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Wandering Adventure Party

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American food.

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  • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

    A stereotypical American meal is “meat and potatoes” If either the meat or the potatoes are green, you die.

    jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ This user is from outside of this forum
    jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ This user is from outside of this forum
    jordanlund@lemmy.world
    wrote on last edited by
    #13

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ jordanlund@lemmy.world

      Yesterday I re-learned that Romans didn’t use salt and pepper, they used salt and cumin.

      Going to try that today.

      FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
      FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
      FauxPseudo
      wrote on last edited by
      #14

      They liked long pepper and grains of paradise. But I wouldn’t use grains of paradise on pork chops. Cumin and long pepper sounds good.

      jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ 1 Reply Last reply
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      • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

        They liked long pepper and grains of paradise. But I wouldn’t use grains of paradise on pork chops. Cumin and long pepper sounds good.

        jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jordanlund@lemmy.worldJ This user is from outside of this forum
        jordanlund@lemmy.world
        wrote on last edited by
        #15

        I did salt and ground cumin on a ham sandwich, it was decent!

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        • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

          Potatoes and onions, corn, inch thick pork chops.

          Pork chops were excellent looking managers specials for 6.12 instead of 9 something.

          The whole thing would have come up to about $5.50 per person. But a weird thing happened. A while back we went to a store we got maybe four times a year to get something Walmart didn’t have. They handed us a store contest scratch off card. We got home and scratched it off. We won a $100 gift card.

          So technically this meal was about negative $40 per person.

          We wanted to stock up on freezer friendly meats but that entire freezer was out of commission. Womp womp. Like MacArthur, we will return.

          J This user is from outside of this forum
          J This user is from outside of this forum
          JohnnyEnzyme
          wrote on last edited by
          #16

          Late reply, but are those mustard seeds on the potatoes?

          Jane Brody would be happy…

          FauxPseudo F 1 Reply Last reply
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          • J JohnnyEnzyme

            Late reply, but are those mustard seeds on the potatoes?

            Jane Brody would be happy…

            FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
            FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
            FauxPseudo
            wrote on last edited by
            #17

            I used a seedy German mustard on the potatoes and onions after I fried them. Oh and about two tablespoons of butter.

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            • H Hond

              That poster a few weeks ago who said hes gonna block this community lives rentfree in my head. Because i get him. Nearly everytime i see a picture of this community posted in my feed it just absolutly disgusts me. Holy moly. It dont even know why? Its not high cuisine, but who cares? I’m sure its perfectly fine tasting self cooked food.
              But something about it just breaks me.

              Anyway. Keep it up. This is a nice little community and i could just post my own stuff if really cared. Feel free to delete this comment. But damn, i couldnt stay silent or just ignore it any longer. My poor european tastes are struggling to keep it together with these meals.

              R This user is from outside of this forum
              R This user is from outside of this forum
              rheumatoidarthritis@mander.xyz
              wrote on last edited by
              #18

              Does this look better? If so: too much instagram 🙂

              ResizedImage_2025-11-20_07-47-01_1

              F H 2 Replies Last reply
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              • R rheumatoidarthritis@mander.xyz

                Does this look better? If so: too much instagram 🙂

                ResizedImage_2025-11-20_07-47-01_1

                F This user is from outside of this forum
                F This user is from outside of this forum
                froh42@lemmy.world
                wrote on last edited by froh42@lemmy.world
                #19

                Nope it does not look better. It’s the food, not the colors.

                Oh maybe it is the colors, it looks even more like it’s heavy in the stomach.

                It’s weird as I like meat and cheese myself. But photos of American food which is almost exclusively that stuff - the first few I saw, i though yum. But now every time I see more of them, it turns me off.

                I understand OP is living on a budget and I’m happy for them for their 100 USD card. And I remember - when I was there for holidays the last time I ate similarly myself because some simple fresh stuff just did cost a fortune.

