Keelandson
Porn Star
Grits, hog jowels and possum pie, outdoors under the palm trees next to the ceement pond on a warm Saturday afternoon.
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I'm wondering if anyone outside the Americas ever eats cornbread or hominy.
Also, are pumpkins grown and eaten in other countries?
As in: "deep-fried oreos", "deep-fried turkey" etc.
-T.

I don't know if those things reach even "the Americas." Cornbread is, I believe, available at Kentucky Fried Chicken franchises. And I don't know what hominy is though I'm sure I've heard the word before. I'm even sure someone on here has been kind enough to explain it, though I can't remember for the life of me. Some part of a pig?
Their roots are German but the modern hamburger and hotdog are American creations.
ander123: The American hamburger and hot dog have little to do with their German roots; hamburgers have far too many vegetables on them, and hot dogs aren't necessarily the frankfurters you would expect.
I'm wondering if anyone outside the Americas ever eats cornbread or hominy.
Also, are pumpkins grown and eaten in other countries?
I agree completely. Never drink them.
Chicken and waffles is really good - contrasting textures, flavors, all that. I didn't know it was a Southern thing - as someone else posted, I think - I thought it was a West Coast thing.
Here's a food story for ya:
I'm Australian, but when I backpacked around the world I worked part-time in a kitchen in an English pub. For Australia Day, I decided to make "The Great Aussie Burger With The Lot" as a special. An Australian hamburger "with the lot" comprises the burger bun, a ground beef pattie, fried onion, lettuce, tomato, cheese, bacon, a fried egg, a slice of pineapple, beetroot, and either barbecue sauce or tomato sauce (ketchup).
Beetroot is what really upsets the foreigners. They just don't get it.
In the English pub, not a single customer ordered the special. The pub manager ended up asking for one, because he felt sorry for me.
It would be African American foods like chitlins, collard greens, pig's feet, etc because these foods aren't eaten in Canada since the African Canadian population is small.
Chicken and waffles. I don't understand how those two goods were put together.
Here's a food story for ya:
I'm Australian, but when I backpacked around the world I worked part-time in a kitchen in an English pub. For Australia Day, I decided to make "The Great Aussie Burger With The Lot" as a special. An Australian hamburger "with the lot" comprises the burger bun, a ground beef pattie, fried onion, lettuce, tomato, cheese, bacon, a fried egg, a slice of pineapple, beetroot, and either barbecue sauce or tomato sauce (ketchup).
Beetroot is what really upsets the foreigners. They just don't get it.
In the English pub, not a single customer ordered the special. The pub manager ended up asking for one, because he felt sorry for me.
Hominy is what they grind to make grits.
