Poll of the Day > You must dip a chicken nugget/strip. Choose your sauce wisely.

Topic List
Page List: 1, 2
fettster777
08/03/22 10:04:19 AM
#51:


BBQ only. I hate that Raising Canes doesn't have BBQ.
... Copied to Clipboard!
BigOlePappy
08/03/22 6:51:12 PM
#52:


wolfy42 posted...
How is this not a freaking option!!!

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EAf9Is_b00U&ab_channel=BackpackTV

It is on there as sweet/savory.

---
"Oh, you think lag is your ally. You merely adopted lag. I was born in it, molded by it. I didnt have cable until I was already a man."
... Copied to Clipboard!
SunWuKung420
08/03/22 7:21:16 PM
#53:


Buffalo ranch

---
"I don't question our existence, I just question our modern needs" Pearl Jam - Garden
My theme song - https://youtu.be/-PXIbVNfj3s
... Copied to Clipboard!
CynicalZealot
08/03/22 7:54:10 PM
#54:


BigOlePappy posted...
You have been bestowed the chicken nuggets/strips of your choice...like mana from the heavens. You must select a dipping pairing for your favorite chicken(s).

None of the above. Any dip you give me is getting thrown away.

I never dip chicken. Either the chicken is juicy and delicious and doesn't need sauce to make it good, or it's so dry and tasteless that it needs a dipping sauce... in which case, I'm not eating it anyway.

About the only thing I dip is mozzarella sticks in marinara sauce.

---
"This calls for a particularly subtle blend of psychology and extreme violence."
--- Vyvyan, The Young Ones
... Copied to Clipboard!
hera
08/03/22 7:54:51 PM
#55:


you're a fuckin liar po

---
send you my love on a wire
... Copied to Clipboard!
Johnny_Eagle
08/03/22 10:40:45 PM
#56:


CynicalZealot posted...
doesn't need sauce to make it good

So, that somehow means it can't taste even better dipped? >_>

---
"Life's a game. It's meant to be played."
"Amateurs built the Ark. Professionals built the Titanic."
... Copied to Clipboard!
BigOlePappy
08/04/22 3:47:24 AM
#57:


Johnny_Eagle posted...
So, that somehow means it can't taste even better dipped? >_>

Good chicken nuggs + good sauce = exponential Tastiness.

---
"Oh, you think lag is your ally. You merely adopted lag. I was born in it, molded by it. I didnt have cable until I was already a man."
... Copied to Clipboard!
CynicalZealot
08/04/22 1:36:26 PM
#58:


hera posted...
you're a fuckin liar po

Nope. I like to taste my food.

I don't use condiments (or salt) in general for most food. If food needs condiments to taste good, it's not good food, so why would I want to eat it in the first place? Eat better food and you don't need condiments or dipping sauces.

---
"This calls for a particularly subtle blend of psychology and extreme violence."
--- Vyvyan, The Young Ones
... Copied to Clipboard!
hera
08/04/22 3:08:06 PM
#59:


hera posted...
you're a fuckin liar po

---
send you my love on a wire
... Copied to Clipboard!
BigOlePappy
08/04/22 4:29:24 PM
#60:


CynicalZealot posted...
Nope. I like to taste my food.

I don't use condiments (or salt) in general for most food. If food needs condiments to taste good, it's not good food, so why would I want to eat it in the first place? Eat better food and you don't need condiments or dipping sauces.

I'm a heat head...I love intense spice. Ghost pepper et al. It makes the flavor of the food enhanced. I was in Minnesota for a long time...they said they liked to taste the food... but the food didn't taste that good. That said, Minnesota is a place where they have Extra Mild salsa.

---
"Oh, you think lag is your ally. You merely adopted lag. I was born in it, molded by it. I didnt have cable until I was already a man."
... Copied to Clipboard!
CynicalZealot
08/04/22 4:35:50 PM
#61:


hera posted...
you're a fuckin liar po

I'm sorry you're too poor to afford worthwhile food. I'll pray for you.



BigOlePappy posted...
I'm a heat head...I love intense spice. Ghost pepper et al. It makes the flavor of the food enhanced.

Spice is fine, honestly. But it should be integrated into the actual meal and not added after the fact. Add it while cooking, not at the table.

