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Apparently, an egg foo yung sandwich is a 'thing' in St. Louis. And it is called a 'St. Paul' sandwich. I've never had the experience.
How about a traditional German Mennonite meal?duplicate text checkerGliderJohn
I lived in StL for 5 or 6 years and never heard of that. Although I did have some fried ravioli and Ted Drews concrete (Ice cream)
Halupki, also known as stuffed cabbage is sometimes referred to as Pigs in the Blanket.
......and Imo's St Louis style pizza.
I doubt nobody here eats much of fishes? It is sausages and beefs (red meat) in USA? Add Pan pizzas and hamburgers?Here is traditional way to cook fish in Ostrobothnia
The U.S. has lots and lots of coast, rivers, and lakes. Of course we eat fish! Personally, I want to try some of that pickled Norwegian shark I’ve read about.
I live down the street from where the fishing/shrimp boats dock so we eat plenty of fish,shrimp,crabs,oysters... Usually made at home because the locals deep fry everything in the local restaurants.
We caught and ate a lot of (freshwater) trout in VT when I was young. Almost without exception, it was eaten at breakfast. Lightly coated with seasoned flour and cooked (gutted, no head but otherwise whole) in a pan with butter or bacon fat, it was served with eggs (best over easy with soft yolks) and maybe fried potatoes. Small trout tails were the real treat, like a potato chip. Big tails were too bony. We always wanted to cook a bunch of big trout butterflied like that in front of a fire, but you had to catch a bunch of them first.....We rarely if ever ate trout at another time of day. we couldn't catch any other fish there at home on the farm or in town. When we did have other fresh fish, it was more likely to be eaten at breakfast like this than at other times. For dinner/supper fish, we would have salmon patties or Finnan Haddie (dried smoked haddock) cooked in milk with potatoes and califlower.I worked as a fishmonger about 15 miles from the family farm when I was 18. Lots of different fish there, with much trucked in from the Northeastern USA coast. Gulf Coast seafood and crawfish in New Orleans were great, too.
That looks really good! I'd eat that!
It is this one. A good tasty fish.https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coregonus_lavaretus
Reading the "which WG member to dine with.." Thread and some of the tangent regional banter makes me think about serious differences in food by the same name, depending upon region.In VT & around northern New England, Barbecue is almost exclusively half or quarter chicken with tomato barbecue sauce, actively cooked & some char is ok, eaten off the bone. Down here in the southeast, barbecue means pulled pork with regional sauce or dry rub, usually slow cooked if not smoked and char is a no-no, served on a sandwich or eaten with fork. We moved down here from VT and we're excited to see some having a special BBQ sale/fundraiser event. We got a plate and were really stumped, probably as stumped as the people serving when we asked them where the chicken was...On another forum, someone in AU recently mentioned Pigs in A Blanket as being sausage wrapped in bacon. Someone from Ontario said around there that meant Steak wrapped in Bacon. Then an American said that here, pigs in a blanket is a hot dog wrapped in dough, usually biscuit dough out of a can. Typical Boy Scouts fun camping food.There must be other things like this, especially things that are more than just different by one "always" or "never" ingredient (like true gumbo never having both okra and file' in it) but those can be fun too. If there's a local food/dish/style that is the standard for the area, tell us about it. Then when we go there, we can know what to look for and expect when the plate comes.Make us hungry..
Growing up in Georgia, with both parents being from Georgia, when mom would fix Chicken Pot Pie she would fill actual pie crust with filling. Usually a mix of sliced white meat chicken, peas, potatoes, onions, and carrots in a white sauce. Then bake it in the oven. It was delicious. She would also make chicken and dumplings. This would be deboned baked chicken, usually pulled/chopped with home made dumpling strips that would be cooked in a pot, again with a white sauce. It was one of my dad’s favorite meals. Imagine our surprise when we moved up to PA Dutch country west of Allentown and ordered chicken pot pie and got chicken and dumplings!
What’s even funnier is that we Pennsylvania Dutch are known for our pies!
Growing up in Georgia, with both parents being from Georgia, when mom would fix Chicken Pot Pie she would fill actual pie crust with filling. Usually a mix of sliced white meat chicken, peas, potatoes, onions, and carrots in a white sauce. Then bake it in the oven. It was delicious. She would also make chicken and dumplings. This would be deboned baked chicken, usually pulled/chopped with home made dumpling strips that would be cooked in a pot, again with a white sauce. It was one of my dad’s favorite meals.
Man, a good shoo-fly pie with a cuppa coffee.
Yup, no kidding. My wife and mother-in-law (both PA Dutch) "compete" to make perfect medium rare/barely medium center shoo fly pies. Uniform color, fully cooked shoo fly pie is a sad thing.But my wife rarely makes pigs stomach and my mil always does for me when I visit. Life's been a lot worse.
We have Imo's in SGF now. It's not that special anymore