Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Talk about just about anything else that is non-gaming here, but keep it clean
lisalover1
Next-Gen
Posts: 4960
Joined: Tue Jul 08, 2008 10:50 am
Location: Redmond, WA
Contact:

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by lisalover1 »

weasels wrote:
pakopako wrote:Pizzas are like tacos -- as long as the topping fits in the curve, you can eat i-- WHAT THE HELL ARE YOU DOING
Forks?....


to be honest when i was visiting Germany,i found that pizza is almost always eaten with a fork and knife...one day my folks over there got a pizza (with salami on it which was really awesome). I at first used my hands (this was when i was quite young and only knew my way to live) only to be told that it was in some way or another "disrespectful"...so being one not to disrespect people, i picked up a fork and knife..and ate...very strange to do so though. :lol:

I hear that in most European countries, hamburgers are eaten with a knife and fork. Is that true?
Image
~My name's Vicky, by the way!~ ^_^
User avatar
pepharytheworm
Next-Gen
Posts: 2853
Joined: Fri Mar 20, 2009 4:14 pm
Location: Portland, Oregon

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by pepharytheworm »

jfrost wrote:We eat pizzas with knife and fork around here too. That's because we're not cave men.


Do you eat tocos with fork and knife too? How about Gyros, hotdogs, and hamburgers. As far as I have heard pizza history is similiar to all these types of food.

Starting for the poor and working class, it was a street vendor food, which is meant to be eaten with hands since they were bought on the street.
Where's my chippy? There's my chippy.
User avatar
jfrost
Next-Gen
Posts: 3329
Joined: Sat Feb 07, 2009 12:36 pm
Location: Rio de Janeiro, Brazil

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by jfrost »

I don't eat tacos or gyros (actually, I didn't even know what gyros were). As for hamburgers and hot dogs, we eat them with our hands. But if Jon Stewart goes berserk because people eat pizzas using cutlery, we are allowed to call you cave men.

As an aside, sometimes I really wish we'd use fork and knife to eat hot dogs. Type "Brazilian hot dog" on Google and you'll know what I mean.
User avatar
KillerJuan77
Next-Gen
Posts: 1432
Joined: Mon Jun 06, 2011 5:01 am

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by KillerJuan77 »

I always put tabasco on it and no one complains about it so it's OK here in Mexico? I'm not sure.

jfrost wrote:As an aside, sometimes I really wish we'd use fork and knife to eat hot dogs. Type "Brazilian hot dog" on Google and you'll know what I mean.


Image

There is no way you can eat that with just your hands, also, you would need Kakihara's mouth (From Ichi The Killer) to bite it :lol:.
Image
dedalusdedalus
Next-Gen
Posts: 1465
Joined: Wed Dec 03, 2008 9:38 pm

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by dedalusdedalus »

jfrost wrote:Type "Brazilian hot dog" on Google and you'll know what I mean.


It's...it's beautiful. It makes the Chicago dog look anemic.
User avatar
Luke
Next-Gen
Posts: 21076
Joined: Wed Jun 10, 2009 9:39 am

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by Luke »

dedalusdedalus wrote:
jfrost wrote:Type "Brazilian hot dog" on Google and you'll know what I mean.


It's...it's beautiful. It makes the Chicago dog look anemic.

That is what some refer to as "Midwestern Blasphemy".
Hatta
Next-Gen
Posts: 4030
Joined: Tue May 06, 2008 8:33 pm

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by Hatta »

Is that ketchup? On a hot dog? :wink:
We are prepared to live in the plain and die in the plain!
pakopako
Next-Gen
Posts: 1654
Joined: Wed Jul 07, 2010 2:29 pm

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by pakopako »

jfrost wrote:As an aside, sometimes I really wish we'd use fork and knife to eat hot dogs. Type "Brazilian hot dog" on Google and you'll know what I mean.

Ah yes, the various South American hot dogs. (I grew up with Colombian style myself.)

Much like eating bratwurst or sausage, you really need to set the things down. (Unless, for whatever reason, you're nuking them in a sandwich.)
My scheduling skills have died of dysentery; I hope to visit at least on a monthly basis.
Still, don't forget to tip your waitress.
User avatar
the King
Next-Gen
Posts: 1028
Joined: Wed Mar 18, 2009 2:22 pm
Location: Hockeytown, USA

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by the King »

dsheinem wrote:But yeah, that Detroit pizza looks like a gimped Chicago style pie. I know other pizzas from other regions can be passable to good, but I really doubt anyone who has had authentic NYC or Chicago pizza would argue that there's better pizza anywhere else.


Yeah, it's nothing like a Chicago style pie, but if someone's pizza experience was limited enough to make that assumption I could see why they would only think NYC or Chicago makes good pizza. I've had both and they are both really good, but you are talking about two styles at the opposite ends of the pizza spectrum and there is so much great pizza in-between.

On a side note, did individual pizza's on the grill tonight. The kids love putting together their own pies. They always tend to eat better when I let them help make their dinner actually. Here is my wife's with onions and shrooms I sauted first on the the cast iron skillet I use on my grill. It's just store bought frozen dough, so Luke might not approve but the cheese is homemade using extra breast milk.

Image
User avatar
o.pwuaioc
Next-Gen
Posts: 8444
Joined: Tue Mar 29, 2011 7:59 pm
Location: I miss NYC.

Re: Social acceptability of putting condiments on pizza

Post by o.pwuaioc »

the King wrote:It's just store bought frozen dough, so Luke might not approve but the cheese is homemade using extra breast milk.

Not sure if want...
Post Reply