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/ck/ - Food & Cooking


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6888101 No.6888101 [Reply] [Original]

Why do Americans have so many names for the same dish?
Is there really a difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?
What are the characteristics that differentiate a sub from a grinder, a hoagie, a po'boy or a hero?
I mean, you can have thousands of kinds of beer and just call it 'beer', why the need to have half a dozen names for the same dishes?

>> No.6888108

A large country defined regionally.

Even some of the states are big enough to be broken down county to county.

>> No.6888110

>>6888108
This.

>>6888101
It's a bit difficult to understand when your entire country is smaller than some of our states, we know.

>> No.6888111
File: 167 KB, 295x282, 1441239499563.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888111

>>6888101
>Why do Americans have so many names for the same dish?
to distinguish them from one another?
is your brain too small to memorize more words?

>> No.6888148

Are yuropoors really so stupid that they can't understand that the United States is literally the size of Europe?

They don't call food the same names in England as they do Poland, dipshit. America is huge, with a lot of different cultural/ethnic groups. An extreme amount of local dialects, many of whom developed independent of others. Which is why you will see many different names for different shit. A guy in Massachusetts isn't going to call a type of food the same as a guy from Alabama most likely will.

>> No.6888206
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6888206

>>6888110
1/10 at least you tried

>> No.6888214

>>6888206
Remind me again, the population of Australia?

>> No.6888227

>>6888206
The majority of Australia is uninhabited wasteland you mong

>> No.6888242

Is nobody gonna call OP out on asking "what's the difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?"

What's the difference between baked beans and Heinz Baked Beans?

>> No.6888260

>>6888206
3/10 got some replies

What percentage of that is practically uninhabited desert, again?

>> No.6888274

>>6888242
this

>> No.6888287
File: 54 KB, 766x550, Capture.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888287

>>6888206

>> No.6888302
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6888302

>>6888287
>>6888206

>> No.6888522
File: 407 KB, 920x370, slider_tacos_fiery_2013.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888522

>>6888101
Yeah I've been saying this for a while, a sandwich by any name is ultimately just a sandwich.

Pic related

>> No.6888552
File: 671 KB, 920x975, m-products-original.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888552

>>6888101
>Is there really a difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?

Sloppy joe is a sandwich, Manwich is a brand of pre made sauce , how dense can you be?

>> No.6888556

>>6888242
Manwich worked hard on their brand to make it seem different from sloppy joes. I can see how clockspiderlanders would get confused by it.

>> No.6888567

>>6888227
>>6888214
>>6888260

>comparing 'size'
>hurr durr in Americanese size means population

Go pour yourselves three gills of brandy in a firkin of beer, it'll help you relax.

But seriously, is there sufficient regional distinctiveness to justify half a dozen names for the same dish? Look at Mexican food. A taco is a taco. It might be from a specific region or state but you don't call it something completely different just because it's got coriander leaves on it and the next town doesn't.

>> No.6888574

>>6888552
Newsflash; many American brand-name consumer goods may not be well known outside America.

>> No.6888575

america is a big place with different regional dialects

>> No.6888577

>>6888567
Tell me the population of Australia and the USA

>> No.6888581

interrogative word - helping verb - Americans

10/10

>> No.6888583

Where in america do people refer to sloppy joes as manwiches?

>> No.6888586

>>6888567
I've actually seen many different varieties of tacos. We use different words to describe things because we have extensive vocabularies. Manwich is a brand name.

>> No.6888588

>>6888574
Newsflash, then why the fuck would you make a thread about them before educating yourself with a simple google search?

>> No.6888592

>>6888148
Reminds me of people from the mid-west thinking the state of NY is just manhattan

>> No.6888594

>>6888101
>Is there really a difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?
Yes, Manwich is a brand, a sloppy joe is not necessarily made with Manwich brand tomato base.
>What are the characteristics that differentiate a sub from a grinder, a hoagie, a po'boy or a hero?
A po'boy is different because it includes fried food (usually shrimp) and remoulade sauce. The rest are just regional dialects, e.g. soda vs. pop.

