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So trivial, yet it really ticks you off.

Harp

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,508
Location
Chicago, IL US
What area is this?? o_O

Trench, warum diese Frage stellen? o_O;)

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Dunkin Donuts do not deliver. :(
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Certainly not trivial, but preponderance of journalist acumen for vengeful constitutional cite reflects
a Pavlovian reaction, liken a pack of jackals after a carcass. And this particular proletariat is pursued
relentlessly; others in the recent past not so. Separating wheat from chaff, mere protesters from rioters.
Agenda, epithelial pigmentation, and various sundry equation variables comprise this peculiar formula.
Differential and integral calculus. :rolleyes:
 

Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
Trench, warum diese Frage stellen? o_O;)

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Dunkin Donuts do not deliver. :(
----------

Certainly not trivial, but preponderance of journalist acumen for vengeful constitutional cite reflects
a Pavlovian reaction, liken a pack of jackals after a carcass. And this particular proletariat is pursued
relentlessly; others in the recent past not so. Separating wheat from chaff, mere protesters from rioters.
Agenda, epithelial pigmentation, and various sundry equation variables comprise this peculiar formula.
Differential and integral calculus. :rolleyes:

Some things are best ignored.

But Dunkin Donuts does deliver. It's on doordash.

While undoubtedly thought cleverly obfuscated, I wonder if it will be addressed.
 

Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
That most abominable of Canadian inventions - the Hawaiian pizza...

I didn't know it was a Canadian invention. Huh, go figure. Somehow I actually don't mind a Hawaiian pizza. I won't go out of my way to order one for myself but I'll have a piece and enjoy it if offered. It seems that my pizza objection of late is bacon. (Imagine that!) It just seems "too flavorful" so out of place.

Ever have a spaghetti pizza? How about a baked potato pizza? Seems like anything is fair game to make a pizza out of.
 

Turnip

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,349
Location
Europe
Döner-Pizza is not too uncommon here.

Doener-Pizza.jpg


Sometimes also available with red/white (ketchup/mayonnaise) fries.

download-2.jpg


Real fusion kitchen...:D
 

Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
Typically if I want pizza, I want pizza! Which means the usual traditional construction (regional variants are good too) and toppings. (Don't skimp on the sauce. Put the toppings ALL the way out to the edge, and COOK the damn thing, don't just melt the cheese!) That certainly is not to say I don't enjoy the "artsy" style pizzas. We have several of those kinds of pizza shops around town and they are really incredible (good!). Their pizzas are pizzas in name only, so once you come to terms with that you're in for a great experience. They've certainly have taken the concept of pizza to a whole new level. Couple that with the wide varieties of craft beer that are readily available and, well... Need I say more?
 
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MisterCairo

I'll Lock Up
Messages
7,005
Location
Gads Hill, Ontario

Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
It seems that burgers these days took their cue from pizzas (or is it the other way around) - the things come on burgers. Now really, can you really taste all those things? And do they all really go together for a good end result? They usually just make for a mess in my opinion. Actually, one of the best burgers I can have anymore is a simple burger seasoned with only salt and pepper between two slices of lightly buttered white bread.

As a kid I remember my mom adding water to the pan after the burgers were cooked (she liked her's VERY well done so there was great fond in the skillet), to make a watery pan "gravy" which we had on buttered white bread with S&P.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,715
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
I like a plain, loosely packed slab of ground beef, cooked rare, between two slices of plain white toast. If it's good meat, about 80-20, it's absolutely delicious that way. When I had a bad case of anemia after major surgery years ago, I had a manic craving for these.

I am not a fan of highly-accessorized hamburgers -- if stuff falls out in your lap while you're eating it, then it's gone too far. Cheese, lettuce, and a blob of A-1 sauce is as much dressing as I like on a restaurant burger.
 
Messages
10,930
Location
My mother's basement
For the past several months the lovely missus has patronized an outfit from over Boulder way that sells grass-fed beef and other organic meats. They deliver the product, frozen, in insulated cloth carriers with a block of dry ice.

It doesn’t come cheap, I’m sure, but I avoid knowing the exact amount because, 1.) it would only frustrate me, 2.) it wouldn’t stop her anyway, and, 3.) it really is a superior product, much as I hate to admit it. The ground beef especially makes for a burger to rival what I remember from my early years.
 

Turnip

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,349
Location
Europe
A burger shop around makes a marvelous pulled duck burger for Christmas, even red kraut and some lingonberries included.

I also love (raw) steak tartare, from the butcher´s, but I’ll have to wait until my girlie´s out, she really hates it...:)
 
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Hercule

Practically Family
Messages
953
Location
Western Reserve (Cleveland)
I like a plain, loosely packed slab of ground beef, cooked rare, between two slices of plain white toast. If it's good meat, about 80-20, it's absolutely delicious that way. When I had a bad case of anemia after major surgery years ago, I had a manic craving for these.

I am not a fan of highly-accessorized hamburgers -- if stuff falls out in your lap while you're eating it, then it's gone too far. Cheese, lettuce, and a blob of A-1 sauce is as much dressing as I like on a restaurant burger.

Hear, Hear! While I agree on all points, I must admit that any more I prefer my burgers cooked medium. It's purely a texture thing. A rare center, to me, has no flavor and just comes across as slimy. Now steaks on the other hand... When I'm cutting up larger pieces of meat to use in stews etc., I almost always sample a few pieces raw. My wife says that in college there was a girl in the dorm who came from a family that considered it a treat to eat hamburger raw, something my wife witnessed on several occasions. I won't go that far. Too many opportunities to pick up bacteria in the processing.

As for fresh and grass fed, we raised beef cows when I was a kid back in CT and you definitely can tell a difference from the mass market beef. It's a flavor to behold for sure!
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,715
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
When pizza became popular in New England in the late 1930s, anchovies were the dominant topping. You'd be hard pressed today to find anyone who has ever seen an anchovy, let alone put one on a pizza. "Anchovy Pizza" was still common into the '70s, but only old people ate it, and with the domination of the market by chain pizza, it's all but extinct now.
 

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