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Midwesterners rock. Its true. We're more or less the coolest, toughest, best people. Its simple. :-)
Sorry to those of you whose delusions were just shattered. Especially you New Yorkers. But reality had to strike sometime. ;-)
Posts: 54 | Registered: Oct 2003
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See, even after reading this I don't have any desire to visit the Southern US. I hate hot weather. Humidity and I don't see eye to eye. I'm not religious. I think the only sports worth playing are soccer and hockey. I don't eat meat, dairy or eggs.
What does the South have to offer me? (Or, for that matter, what do I have to offer the South? Other than my superior way of life that is
Posts: 3243 | Registered: Apr 2002
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According to Fox's show The O.C., Newport Beach still has cotillions, but I'd hardly consider that part of the South. I'd also hardly consider a Fox "drama" to be a reliable source of info, though.
Posts: 4534 | Registered: Jan 2003
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The south is too humid for me. I took a road trip to New Hampshire and could barely breathe as I passed through Memphis.
Prescott, Arizona is perfect though. It's not too warm in the summer, and not too cold in the winter, and it's only rarely humid.
Posts: 2292 | Registered: Aug 2003
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Yeah, that's true. St. Louis is still pretty Midwestern. An hour south, though, and you may as well be in Arkansas. j/k
Posts: 37449 | Registered: May 1999
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What do southerners consider cornbread? I've had cornbread that was almost like cake, sweet and fluffy and smooth, and on the other hand I've had cornbread that was like multigrain bread, heavy with lots of texture and big pieces of corn.
Darn it, I am -hungry-. I love grits, though I don't like them with cheese. Mmm, biscuts with sausage gravy, grits, eggs, fruit...
Of course, I like lox and bagels too. Should have eaten breakfast :\.
Posts: 1676 | Registered: Jul 2000
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Back from lunch- had shrimp and hushpuppies! On the cornbread question- technically we have two types. There's lace cornbread, which is spooned batter in a frying pan (my fave kind) or pan cornbread, which is fluffier and baked in the oven. Its usually up to the cook which one you'll get. Now the kind with bits of corn is either corn pudding or corn fritters. Also, pudding in the oven or fritters in the frying pan. I'm sorry for those of you with bad experiences with the rude type Southerners. People here usually have a lot of heart, but many still harbor distrust of "Yankees" and there's still prejudice to contend with. We're not all like that, I promise!
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Hushpuppies must be eaten with honey. Why some restaurants that serve them don't understand this, I don't know.
Posts: 221 | Registered: Mar 2003
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Another thing- the weather. At least we have SEASONS. It doesn't get that cold here, but when it does actually snow-woo hoo, its a major event. The humidity is a pain, but living near the coast makes it a great excuse for going to the beach.
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Southern "delicacies" I won't eat- pig's feet pig's brains (my great granmother ate them mixed with eggs) yok (I really don't even know what this is, nor do I want to) rice pudding (we here in the South will make pudding out of anything) deer stew (self explanatory, I hope) squirrel (don't ask!)
Jaxonn Suddenly, not hungry anymore...
Posts: 55 | Registered: May 2003
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With all due respect Ronnie, what planet are you from? Rice pudding is nasty- but to each his own. What about tomato pudding? Bread pudding? Hey, like I said they'll make anything into a pudding around here.
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Jaxonn, NC beaches don't really count as beaches.
And even though the lack of seasons sometimes sucks, the fact that I can sit by my pool in my shorts and sip a cold beer for at least 10 months out of the year is a definite bonus.
Posts: 221 | Registered: Mar 2003
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Zan- I completely understand your point on the seasons thing. But why don't NC beaches count as beaches?
Posts: 55 | Registered: May 2003
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NC is the place that Floridians go to vacation in the summer. My parents spend a month there every year.
Posts: 221 | Registered: Mar 2003
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I love NC beaches. This summer I went to Cape Lookout, which was really neat. You have to take a boat to the island with the lighthouse, and on the way you see wild horses grazing on the saltwater grasses that grow in small islands in the area. Like I said, it's really cool.