>> No.6888597

>>6888592
>Reminds me of people from the mid-west thinking the state of NY is just manhattan
pretty sure you are confusing people from the midwest with people from manhattan,

>> No.6888603
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6888603

>>6888597

>> No.6888606

>>6888567
>A taco is a taco
Mainly, but start discussing quesadillas or moles and people suddenly get very technical.

>> No.6888610

>>6888592
>mid-west
who put a hyphen in 'midwest'?

>> No.6888615
File: 378 KB, 960x768, tmp_914-96d-156140678.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888615

>tfw im from urope

>> No.6888621

>>6888610
The same people who don't capitalize it.

>> No.6888623

>>6888615
It can't be helped, there's no reason to feel bad about it.

>> No.6888624

>>6888610
you clearly knew what i meant
why be a faggot about it?

>> No.6888627

>>6888615
I hear there's some available real estate in Syria.

Get it while it's hot.

>> No.6888628

>>6888624
yeah I knew what you meant, just thought it was strange

>> No.6888633

>>6888621
>capitalizing names of unofficial regions
Why?

>> No.6888634

>>6888628
Why don't we call the mid-west the middle west
or the middle east the mid-east?
Isn't that strange as well?

>> No.6888635

>>6888633
Because it's a proper noun, you silly cunt.

>> No.6888639

>>6888101
>What are the characteristics that differentiate a sub from a grinder, a hoagie, a po'boy or a hero?
Regional styles. The craze for French bread sandwiches in America started at the tail end of the 19th Century. No TV, no radio back then, so regional accents and styles of speech were much stronger than they are today. No chain restaurants, either, so regional variations in food were more pronounced as well.

Italian immigrants were instrumental in popularizing the sandwich, so many variations contain popular Italian-American deli items.

>> No.6888641

>>6888634
maybe a little, but not in the same sense that what you did is strange. Yours was strange because it was similar yet different than what is normally done. It may also be strange that our names for the midwest and middle east are not analogous but that is entirely unrelated

>> No.6888642

>>6888635
>Because it's a proper noun
Is it? I wouldn't consider it one

>> No.6888646

>>6888642
Stay in school.

>> No.6888647

>>6888639
>No TV, no radio back then, so regional accents and styles of speech were much stronger than they are today
actually (somewhat unexpectedly) regional accents have not become less prominent with the rise of national media

>> No.6888651

>>6888647
What's even more baffling is the fact that people in the Midwest think they don't have an accent.

>> No.6888652

>>6888647
Depends on the accent. The New York accent is substantially in decline.

>> No.6888656
File: 5 KB, 522x507, tmp_914-youwin-307098778.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888656

>>6888641
I'm being sincere

>> No.6888657

>>6888651
Well people in parts of the midwest (much of Iowa) have no regional dialect, but the midwest is a large place and the 2nd most densely populated part of the country, it has several distinct dialect

I think people from California thinking they don't have an accent is the funniest (then they go and pronounce 'cot' and 'caught' as though they are homophones)

>> No.6888659

>>6888652
Thank god, it's easily the most irritating one.

>> No.6888660

>>6888657
>no regional dialect
yes they do.

>> No.6888664

>>6888659
That's not southern.

>> No.6888665

>>6888657
You've obviously never been

>> No.6888667

>>6888664
Nope south included

>> No.6888672

>>6888660
not according to linguists, they have the standard american accent, its only a small portion of the midwest but it is the only part of america where no regional dialect is present

(I think during the rise of radio and then TV, much of the midwest had this accent, but the dialect of northern cities later shifted, leaving these mostly rural people behind)

>> No.6888673

>>6888667
Are you a flyover?

>> No.6888679

>>6888672
>Iowans, and Midwesterners in general, typically don’t think they speak with an accent. But they do, said Aaron Dinkin, a linguist who featured on IPR’s “Talk of Iowa” this week. Everyone does.

