Unusual ways you prepare or eat food.

Ronni

Well-known Member
Location
Nashville TN
I posted in another thread about how in Australia when I was little, cantaloupe (called rock melon there) was like a dessert or a treat. How we'd cut them in half, dig out the seeds, and put a big scoop of ice cream in the middle. It was SO good!!

Also pancakes. We called them pancakes anyway, back in Oz, though in the US they're called crepes. My mum would make "pancakes," slather them with butter, sprinkle them with granulated sugar, a squeeze of lemon, and roll them up. Make a mound of them and we'd gobble 'em up for dessert. The idea of putting cheese or mushrooms or other savory things in the crepes took me a LONG time to get past!!

Oh! Beans on toast...a common lunch or snack. Toast the bread, spread with butter, heat up some baked beans and then scoop the beans onto the toast. Also mushrooms on toast, you could get these cans of mushroom pieces in some kind of sauce, and my mum would heat that up and spread that on toast sometimes too.

And let us not forget VEGEMITE!!!! That was my mum's go-to for my lunches. Vegemite sandwiches.

Wow...such memories!!! :love_heart:
 

None of the things that I eat seem unusual to me! :):playful::eek:nthego:

I enjoy strawberry preserves on a little slice of extra sharp cheddar cheese, creamy blue cheese dressing on baked potatoes, fried bread dough sprinkled with cinnamon sugar, bean sandwiches, fried egg sandwiches, fried bologna or kielbasa with eggs for breakfast, etc...
 
I remember, when I was in high school in the mid-to-late 60's, having a onion sandwich was popular. Two pieces of buttered bread and a slice or two of onion.

Funny, I still eat fried egg sandwiches. But, you mention that food today and young folks will go "what???".

Also, back in northeastern Indiana, on the farm, we ate rhubarb pie, rhubarb pudding, dandelion salad and pickled pork feet and hocks. Rhubarb came from our garden, dandelions came from our yard and the pickled pork came from local store. Liked the hocks, because the feet had very little meat on them.
 
Also, back in northeastern Indiana, on the farm, we ate rhubarb pie, rhubarb pudding, dandelion salad and pickled pork feet and hocks. Rhubarb came from our garden, dandelions came from our yard and the pickled pork came from local store. Liked the hocks, because the feet had very little meat on them.

My mum made THE BEST rhubarb pie I've ever eaten. I've tried it a few times since, here and there in restaurants, but none of the slices ever came close to what my mum would bake.

I just remembered another one...named by my kids lol!

They'd slice a bagel, add a bit of mayo and mustard, ham and cheese and lettuce, and call it a bagelwich. ;)
 
Well, I've stated in a number of other threads that we cook almost everything in Thai, Chinese, or Indian style, which would be 'unusual' for most people. We think the 'average' American diet is bland, greasy, salty. We don't do breading or deep fried anything. You need at least half a dozen spices to make something taste really good, and you always need fresh veges.
Few people understand our tastes. I don't understand fried chicken and 'taters.
 
My dad liked cornflakes and milk for a bedtime snack. Right after dinner he would put the cornflakes in a bowl and cover them with milk and a bit of sugar. When snack time rolled around he had a solid mass of cornflakes that you could eat with a fork. It used to turn my stomach. I'm glad he didn't make me eat any.
 
What about a South Australian pie floater Ronni did you ever try them ?
 

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I remember, when I was in high school in the mid-to-late 60's, having a onion sandwich was popular. Two pieces of buttered bread and a slice or two of onion.

Funny, I still eat fried egg sandwiches. But, you mention that food today and young folks will go "what???".

Also, back in northeastern Indiana, on the farm, we ate rhubarb pie, rhubarb pudding, dandelion salad and pickled pork feet and hocks. Rhubarb came from our garden, dandelions came from our yard and the pickled pork came from local store. Liked the hocks, because the feet had very little meat on them.

