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[Misc] Why do they do it ?













Yoda

English & European
What is Parmajarn cheese? Or O reg an O?
That's not even true Parmigiano Reggiano, but a fake American copy. I believe the FDA banned a certain process originally (the milk is not pasteurised in Italy where as in the US this used to be illegal) and also it's aged nowhere near as long (2 years minimum in Italy but as little as 10 months in 'Merica).
 






Professor Plum

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 27, 2024
618
It’s just that I’ve never heard of cornichons before. Annoyed at my own ignorance maybe
They’ve been around for a while, at least 15 years, prob longer, in UK supermarkets. Basically small gherkins. Used in salads more than in burgers.

As for American pronunciations, like a lot of things in life I sort of like them even though I disapprove of them. They make me laugh. I mean, scallions? Arugula? I drive my wife nuts by saying t'mayders and bay-zil to wind her up.

All harmless fun but where I do draw the line is using 'cups' in recipes! Gah! Drives me nuts. What is 'a cup of broccoli'? A cup of anything? It’s got to be weight and if it is weight, give us grams and not ounces please. Especially liquids.
 










schmunk

Why oh why oh why?
Jan 19, 2018
10,353
Mid mid mid Sussex
All harmless fun but where I do draw the line is using 'cups' in recipes! Gah! Drives me nuts. What is 'a cup of broccoli'? A cup of anything? It’s got to be weight and if it is weight, give us grams and not ounces please. Especially liquids.
I very much agree with your sentiment but seriously, if you're in a pinch with a recipe: Get a cup of about 240ml. Use it to measure your stuff.
 




PTC Gull

Micky Mouse country.
NSC Patron
Apr 17, 2017
1,295
Florida
They’ve been around for a while, at least 15 years, prob longer, in UK supermarkets. Basically small gherkins. Used in salads more than in burgers.

As for American pronunciations, like a lot of things in life I sort of like them even though I disapprove of them. They make me laugh. I mean, scallions? Arugula? I drive my wife nuts by saying t'mayders and bay-zil to wind her up.

All harmless fun but where I do draw the line is using 'cups' in recipes! Gah! Drives me nuts. What is 'a cup of broccoli'? A cup of anything? It’s got to be weight and if it is weight, give us grams and not ounces please. Especially liquids.
This might explain it all



and this

 








Professor Plum

Well-known member
NSC Patron
Jul 27, 2024
618
I very much agree with your sentiment but seriously, if you're in a pinch with a recipe: Get a cup of about 240ml. Use it to measure your stuff.
Oh I’ve got one. But instead of ‘about 240ml’ it’s simpler and more logical to deal in exact weights. A cup of flour looks different once it’s settled down a bit. A cup of mushrooms I saw mentioned recently. Are these stuffed in or just gently dropped in? Two quite different quantities. Anyway, First World problem. The solution is to avoid US recipes. They’re weird anyway. ‘About a cup of Fat-Be-Gone from Walmart….’ I’ll stick to BBC Good Food and Jamie Oliver.
 


vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273
They’ve been around for a while, at least 15 years, prob longer, in UK supermarkets. Basically small gherkins. Used in salads more than in burgers.

As for American pronunciations, like a lot of things in life I sort of like them even though I disapprove of them. They make me laugh. I mean, scallions? Arugula? I drive my wife nuts by saying t'mayders and bay-zil to wind her up.

All harmless fun but where I do draw the line is using 'cups' in recipes! Gah! Drives me nuts. What is 'a cup of broccoli'? A cup of anything? It’s got to be weight and if it is weight, give us grams and not ounces please. Especially liquids.
I remember the great William Shatner doing some cooking on film and asking for someone to pass him the " Oh-regano " ..horrible !
 


vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273
Oh I’ve got one. But instead of ‘about 240ml’ it’s simpler and more logical to deal in exact weights. A cup of flour looks different once it’s settled down a bit. A cup of mushrooms I saw mentioned recently. Are these stuffed in or just gently dropped in? Two quite different quantities. Anyway, First World problem. The solution is to avoid US recipes. They’re weird anyway. ‘About a cup of Fat-Be-Gone from Walmart….’ I’ll stick to BBC Good Food and Jamie Oliver.
I heard somewhere that life was tough on the frontier in the US a couple of hundred years back and people did not have an awful lot of cutlery and scales and bowls, pots and pans etc. The " Cup " system was the simplest way to bake and cook with in order to get the right proportions ...one cup measuring is elegantly simple but, you end up with legendary US portion sizes with the finished cake.
 


csider

Active member
Dec 11, 2006
4,511
Hove
Change the names of things.

For years I’ve been getting gherkins and now I’m being told they are called cornichons.
They’re gherkins…
Or pickles in the States.
It shouldn’t really bother me but it does.
Diversity & non offensive.
 






Harry Wilson's tackle

Harry Wilson's Tackle
NSC Patron
Oct 8, 2003
56,119
Faversham


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