>A major linguistic fault line separates northern and southern Iowa, Dinkin said, meaning Iowans in Ottumwa may speak differently than those in Mason City.

>Northern Iowans often speak their vowels from the back of the mouth, Dinkin said. (Think about how one enunciates a playful “Minnesooohta” accent.) Southern Iowans, however, (as well as those in Nebraska and Missouri) pronounce vowels toward the front or middle of the mouth.

>> No.6888682

>>6888673
everyone who doesn't live in Brooklyn, or San Francisco is a flyover

>> No.6888685

>>6888682
That's a very flyover thing to say.
Why not Manhattan and L.A?

>> No.6888686

>>6888679
well yeah, they have a dialect, but it is also the dialect known as the standard american accent, and yes it is not all of Iowa, people in the northern part of the state have Minnesota accents

>> No.6888688

>>6888685
Manhattan is just rich people from other places, it has no culture of its own. LA is basically Mexico

>> No.6888689

>>6888686
>the standard american accent
No
Do some reading
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/General_American

>> No.6888693

>>6888673
No I've lived all over. Currently Va beach. Just my opinion on the most obnoxious accents.

>> No.6888696

>>6888679
The general american accent is based on the traditional accent of the inland north, from Buffalo to Iowa. Since this standard was established much of that region has shifted their regional accents as America becomes older and regional accents more established, but certain areas in the western, central midwest have retained this dialect

>> No.6888697

>>6888685
Tbh everything but Portland Or, and richmond va is flyover

>> No.6888699

>>6888696
No.

>> No.6888700

>>6888689
look at the map on the very page you just posted

>> No.6888702

>>6888700
READ

>> No.6888704

>>6888702
I did, it clearly contradicts what you are trying to say

>> No.6888706

>>6888704
You can't read then, okay.

>> No.6888707
File: 178 KB, 754x600, cot vs caught.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888707

lets get this shit started
>people with western accents

>> No.6888709

>>6888706
please copy and paste what you are talking about, I am genuinely curious

>> No.6888713

>>6888709
>The term "General American" arose as a name for a presumed most common or "default" form of American English, especially to be distinguished from marked regional speech of New England or the South. "General American" has often been considered to be the relatively unmarked speech of "the Midwest", a vague designation for anywhere in the vast midsection of the country from Ohio west to Nebraska, and from the Canadian border as far south as Missouri or Kansas. No historical justification for this term exists, and neither do present circumstances support its use... [I]t implies that there is some exemplary state of American English from which other varieties deviate. On the contrary, [it] can best be characterized as what is left over after speakers suppress the regional and social features that have risen to salience and become noticeable

>> No.6888716

>>6888713
keep on reading dude

>> No.6888723
File: 141 KB, 901x600, bag.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888723

>>6888707
>people who don't say 'bag' like a northerner

>> No.6888724

>>6888707
i'm from nj and i saw caught with a w like cawt

>> No.6888726

>>6888716
>The General American accent is most closely related to a conservative, generalized Midwestern accent of the early 1900s

Meaning, no one living today talks like this except for people trained into it for tv.

>> No.6888731

>>6888723
how do you say bag like "say" like bay-guh? wtf?

>> No.6888732

>>6888726
>Meaning, no one living today talks like this
except it goes on to say that some people do, there is even a fucking map, why are you ignoring this

>> No.6888734

>>6888731
>how do you say bag like "say" like bay-guh
no, one syllable, the vowel is like the 'a' in ape, not like in 'apple' as southerners pronounce it

>> No.6888739

>>6888732
Show me video of someone from there speaking with a general accent.

>> No.6888740

>>6888659
Except for Boston and Philly.

>> No.6888742

>>6888723
BOLSA!

>> No.6888748

>>6888734
ew

>> No.6888749

>>6888739
>Show me video of someone from there speaking with a general accent.
i'm, just gonna stick with what the experts say, if thats not enough for you than so be it

>> No.6888753

>>6888732
>there is even a fucking map
You didn't read anything. If you did you would have read that the accent came from there PRIOR to the region's vowel shift.