RRR- I don't specifically recognize the beach, so I'll make a random guess. Oak Island? (Long Beach, NC is my favorite beach.)
Posts: 224 | Registered: Aug 2002
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I may be biased but I think our Gulf coast beaches are the most gorgeous in the world. Expand any of the pictures on this page, for instance, to see what my favorite beach town, Pensacola, has to offer. Sugar white fluffy sand, pure clear water, and fewer people density than most anywhere else, Pensacola still retains the old-Florida charm. Destin and Ft. Walton and Gulf Shores have become wall to wall condos with way too many people on the beaches, but Pensacola is still completely lovely. I miss it so much. I hope I can go next summer if I'm home from Iraq.
Posts: 968 | Registered: Sep 2003
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quote: *blinks* You make some really funny latkes! Mine are made from potatoes.
Aren't they cooked by the same process though? I knew they were potatoes. We made them in Elementary school. I can't remember why, but I think we had a Jewish lady come teach us to make some stuff like that. It was nifty.
Oops, misspelled latke in the post before. Got it confused with the guy on taxi.
Posts: 264 | Registered: Jan 2002
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Nah, you didn't misspell it. The trouble with transliterating words is that there are too many ways to do it. I've seen latka, latke, latkah, latkeh, and others. Pick your favorite.
Aren't all pancakes made that way, though?
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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I don't know. We did it with like half an inch of oil. I don't use oil with pancakes. Just a non-stick pan.
Posts: 264 | Registered: Jan 2002
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Okay, confession time for all Southerners or those who can relate. I have done something equivalent to a "choosing a different religion from my momma" kinda no-no. I have...(gasp) . . . . . . given up cast iron. . . . . I HATE it. I thought I loved it. I stood behind it and told everyone how great it is. . . . . My mom doesn't know I threw out all my cast iron.
I hate it. It weighs six times more than a normal pan with no known benefit. Plus the handle gets hot. It's almost impossible for a pregnant woman to use it, which I usually am. What's the point? When it came time to move, I realized that stupid cast iron would probably take us over our weight limit in the moving van, that's how heavy it was. So I chucked it. I haven't missed it since.
*breathes sigh of relief*
My name is Maureen, and I'm a non-stick-aholic.
Posts: 264 | Registered: Jan 2002
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Non-stick spray is your friend. Or maybe a little olive oil in a pan, but "half an inch"? Yikes! *dies*
Cast iron actually does have a health benefit -- trace amounts of iron end up in the food. And since most people are iron-deficient . . . OTOH, I'm with you on what a pain in the neck it is. I have a friend who loves it, but I can't stand it.
Posts: 32919 | Registered: Mar 2003
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Yes- someone clear up the hushpuppies thing. They tasted oniony to me, I can't imagine them with honey. I guess it might be like chicken fingers in honey. Hm.
Edited to ask, Why is Ana Kata in Iraq? Is she in the military?
Only a true Southerner knows that Coke doesn't mean a specific drink-it's just a general term for any type of soda
and no one has mentioned Boudin sausage, which is one of my favorite.
As for the politeness, raised by two yankees in the South, it was VERY hard for me, but I can see reasons behind it now, it just gives people a basis for speaking, and the talking about you behind your back stuff seems overrated (but I'm generally pretty oblivious, so I may have just missed it)
But my third family is very country southern, Dad just started visiting them a lot in college and got adopted. And it's a good family, they're very hosiptable, good cooks, and they treat my sisters and I as if we are actual members of the family, not the children of a son they adopted in later on in life. And also-that politness thing can go away pretty quickly, once southerners get into politics.....
Posts: 3493 | Registered: Jul 2001
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I was in Mississippi for an internship this spring, and just before I left the big city of Corinth west of where I was held its annual Slugburger Festival, where everyone meets together to socialize and eat a burger made of a mixture of hamburger, grease and bread crumbs. I didn't expect the experience to be so anecdotal, but the south is like a charicature of itself, I couldn't believe it. It's awesome
Posts: 66 | Registered: Sep 2003
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