                Back to the picture - what would make it look good to me would be something green, just a bit of salad on the side or some bell peppers sliced.

                I was in Sardegna once and on that trip I had one of the best meals I ever had in an agroturismo. What do I remember about it? The plate of raw sliced tomatoes and bell peppers they had grown themselves.

                FauxPseudo F 1 Reply Last reply
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                • R rheumatoidarthritis@mander.xyz

                  Does this look better? If so: too much instagram 🙂

                  ResizedImage_2025-11-20_07-47-01_1

                  H This user is from outside of this forum
                  H This user is from outside of this forum
                  Hond
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #20

                  Nah, the last time i used insta was when it was mostly known for its infamous lomography filters. While this edit is intentionally horrible it proofs a point though. A subtle shift in the whitepoint to the warmer side and a few clicks to reduce the slight green tint in the potatoes would help wonders. Almost looks like flourescent light or photographed with a flash light. Either case wouldnt be ideal.

                  Anyway, i’m well aware of how hard it is to take good pics of food. I wouldnt have made that rather blunt and maybe hurtful comment if it was only about the presentation. Its mostly just a culture shock thing, i guess.

                  But enough of me and my “feelings”. If i ever comment or post again i will provide pics/recipes.

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                  • F froh42@lemmy.world

                    Nope it does not look better. It’s the food, not the colors.

                    Oh maybe it is the colors, it looks even more like it’s heavy in the stomach.

                    It’s weird as I like meat and cheese myself. But photos of American food which is almost exclusively that stuff - the first few I saw, i though yum. But now every time I see more of them, it turns me off.

                    I understand OP is living on a budget and I’m happy for them for their 100 USD card. And I remember - when I was there for holidays the last time I ate similarly myself because some simple fresh stuff just did cost a fortune.

                    Back to the picture - what would make it look good to me would be something green, just a bit of salad on the side or some bell peppers sliced.

                    I was in Sardegna once and on that trip I had one of the best meals I ever had in an agroturismo. What do I remember about it? The plate of raw sliced tomatoes and bell peppers they had grown themselves.

                    FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
                    FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
                    FauxPseudo
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #21

                    I fully get what you are saying. But for this meal specifically I wasn’t cooking for myself. This was basically the request of my wife and it had to fit her comfort food ideals. Before she met me she was the kind of person that would eat the same beige meal for months at a time before she got bored with it. She grew up near Amish country in Pennsylvania and is if the people that think mayo is spicy. She had made a lot of progress. It was her idea to put the German mustard on the potatoes.

                    You can pretty much tell my meal concepts from hers just by the amount of seasoning involved. I make tacos with fresh salsa. She wants nothing green other than starchy pees. I make shakshuka and chili. She wants fried chicken. She always eats what I make and she likes it. But I have to put in beige flood for her too.

                    And that budget thing is a real pressure. I’m doing a lot less meat and I make more vegetarian and non-American food than most non-ethnic Americas because I love a good loaf of bread and veg based something to dip it in. But my job and metabolism also requires a lot more protein and calories than that makes possible. So it’s all a balance it was only so years ago that I stopped needing 3500 calories a day because I was turning 50 and my metabolism has started to reach something recognizable to most people instead of the 6000 calories I was eating in my teens and 20s. So meals tend to be heavy so that I don’t start dropping pounds. I accidentally lost 38 pounds in 2016 just because I was eating sardines as a snack instead of a whole third meal.

                    She gets kidney stones. That prevents frequent usage of a lot of different greens. And I live in a food desert where eggplant and leeks are very rare while fancy greens that aren’t kidney stone inducing are almost unheard of even if they were in budget. I have to drive 24 miles one way to get arugula.

                    Sorry for going on. I’d like to cook different. But her upbringing and my budget combined with calorie needs are several layers of complexity to figuring out what dinner is going to be.

                    F 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

                      Potatoes and onions, corn, inch thick pork chops.

                      Pork chops were excellent looking managers specials for 6.12 instead of 9 something.