>> No.6888755
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6888755

>>6888723
Really?

>> No.6888757

>>6888749
You can't because they speak in a Midwest accent.

>> No.6888764

>>6888753
>If you did you would have read that the accent came from there PRIOR to the region's vowel shift.
No, it clearly says the accent has its roots in the dialect of the entire inland north, and the highlighted region is the only part that has retained that accent as regional dialects have differentiated themselves

Basically at the dawn of radio and film, most newsmen and actors came from the midwest, or were from California from families recently relocated from the midwest before the west coast had time to get its own accent as it has now. In addition to the west coast gaining an accent, the northern cities and northern plains also have, but parts of the midwest as highlighted in that map have retained the general accent

>> No.6888768

>>6888764
They have not retained it.

>> No.6888772

>>6888768
so what shift have they undergone to differentiate them from the general american accent?

I don't understand why you are so adamantly against what every source available says

>> No.6888773
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6888773

why do so many southerners follow this made up rule?

>> No.6888775

>>6888772
You must be from there.
You idiots really do think you speak without an accent...

>> No.6888778

>>6888772
>what every source available says
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Midwestern_accent

>> No.6888779

>>6888775
no, i am not from there, I have the inland north accent myself. But I have been to Iowa before.

I don't understand how you think they speak there, seriously, what do they do there that causes you to consider them distinct?

>> No.6888784

>>6888778
that link clearly supports what I am saying, showing 3 distinct midwestern accents, one of which is known as the general american accent

>> No.6888786

>>6888779
The fact that they are distinct.
Half of them talk like Fred Savage, and the rest talk like retarded Canadians, or old southerners.

>> No.6888791

>>6888784
PRIOR
PRIOR
PRIOR
TO
THE
VOWEL
SHIFT

Read it.

>> No.6888794
File: 601 KB, 2715x2298, accents.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888794

>>6888786
dude, stop it. I can't tell whether you are intentionally being wrong or just can;t read

>> No.6888799

>>6888794
post a video of someone living there speaking general american.

>> No.6888800

>>6888791
the vowel shift affected the great lakes cities, it has yet to make it to Iowa

>> No.6888806

>>6888799
oh yeah, I will just call up my buddy in Iowa and have him talk on video, that is a completely plausible thing for me to do

but here you go anyways https://www.youtube.com/results?search_query=tom+brokaw

>> No.6888807

>>6888800
>>6888679

>> No.6888809

>>6888806
So you can't.

>> No.6888812

>>6888809
see the link I posted

>> No.6888824
File: 41 KB, 634x450, soda.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6888824

"what kind of coke do you want?"
"Ill have a Mountain Dew"

>> No.6888843
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6888843

>>6888639
That's a good explanation, thanks.

>>6888594
Also very helpful, thanks.

>>6888586
Yeah, I've heard Hermes on Futurama mention manwiches and thought it was a generic term, like Xerox or Kleenex. (Jk)

As to most of the rest:
>MFW a not-even troll got you frothy in your y-fronts

>> No.6888865

>>6888101
>What are the characteristics that differentiate a sub from a grinder, a hoagie, a po'boy or a hero?

Someone said it's about local dialect and they are wrong about this. The difference between all of those is either the bread used or the contents of the sandwich, which should be obvious.

>Is there really a difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?
Manwich is a brand of shitty CANNED tomato sauce that gross people dump on their hamburger meat. It sucks. Homemade sloppy joes usually consist of not just hamburger, but chopped onion and peppers, and the sauce is made with something tomato based, usually a good ketchup, blended with a little brown sugar, vinegar, chili powder, salt and pepper and maybe red pepper flakes or sriracha to give it a kick. It's delicious.