My mother made the best rhubarb pie on the planet from rhubarb my dad grew in the garden. I occasionally make for myself when I can find rhubarb in the store, but it's never as good as my mother's -- still good, but not as good as I remember hers to be.
 
What about a South Australian pie floater Ronni did you ever try them ?

I know you addressed Ronni with this question .. however, I tried a pie floater on my first
trip to SA, and really like it. I could not finish it though, as it was in a huge bowl!
 
Has anyone tried eating cereal like you eat potato chips? Some cereal is great tasing out of the box and a lot better for you. It's funny learning what people eat. My dad ate pigs feet over the kitchen sink. For the life of me I will eat a tire before pigs feet. Scrambled eggs & onions was my favorite growing up. I put cucumbers, tomatoes, onions, Lawry's Salt and celery salt on my hot dogs and pepper buns when I can find them. My mom also made rhubarb pie and yes it is great! We had so much rhubarb growing we trashed a lot of it.
 
I remember, when I was in high school in the mid-to-late 60's, having a onion sandwich was popular. Two pieces of buttered bread and a slice or two of onion.

Funny, I still eat fried egg sandwiches. But, you mention that food today and young folks will go "what???".

Also, back in northeastern Indiana, on the farm, we ate rhubarb pie, rhubarb pudding, dandelion salad and pickled pork feet and hocks. Rhubarb came from our garden, dandelions came from our yard and the pickled pork came from local store. Liked the hocks, because the feet had very little meat on them.
I eat fried egg and cheese sandwiches frequently (pepper jack or American)
 
Has anyone tried eating cereal like you eat potato chips? Some cereal is great tasing out of the box and a lot better for you........

Yes. We do not have junk food in the house, or desserts. We do snack on cereals like Honey Bunches of Oats. It definitely has sugar in it, but it's mostly healthy and of course, better than tater chips. Also like Frosted Mini Wheats. Again, sugar, but far healthier than 'regular' snack food. Lots of other sweetened cereals, with whole grain, good for snacking.
But, wife and I do not eat what 99% of other Americans eat, so can't go by us.
 
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I cuss, you cuss, we all cuss for asparagus!
 
We used to food trade shows and there was usually always a company there that had aprons and t-shirts with slogans on them like:

"Kiss My Asparagus" and "Vegetarian is Old Indian Word for Bad Hunter".
 
We used to food trade shows and there was usually always a company there that had aprons and t-shirts with slogans on them like:

"Kiss My Asparagus" and "Vegetarian is Old Indian Word for Bad Hunter".

Liberty, I'm so interested... are you chefs? Would love to hear more about what you did/do in the food world!
Do you have a favorite food website you would share? TIA.
 
RR...we manufactured packaged and RTE (ready to eat) diet and fitness foods, like for Atkin's Nutritionals, medical facilities, and "celebrity" diets. These foods fell into the ranges of low carb, sugar free, and/or gluten free, vegetarian, vegan, etc. Yes, there are many stories about those days.

We traveled a lot - way too much for my taste, lol.. and did TV, hundreds of Radio hosting/trade shows and lecturing all over the country.

Don't really have a "single" foodie website as food is such a personal thing. I am a French trained chef/ cook (AKA Julia Child). Love to cook and do so just about each and every day. Baking is a real joy. Don't use sugar often though...have wonderful sweetener alternatives.

Am happy to help with recipes or offer suggestions regarding questions

We sold our business a couple years ago to retire. Still get formulation requests and have many friends in the industry. Sadly, some wonderful celebrity clients have passed away, also. That's the hard thing about getting old, isn't it!

Thanks for asking RR!
 
Tomato sandwiches....yum. Sliced tomatoes on white bread (it SHOULD be white bread but I substitute Italian bread as I can't stomach "real" white bread), heavy on the salt and mayonnaise. The bread should be toasted lightly so the sandwich doesn't flop around when you're eating it.

