French toast and sausage.
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Why is your breakfast action zooming?
Too much ken Burns
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Day old bread, back yard eggs and grapes.
Cost? No idea. Bread costs about 70¢ to make. Grapes free, eggs practically free, sausage $1 per person, quarter cup of honey as syrup, half a stick of butter, 1/3 cup milk, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla extract. Probably $3.20?
I thought French toast was “pain perdu”. Is it “croque-monsieur” now?
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I thought French toast was “pain perdu”. Is it “croque-monsieur” now?
You lost me. Heathcliff does ham. Not me.
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I used an air fryer on the sausage. I traded grease for convenience. I think it was worth it.
I traded sarcasm for comprehension. The whole plate looks oily.
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I thought French toast was “pain perdu”. Is it “croque-monsieur” now?
US people doing weird things with (and the name of) recipes from the rest of the world, yet again. Episode Longint Overflow.
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I traded sarcasm for comprehension. The whole plate looks oily.
That’s the honey and butter. And because of the air frier sausage this has less grease than the typical preparation. I genuinely appreciate sarcasm. Unironically.
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US people doing weird things with (and the name of) recipes from the rest of the world, yet again. Episode Longint Overflow.
I look up Pain Perdu and found many versions made differently. Top of the results gives a recipe originating from Louisiana, which had a large population of french immigrants once apon a time, and the culture there remains heavily influenced by such.
Perhaps the US people do “weird things” to recipes is because we are a country full of immigrants adapting each others recipes with ingredients found here over many generations.
We are a melting pot, and thus there are not strict rules for American cuisine.
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Day old bread, back yard eggs and grapes.
Cost? No idea. Bread costs about 70¢ to make. Grapes free, eggs practically free, sausage $1 per person, quarter cup of honey as syrup, half a stick of butter, 1/3 cup milk, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla extract. Probably $3.20?
The greasy strangler would be proud of you.
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I look up Pain Perdu and found many versions made differently. Top of the results gives a recipe originating from Louisiana, which had a large population of french immigrants once apon a time, and the culture there remains heavily influenced by such.
Perhaps the US people do “weird things” to recipes is because we are a country full of immigrants adapting each others recipes with ingredients found here over many generations.
We are a melting pot, and thus there are not strict rules for American cuisine.
I think that the thing is that when people arrived in the Americas, they no longer had anything familiar, yet they tried to cook something akin to what they had at home with whatever was available, and they slapped a heartwarming name on it.
And here we are, decades later, wondering why those recipes got so twisted.(And then there’s disney’s ratatouille)
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I think that the thing is that when people arrived in the Americas, they no longer had anything familiar, yet they tried to cook something akin to what they had at home with whatever was available, and they slapped a heartwarming name on it.
And here we are, decades later, wondering why those recipes got so twisted.(And then there’s disney’s ratatouille)
You understand. There’s no wondering to it.
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Day old bread, back yard eggs and grapes.
Cost? No idea. Bread costs about 70¢ to make. Grapes free, eggs practically free, sausage $1 per person, quarter cup of honey as syrup, half a stick of butter, 1/3 cup milk, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla extract. Probably $3.20?
Looks awesome.
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You understand. There’s no wondering to it.
You’d still be annoyed if it was your stuff that got fucked up.