>> No.6888872

>>6888843
i don't think I have ever heard someone refer to a sloppy joe as a manwich, though manwich is the brand of filling many people use for it

>> No.6888885

>>6888865
Oh I also add some chopped mushrooms to the sloppy joes, really good in there and important imo.

>> No.6889067
File: 266 KB, 835x586, carmel.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6889067

>> No.6889127

>>6888206
What's the difference between a popper and a juice box? What's the difference between a baby frank and a cheerio?

>>6888214
>>6888227
>>6888260
So, what, you guys are arguing that geographical distance has no effect on the dispersion of language? That population density is the primary factor in variations?

Looks more like you forgot what the discussion was even about the moment you saw an opportunity to wave your dicks around.

>> No.6889228

oh look, I binged google with ''grinder vs. hoagie'' and found a quick, concise response as opposed to over 100 posts of autistusts arguing over Iowanese accents.

http://www.houstonpress.com/restaurants/hoagies-vs-grinders-vs-sub-marine-sandwiches-6436641

>> No.6889231

>>6889228
Everyone knows this, faggot

>> No.6889304

>>6888843
>That's a good explanation, thanks.
My pleasure.

>> No.6889336

>>6889067
The last option is the only correct option.

Caramel is the candy,

"Carmelizing" (caramelizing) is the browning of sugars.

Anything else is entirely wrong.

>> No.6889340

>>6888773
>that gray area in Wisconsin
fuck, I just don't know

>> No.6889345

>>6889067
dis map is bullshit.

>> No.6889425

>>6888206
You forgot Alaska, retard. That place is pretty fucking big.

>> No.6889441
File: 156 KB, 600x419, pasta-encyclopedia-01.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6889441

>>6888101
Of course it's the Americans that have the problem. Talk to the Italians about pasta. It's all the same stuff

>> No.6889467
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6889467

>>6888824
Fuck people who say "pop".

>> No.6889474
File: 54 KB, 500x272, bettermadefaygo.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6889474

>>6889467
Fuck people who say soda

>> No.6889482
File: 3.91 MB, 400x225, Midwestern women.gif [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6889482

>>6889474
Kill thyself

>> No.6889486

>>6889441
what is this, an infographic for ants?

>> No.6889509
File: 26 KB, 486x412, fieri.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6889509

>>6889482
How bout I "pop" you in the face, cuz

>> No.6889518

>>6889509
It's cute how you're probably some sheltered white boy talking like a "nigga xD", even though you'd be too scared to walk the streets of a black neighborhood.

>> No.6889524
File: 681 KB, 600x800, 1441359494663.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6889524

>>6889518
I walk the streets of black neighborhoods all the time.

>> No.6890006
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6890006

>>6888577
The initial post was about the size of a country, not population, you dense amerifat.

>> No.6890126

>>6888588
Spicy butthurt?

>> No.6890129

>>6889425
Yeah but what's its population?

>> No.6890141

>>6890126
>he calls me out on my idiocy
>"I know, Ill call him butt hurt!"

>> No.6890143

>>6888101
America is a huge country
Like the same size as all of Europe
We're going to have different terms for the same thing in different parts of the country

>> No.6890145

>>6888567
Wow. You're a real idiot

>> No.6890146

>>6890006
I mean. To be fair. Only like 5% of Australia is inhabited

>> No.6890149

I mean. I'll never say /ck/ was a haven from shit posting
But wtf happened?
The past week I've been here, and it's full of spill over from /b/ or some shit

>> No.6890516

>>6890149
it's been that way and just been a race to the bottom for awhile
any attempt at actual threads is overwhelmed by memefood/veganxcarnist/flyover/whydoallamerifats/fastfood shitposting with a dash of /pol/

>> No.6892121
File: 334 KB, 800x530, 6a010534b1db25970b01901d1cfea9970b-800wi.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6892121

>> No.6892396

>>6888634
> Why don't we call the mid-west the middle west or the middle east

The people of the East coast slowly expanded westward. They had no idea how far the next ocean was. When they hit Ohio they thought Ohio was the west. To them it was about as west as they card to imagine. Eventually the current west coast was know so the previous west became Midwest... Not because it was the middle of the West but because it is, when guaging distance and direction, a midpoint between themselves and the west.

