgers.
In college! I would order bacon cheeseburgers with mayonnaise and mushrooms. The mushrooms were sautéed with thyme (I think). They were delicious.
Anonymous wrote:DP. Ketchup and mayo plus pickle relish makes thousand island dressing, which is delicious with a beef burger. Mayo and mustard taste better on a turkey burger. I like a little hot sauce mixed with ketchup for my fries.
Anyone else want to add their condiment concoctions?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I hope you didn’t eat it on a bun! 😳
Exactly, because being picky and having all these wierd food things is super high class. (Total sarcasm). Could you imagine any Royal having these stupid nit-picking things. NO. 'Don't complain, don't explain'
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Julia Child like mayo as a base for her burgers. She had some good tips for how to make a good hamburger. I personally like very good high fat ground beef on the grill, and then build it with a good melted cheese - maybe aged chedder, swiss, provolene, gouda - mayo at the bottom, then burger, add lettuce, a slice of summer tomato, sliced pickles, and mustard on the top bun. When its quality ingredients, that is a solid burger. So count me among among the lower class for my preferences.
Sweetheart, Julia Child has been dead over over 21 years! Her TV cooking in the 1960s, 70s and 80s is not in any way relevant to modern grocery stores, modern tastes, and modern cuisine.
But good food is good food. Go back to your little tiktok trendy things. We are discussing mayonnaise on hamburgers. As grownups do.
Burgers were peasant blue collar food when Julia was on TV. The burger fad and professional and home chefs perfecting them didn’t happen until the 90s and 00s. Julia’s views are not relevant at all to this dialogue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Julia Child like mayo as a base for her burgers. She had some good tips for how to make a good hamburger. I personally like very good high fat ground beef on the grill, and then build it with a good melted cheese - maybe aged chedder, swiss, provolene, gouda - mayo at the bottom, then burger, add lettuce, a slice of summer tomato, sliced pickles, and mustard on the top bun. When its quality ingredients, that is a solid burger. So count me among among the lower class for my preferences.
Sweetheart, Julia Child has been dead over over 21 years! Her TV cooking in the 1960s, 70s and 80s is not in any way relevant to modern grocery stores, modern tastes, and modern cuisine.
But good food is good food. Go back to your little tiktok trendy things. We are discussing mayonnaise on hamburgers. As grownups do.
Burgers were peasant blue collar food when Julia was on TV. The burger fad and professional and home chefs perfecting them didn’t happen until the 90s and 00s. Julia’s views are not relevant at all to this dialogue.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Julia Child like mayo as a base for her burgers. She had some good tips for how to make a good hamburger. I personally like very good high fat ground beef on the grill, and then build it with a good melted cheese - maybe aged chedder, swiss, provolene, gouda - mayo at the bottom, then burger, add lettuce, a slice of summer tomato, sliced pickles, and mustard on the top bun. When its quality ingredients, that is a solid burger. So count me among among the lower class for my preferences.
Sweetheart, Julia Child has been dead over over 21 years! Her TV cooking in the 1960s, 70s and 80s is not in any way relevant to modern grocery stores, modern tastes, and modern cuisine.
But good food is good food. Go back to your little tiktok trendy things. We are discussing mayonnaise on hamburgers. As grownups do.
Anonymous wrote:The classiest people mix mayo and catsup in a bowl to smother on their burger, and use the leftover mayo/catsup concoction as a dipper for their fries. They also use the spelling "catsup" for America's favorite tomato based condiment.