Gonna make a sheez tsoste.
She's your gramma.Yes, we know cuisine-strictly speaking, it is. But you didn’t call it a sauce, it was gravy. Just like you didn’t back talk grandma either.
That better involve Vegemite.Gonna make a sheez tsoste.
That does add that tarry rotten salted vegetation flavor often missing in my cuisineThat better involve Vegemite.
You mean umami.That does add that tarry rotten salted vegetation flavor often missing in my cuisine
Ah yes, but this delves into a different category which is, perhaps, more related to geography or region.how about childlike food expressions that are ok....."jimmies." That's what they were called when I was growing up. My son calls them sprinkles.
How pretentious. It's not an Italian dish and chicken is an English word. Now we have an inauthentic dish with a hodgepodge name that gives it a fake Italian flair.![]()
It’s based off of parmigiana di melanzane and in Italy the chicken version is pollo alla parmigiana, well that’s what Wikipedia tells me. But pretentious sums up much of Australia pretty well.
Not to mention you can get breakfast, lunch, or dinner in any decent town around the clock.I don’t have to wait till 7:00PM for a sitcom anymore - I can stream it anytime. Why should I need to wait till evening to eat dinner?
None of those terms are used in upper New England.1.za- it's pizza
2. taters-they are potatoes
3. Sammies- they are sandwiches
4. Sammich- see above
5. Tuck in- you're in the US, not the UK.
6. Chicki parm- it's chicken Parmesan
7. Any Sopranos influenced term for delicatessen meats...it's capicola not gabbagoul , mannigott- it's manicotti, it's spaghetti or marinara sauce-not gravy
The above is entirely for the public good.
New to me.upper New England.
Don't forget about "gn" the g is silent, you net a "ny" sound, unless you call gnocchi, gonocchi.The Italian language has no silent letters like English has, every letter gets enunciated, those i’s and e’s and a’s at the end of words should be pronounced.
Please be advised, "prolly" is not a word, at least not in civilized society.New to me.
I suppose it means Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire.
Are CT, MA and RI Lower New England? Prolly are.
Or lower New England...None of those terms are used in upper New England.
Pretentious or not, having grown up in a 1/2 Italian town in NY, married to an Italian-American woman, and with two semesters of Italian under my belt, I have visions of my wife and the little Nonni of friends I grew up with chasing me with a rolling pin if I didn't pronounce it parmigiana!How pretentious. It's not an Italian dish and chicken is an English word. Now we have an inauthentic dish with a hodgepodge name that gives it a fake Italian flair.![]()
You're prolly right my guy, that's mighty skibidi sigma of you to sayPlease be advised, "prolly" is not a word, at least not in civilized society.
My 14-year-old is ununderstandible...You're prolly right my guy, that's mighty skibidi sigma of you to say
Thank you. I was about to ask where that was myself.New to me.
I suppose it means Maine, Vermont and New Hampshire.
Are CT, MA and RI Lower New England? Prolly are.
Urban dictionary disagrees, so there prolly right. I prolly gonnna use it exclusively now!Please be advised, "prolly" is not a word, at least not in civilized society.
MA I forgotOr lower New England...