Though when you cross the line from "spice as a flavor-enhancer" to "spice is literally all you taste" or "spice as an ordeal", that's when you're kind of ruining your food. If all you really want is to taste the spice or to have a painful burning sensation in your mouth, just bypass the food and down the hot sauce as a shot or something. Same effect.

---
"This calls for a particularly subtle blend of psychology and extreme violence."
--- Vyvyan, The Young Ones
... Copied to Clipboard!
BigOlePappy
08/04/22 4:52:34 PM
#62:


CynicalZealot posted...
I'm sorry you're too poor to afford worthwhile food. I'll pray for you.

Spice is fine, honestly. But it should be integrated into the actual meal and not added after the fact. Add it while cooking, not at the table.

Though when you cross the line from "spice as a flavor-enhancer" to "spice is literally all you taste" or "spice as an ordeal", that's when you're kind of ruining your food. If all you really want is to taste the spice or to have a painful burning sensation in your mouth, just bypass the food and down the hot sauce as a shot or something. Same effect.

Yeah. A lot of great foods are spicy without hot sauce, which is mostly vinegar. Hot sauce gives food an acidic taste that compliments fat, and the salt makes food taste more like itself. The aged ones impart delicious umami flavor too....so they hit a lot of the main taste principles.

I think spice took a lot time to catch up in a lot of the U.S. because it was associated with minorities, e.g. PoC and non-Anglo Europeans. (The idea was that the lesser people had to disguise bad meat or something...which in actuality their aversion was just based on ignorance or inexperience).

The South was the first place to really introduce spicy food into the mainstream combining African, Spanish, and French cooking. Peppers also grew better in the south. So you end up with your sweet heat sauces for pit BBQ, spicy Cajun seafood and etouff, and even bourbon. Eventually these were Integrated into the U.S. as a whole.

Germanic foods use spice mostly through mustard ..probable called Heisenf or something. German horseradish dishes can feel like self defense spray when eaten by Americans. Strangely these didn't carry over with the likes of hamburgers or frankfurters. The most mainstream spicy German food is probably the bratwurst which has a lot of spicy kick. I think the traditional spices for that wurst are paprika, black pepper, nutmeg, cayenne, and rosemary. Also they would brown peppers for it which the practice of made it over the pond.

So...all the way back to hot sauce........it became a practical and convenient way to add spices to foods you didn't cook yourself.

---
"Oh, you think lag is your ally. You merely adopted lag. I was born in it, molded by it. I didnt have cable until I was already a man."
... Copied to Clipboard!
hera
08/04/22 8:33:20 PM
#63:


CynicalZealot posted...
'm sorry you're too poor to afford worthwhile food. I'll pray for you.

and ill venmodash your ass some dipping sauces for your bland ass chicken strips you lying sack of goop

---
send you my love on a wire
... Copied to Clipboard!
Revelation34
08/05/22 1:08:40 PM
#64:


BigOlePappy posted...


Yeah. A lot of great foods are spicy without hot sauce, which is mostly vinegar. Hot sauce gives food an acidic taste that compliments fat, and the salt makes food taste more like itself. The aged ones impart delicious umami flavor too....so they hit a lot of the main taste principles.

I think spice took a lot time to catch up in a lot of the U.S. because it was associated with minorities, e.g. PoC and non-Anglo Europeans. (The idea was that the lesser people had to disguise bad meat or something...which in actuality their aversion was just based on ignorance or inexperience).

The South was the first place to really introduce spicy food into the mainstream combining African, Spanish, and French cooking. Peppers also grew better in the south. So you end up with your sweet heat sauces for pit BBQ, spicy Cajun seafood and etouff, and even bourbon. Eventually these were Integrated into the U.S. as a whole.

Germanic foods use spice mostly through mustard ..probable called Heisenf or something. German horseradish dishes can feel like self defense spray when eaten by Americans. Strangely these didn't carry over with the likes of hamburgers or frankfurters. The most mainstream spicy German food is probably the bratwurst which has a lot of spicy kick. I think the traditional spices for that wurst are paprika, black pepper, nutmeg, cayenne, and rosemary. Also they would brown peppers for it which the practice of made it over the pond.

So...all the way back to hot sauce........it became a practical and convenient way to add spices to foods you didn't cook yourself.


I have never had a spicy bratwurst.

---
Gamertag: Kegfarms, BF code: 2033480226, Treasure Cruise code 318,374,355, Steam: Kegfarms
... Copied to Clipboard!
Topic List
Page List: 1, 2