If the west coast were discovered first by literate folk, the current Midwest would be called the mideast.

>> No.6893287

>>6890129
unrelated to it's land size, which is what your picture is showing <3.

>> No.6893290

>>6892121
I'm in cali, a green, but no a crawdad is completely unrelated to a lobster for me.
I used to catch them way back when, 15 years ago? You scared them to back into your trap/bag etc. I just have to assume I caught them for sport and then let them die on the dirt. I know for sure I've never eaten one.

>> No.6893422

>>6893287
Read the whole thread dipshit, I'm sure you'll figure out the joke eventually.

>>6890145
Now that's a comeback, noice.

>>6890149
Looks like your super sekrit club's been infiltrated. Must be time to find a new place to hang out.

>> No.6893736

>>6888148
Of course British people don't use the same wordt as the Polish. They are two different languages.

Are you dimwitted?

>> No.6893875
File: 259 KB, 480x446, 1369086151750.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6893875

>why do americans

Huge penises and superiority over the world. Unbreakable freedom, response to rampant jealousy.

>> No.6893908

>>6888101
>Why do Americans have so many names for the same dish?
>Is there really a difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?
Manwich is a brand, sloppy joe is the dish. It's the same difference as between a ham and cheese sandwich and a ham and cheese sandwich with clove.
>What are the characteristics that differentiate a sub from a grinder, a hoagie, a po'boy or a hero?
Different breads and ingredients, they're nowhere near the same thing. They may be sandwiches but that's like calling strawberry and blueberry jam the same thing because they're both jams. A GYRO isn't even a sandwich, it's more like a Greek burrito.
>I mean, you can have thousands of kinds of beer and just call it 'beer', why the need to have half a dozen names for the same dishes?
But that's wrong anon, there's shitloads of distinctions for beers.

>> No.6893923

>>6888567
By your definition of size, we should also be counting ocean and airspace, as well as satellite settlements and non-contiguous states.

>> No.6894281

>>6893422
I'm good brah, if your post doesn't hold up on it's own merit I'm not gonna bother reading the thread. But nice jokes m8, you seem upset.

>> No.6894292

>>6890006
Do you just not know how to google up those population #'s and present them here?

>> No.6894329
File: 79 KB, 1642x854, kazakhstan.png [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6894329

Here are the stats, stop arguing with retards Non Americans.
Also I had no idea this country was so large.

>> No.6894343

>>6894329
Also now that I'm actually reading what I posted, what the fuck Wikipedia? Why did you bring Taiwan into the china land mass?
China also has more LAND than Canada, and the USA also has more land. Why is the water being factored in?

>> No.6894349

As usual, Australians prove themselves providers of the lowest quality posts on 4chan.

>> No.6894425

>>6888101
Manwich is a brand, the names are region and contents based, and the third thing is mute because all of the second can be called "sandwiches"

>> No.6894497

>>6894425
moot*

>> No.6894527

>>6888101
>Is there really a difference between a sloppy joe and a manwich?

YES, AND I WILL RIP YOU IN HALF FOR ASSUMING THEY'RE REMOTELY CLOSE TO EACH OTHER

WHERE DO YOU LIVE FUCKBOY

>> No.6894529

>>6894497
Who?

>> No.6894563

>>6888206
>Australian shitposters

>> No.6894599
File: 206 KB, 1500x1125, 452352345209777757.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6894599

>>6888101
Pic is a sloppy joe.

Manwich is something else.

>> No.6894610

>>6888707
>tfw Philadelphian

JUST FUCK MY HOAGIE UP FAM

>> No.6894612

>>6894599

>Pic related is a sloppy joe

what hoity toity upscale new york restaurant calls that a sloppy joe

It ain't sloppy nor joe

>> No.6894616

>>6894612
It's the orignal sloppy joe from Cuba.