It's strictly a summer-time treat as it's absolutely impossible to get good tomatoes in Florida unless I have a relative send me some they've grown. But when we hit the mountains of North Narrowlina, the tomatoes from Tennessee (Grainger County tomatoes are the best) and local tomatoes are everywhere and they are DELICIOUS!

I eat so many tomato sandwiches it's a wonder I haven't turned red.
 
RR...we manufactured packaged and RTE (ready to eat) diet and fitness foods, like for Atkin's Nutritionals, medical facilities, and "celebrity" diets. These foods fell into the ranges of low carb, sugar free, and/or gluten free, vegetarian, vegan, etc. Yes, there are many stories about those days.

We traveled a lot - way too much for my taste, lol.. and did TV, hundreds of Radio hosting/trade shows and lecturing all over the country.

Don't really have a "single" foodie website as food is such a personal thing. I am a French trained chef/ cook (AKA Julia Child). Love to cook and do so just about each and every day. Baking is a real joy. Don't use sugar often though...have wonderful sweetener alternatives.

Am happy to help with recipes or offer suggestions regarding questions

We sold our business a couple years ago to retire. Still get formulation requests and have many friends in the industry. Sadly, some wonderful celebrity clients have passed away, also. That's the hard thing about getting old, isn't it!

Thanks for asking RR!

Oh my, I loved Julia Child! Watched her every day when I was young. Although over my head and budget in those days, I did learn from her.

My old friend's husband took a class from Jacques Pepin who lived (and still does) here in CT.

My tastes have changed, as well as my age and now with no family to cook for, I only cook once or twice a week. My mother never baked so I never learned that, but I can make an "English Muffin Bread" from a batter I learned from PBS. Breads are my downfall.

RTE's from Atkin's. Atkin's frozen meals saved me while I was reversing type 2 diabetes. Maybe not the kind you mean, but they were pricey little frozen dinners. I relied on them while I experimented with other low carb .
meals.

What a fascinating life you have!

I just love watching people cook; it's an emotional thing for me...is it for you sometimes? Home, mom, etc....

I watched "Big Night" last night for about the 3rd time....well, most of it. I'm sure you've seen it, wonderful film.

Thanks for sharing about yourself!
 
Tomato sandwiches....yum. Sliced tomatoes on white bread (it SHOULD be white bread but I substitute Italian bread as I can't stomach "real" white bread), heavy on the salt and mayonnaise. The bread should be toasted lightly so the sandwich doesn't flop around when you're eating it.

It's strictly a summer-time treat as it's absolutely impossible to get good tomatoes in Florida unless I have a relative send me some they've grown. But when we hit the mountains of North Narrowlina, the tomatoes from Tennessee (Grainger County tomatoes are the best) and local tomatoes are everywhere and they are DELICIOUS!

I eat so many tomato sandwiches it's a wonder I haven't turned red.

Oh, me too Jujube! I think tomato sandwiches on white bread are favorite of many on this board. When I have a pot of basil on the porch, I sometimes add a torn up leaf of that.
 
I tend to make salads that have everything but the kitchen sink in them. Berries, grapes and other fruits, beans (kidney, black, garbanzo, cannellini, whatever), ground flax seed, kalamata olives, greens, celery, tomato, red onion, carrots, sauteed tofu, thawed frozen peas, and whatever else I can lay my hands on. And I often eat salad for breakfast.

Like Elaine, I have to have the BIG salad!

 
I tend to make salads that have everything but the kitchen sink in them. Berries, grapes and other fruits, beans (kidney, black, garbanzo, cannellini, whatever), ground flax seed, kalamata olives, greens, celery, tomato, red onion, carrots, sauteed tofu, thawed frozen peas, and whatever else I can lay my hands on. And I often eat salad for breakfast.

Like Elaine, I have to have the BIG salad!


SS, indeed, why not? As long as you like what's in there, I say enjoy. I'll eat any combo, but I'm not that big on cheese with seafood.
 


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