ITT : Underrated dishes from your country
Aguachile.
Manhattan-style clam chowder. I've never met anyone who hasn't panned it, and I don't necessarily think it's better than New England style, but I really love Manhattan style chowder.
>>8156647
Looks good. Is that octopus?
the humble sausage roll
>>8156825
I'm -from- New England and I love both kinds of chowder, that's the kind of sentiment that will get you strung up by the balls in Boston though. Clams and tomato just go so well together though, it's very savory.
>>8156825
Dats sum gud 'go 'za der famalamadingdong xD
>>8156895
kill yourself you cocksucking faggot
>>8156875
I think it's honestly been over 5 years since I had a sausage roll. That seems to long but I'm trying to remember the last time I had them and coming up blank.
Good sausage roll is great, though. Just can't bring myself to get one over a pie when I go to a bakery.
>>8156899
No you!
This shit right here.
Not that it's necessarily an underrated food, but there aren't any restaurants that do it right. They're always fucking around with it. I get there's culinary innovation, but some things are good enough on their own.
>>8156909
Is cornbread a side to a savoury meal or a sweet dessert?
I can never figure out. It's like semi-sweet cake.
>>8156910
It would help if you weren't a limp wristed yankees faggot
>>8156910
Cornbread itself was originally its own meal. After being taken from Native Americans, it was chuck wagon food because it was so easily preserved to take on long journeys and... Well. It's cornbread. Corn's fucking everywhere, this is the shit middle and working class ate. Anyway, it was eaten alongside beans, coffee, and occasionally some kind of beef or bacon if it was preserved properly. Or it was a meal on its own.
Cornbread used as a sweet dish is a recent thing. Honey and cornbread wasn't common back then if it was used at all. The combination isn't necessarily bad, but it's not traditional.
When I was little, my mom used to make me cornbread with milk poured over it. I liked it that way because of the sweetness, but now I prefer it as a savory thing. I usually eat it by itself.
>>8156932
Cornbread isn't Yankee food, you tool, it's from Native Americans. Lots of corn-based foods are because corn and maize was fucking everywhere.
>>8156938
>I have zero reading comprehension
We all gathered that, dipshit
>>8156938
the idea of sugaring it up is a yankee thing though
>>8156961
>'go'za.jpg
Gets me every time lol!
>>8156910
>Is cornbread a side to a savoury meal or a sweet dessert?
In my experience it's generally a side for BBQ....if you go to any BBQ place you will be served cornbread in the same fashion Italian themed places will serve bread sticks or steakhouses will serve rolls
I think it's big with soul food as well
>>8156906
Yeah, I find that for the price pies are usually a better deal. But I still get a sausage roll at least once every week or two from the bakery at my uni.
>>8156939
We do have a few retarded spammers though, and always have. /ck/ is a relatively unmoderated board and you kind of have to self-filter.
>>8157005
Sausage rolls are one of those weird comfort foods that you occasionally have an entirely irrational craving for and nothing else will do. They're not as readily available in my country, but I have actually drove several miles to the big indoor market toward the center of my city just to grab a couple of sausage rolls from the Irish/British bakery there. I end up buying groceries and stuff, but I know the real reason I went.
>>8156939
>go za meme
>new
Sounds like you're the newfag...this shits been going on for the last like three years brah
>>8156647
This. It's not underrated but somehow people forgot about this cake. And it's like god tier shit.
The name: Sękacz. Traditional cake from Germany, popular in Poland/Lithuania.
>>8157052
Fuck off, this meme started getting forced only about a year ago and retards have been spamming it since.