The food thread

Oh that's just criminal. 😉


indeed there's no accounting for taste - and if I want to put pineapple on my pizza, well isn't that what "freedom" is all about? - don't forget this is coming from a guy who can get really anal about which particular brand of small batch kettle cooked salt and vinegar potato chips is "best" (Miss Vickies Sea Salt and Malt Vinegar- their Balsamic Vinegar and Sweet onion are quite nice as well)

hey, now there's an idea for a crusty pizza topping 🙄
 
indeed there's no accounting for taste - and if I want to put pineapple on my pizza, well isn't that what "freedom" is all about?

I have no problem with pineapple on pizza (I might draw the line at spam which IMO is the true Hawaiian pizza 😀) or mayo for that matter.

World cuisine, honey dipped, gorgonzola, and squid ink pizza. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JPYwffTuEuo
 
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Chris, at least in my case, I put the winky to make it clear I was not being serious at all. I might judge your tastes if you start saying you like ranch dressing pizza (one experience in a dining hall in undergrad...shudder), but, hey, do what you enjoy!
 
"Either you like bacon, or you're wrong"

shouldn't that be "love" ?

Charles - isn't having to endure people telling you what you like to eat is wrong, provided nobody gets hurt (besides of course the once living protein source) also wrong?

well, this might be wrong too?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rAiInvC_ci8

Hey I can't even dissuade my own daughter from having pineapple pizza so that is how much my opinion is worth.


Stumbled across the swineapple a couple of days ago and it kinda made me smile and salivate simultaneously. Seemed a good opportunity to just throw it in the mix as it looked quite tasty but then wrapped in bacon anything looks tasty. Even mac'n'cheese... ;-)
 
Speaking of Hawaii, these crazy things really happen. A letter from Hawaii to New York in the 1850's

It was in a bundle of correspondence shoved into a factory furnace around 1870, but packed so tightly that the fire went out (though one side of the cover bears a scorch mark). The factory was abandoned; 35 years later, a workman cleaning the factory for reuse discovered the stuffed furnace, and knew enough about stamps to save the unusual covers.

Sold in 2013 for 2.24 million.