                      The whole thing would have come up to about $5.50 per person. But a weird thing happened. A while back we went to a store we got maybe four times a year to get something Walmart didn’t have. They handed us a store contest scratch off card. We got home and scratched it off. We won a $100 gift card.

                      So technically this meal was about negative $40 per person.

                      We wanted to stock up on freezer friendly meats but that entire freezer was out of commission. Womp womp. Like MacArthur, we will return.

                      H This user is from outside of this forum
                      H This user is from outside of this forum
                      honytawk@feddit.nl
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #22

                      That is about as American as apple pie

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      1
                      • FauxPseudo F FauxPseudo

                        I fully get what you are saying. But for this meal specifically I wasn’t cooking for myself. This was basically the request of my wife and it had to fit her comfort food ideals. Before she met me she was the kind of person that would eat the same beige meal for months at a time before she got bored with it. She grew up near Amish country in Pennsylvania and is if the people that think mayo is spicy. She had made a lot of progress. It was her idea to put the German mustard on the potatoes.

                        You can pretty much tell my meal concepts from hers just by the amount of seasoning involved. I make tacos with fresh salsa. She wants nothing green other than starchy pees. I make shakshuka and chili. She wants fried chicken. She always eats what I make and she likes it. But I have to put in beige flood for her too.

                        And that budget thing is a real pressure. I’m doing a lot less meat and I make more vegetarian and non-American food than most non-ethnic Americas because I love a good loaf of bread and veg based something to dip it in. But my job and metabolism also requires a lot more protein and calories than that makes possible. So it’s all a balance it was only so years ago that I stopped needing 3500 calories a day because I was turning 50 and my metabolism has started to reach something recognizable to most people instead of the 6000 calories I was eating in my teens and 20s. So meals tend to be heavy so that I don’t start dropping pounds. I accidentally lost 38 pounds in 2016 just because I was eating sardines as a snack instead of a whole third meal.

                        She gets kidney stones. That prevents frequent usage of a lot of different greens. And I live in a food desert where eggplant and leeks are very rare while fancy greens that aren’t kidney stone inducing are almost unheard of even if they were in budget. I have to drive 24 miles one way to get arugula.

                        Sorry for going on. I’d like to cook different. But her upbringing and my budget combined with calorie needs are several layers of complexity to figuring out what dinner is going to be.

                        F This user is from outside of this forum
                        F This user is from outside of this forum
                        froh42@lemmy.world
                        wrote on last edited by froh42@lemmy.world
                        #23

                        Please note that I didn’t try to downtalk on what you cook - I’ve been to the US and found that it’s not so easy to get nice fresh stuff. And if you need to eat out it’s impossible or stupid expensive.

                        I was in the US with my (adult) kids and we did a lot of cooking ourselves when we could. Still prices when shopping were crazy - and that was a year ago, before the current round of inflation. We still were at cities where we still had some decent shops in driving range. I can’t even imagine how it feels when you’re away from that.

                        And what I read you’re putting a lot of thought and love into food. Yes upbringing and food deserts are hard problem people don’t deserve.

                        FauxPseudo F 1 Reply Last reply
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                        • F froh42@lemmy.world

                          Please note that I didn’t try to downtalk on what you cook - I’ve been to the US and found that it’s not so easy to get nice fresh stuff. And if you need to eat out it’s impossible or stupid expensive.

                          I was in the US with my (adult) kids and we did a lot of cooking ourselves when we could. Still prices when shopping were crazy - and that was a year ago, before the current round of inflation. We still were at cities where we still had some decent shops in driving range. I can’t even imagine how it feels when you’re away from that.

                          And what I read you’re putting a lot of thought and love into food. Yes upbringing and food deserts are hard problem people don’t deserve.

                          FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
                          FauxPseudo F This user is from outside of this forum
                          FauxPseudo
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #24

                          I want to thank you for having a good faith conversation here.

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