Except with ham instead of tongue. And this is served in New Jersey.

>> No.6894626

>>6894616

get that shit out my face

>> No.6895414

>>6888656
what game is this

>> No.6895419

>>6889336
Carmel is the name of a city in California and Indiana. Fancy flyovers call it Carmel-by-the-cornfields.

>> No.6895495
File: 127 KB, 784x492, Untitled.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6895495

If you use the same word to describe these three things you are retarded.

>> No.6895526
File: 44 KB, 400x265, image_preview.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
6895526

>>6892121
>Crayfish

REEEEE

>> No.6895568

>>6895495
>If you call peppers peppers you are retarded
ok, then...

>> No.6895641

>>6895526
They're called Creek Diddlers.

>> No.6895691

>>6895495

in nz:

top left: capsicum

top right: pepper

bottom: chilli

>> No.6895700

>>6895691
LISTEN HERE PAL, BUDDY
THREE FUCK-ING WORDS IS TOO MANY. I DIDN'T GO TO WAR AGAINST OBAMACARE TO HAVE TO LEARN A NEW FUCKING LANGUAGE.
YOU HAVE A FANTASTIC DAY.

>> No.6895712

>>6895641

i'll diddle you're mom's creek

>> No.6895713

>>6888101
Well there are some differences that are based on regions. For instance, Po'boys usually refer to sandwiches with fried seafood, or some sort of roast beef on a baguette, Hoagies tend to refer to subs with Italian meats, Grinders (from what I remember) is just hot meats, and I have nothing on the Hero (regional dialect?). And all of these are just subsects of subs.

Someone already pointed out that manwich is just a sauce brand.

It really is just that Americans have large regional varieties in their food.

>> No.6895999

>>6895495
Poivron, poivre et piment.
That's why I have troubles cooking in English.

>> No.6896011

>>6895700

Clapclapclapclapclapclapclapclapclapclapclapclapclap

>> No.6896067

>>6895495
Deep souf here
Bells, pepper, chilies

>> No.6896087

>>6888101
Sloppy Joe is a genre of sandwich while Manwich is a brand name.
Like soda is a genre of beverage while Pepsi is a brand name.

Gridners, hoagies, po'boys, and heros are just regional names for the same thing. One place that calls them one name generally doesn't call them the other. In fact since Subway grew so large most other names have been pushed aside in favor of 'sub' or even just sandwich.

>> No.6897648

saving from page 10

>> No.6897659

>>6888552
To be fair, in areas of the United States, a soda is referred to as a Coke. For example a waitress will come to your table and ask what you want to drink. When you respond with "a Coke please", she will ask, "What kind?"

>> No.6897774

>>6897659
No she will bring you a coke because she asked for a specific drink order and you ordered a coke. If you said I'm going to the store to pick up some cokes. In that case someone may ask you what kind.

>> No.6897833

>>6888707
>>6888657
How the fuck are people pronouncing "caught"?

>> No.6897861

>>6895495
Bell peppers, peppercorn, and chili peppers.
Also known as peppers, pepper, and pepper.

>> No.6897989

>>6888206
A grand majority of the australian population is situated in a small strip in the west. Theyre much more geographically closer so languages tend to mix and there isnt as much cultural variation as there is in the us, and that not even considering the differences brought upon by settlers and immigrants.

Are you retarded or just tyring to stir shit up?And are you gonna be that faggot that rbing sup abbo population in the deserts of autralia, you massive faggot?

>> No.6897994

>>6897659

That a regional thing you mong.

In some places its coke, others soda, and the rest pop

people who say coke to refer to all sodas are faggots

>> No.6898191

>>6888287
>Countries
>Antarctica
>European Union

>> No.6898260

>>6888522
That's a pretty good looking sandwich paco. Though if I asked what did you bring for lunch and you said a sandwich then produced tacos I would be a bit thrown.