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I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person.
But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? W. Pooh (AKA Winnie P.) |
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"Christopher M." > writes:
> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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On Mar 15, 11:39*am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote:
> "Christopher M." > writes: > > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > -- > David Dyer-Bennet, ;http://dd-b.net/ > Snapshots:http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ > Photos:http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ > Dragaera:http://dragaera.info Who says? You can put anything you like on pizza. |
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Christopher M. wrote:
>But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? That combo works in a calzone, so why shouldn't it work on pizza? Maybe they used too much spinach. |
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![]() "David Dyer-Bennet" > wrote in message ... > "Christopher M." > writes: > >> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >> >> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >> >> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > -- I share that opinion. I would never have ham or asparagus on pizza. Jill |
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On Mar 15, 11:39*am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote:
> "Christopher M." > writes: > > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > -- > David Dyer-Bennet, ;http://dd-b.net/ > Snapshots:http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ > Photos:http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ > Dragaera:http://dragaera.info What about prosciutto? |
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On Mar 15, 3:23*pm, Bull > wrote:
> In article >, > *George M. Middius > wrote: > > > Christopher M. wrote: > > > >But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > >Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > > That combo works in a calzone, so why shouldn't it work on pizza? > > Maybe they used too much spinach. > > If you like it - it works. *I'm not quite sure what fugly means but it > sounds like it wasn't pretty. *I have had Canadian bacon and spinach > pizza and it tasted good to me. *My favorite is pepperoni or margherita.. > > BTW How long did it take you to come up with that name? *I came up with > Bull in about 30 seconds. > > BULL That's a bunch of bull. |
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Bull wrote:
>> >But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >> >Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >> That combo works in a calzone, so why shouldn't it work on pizza? >> Maybe they used too much spinach. > >If you like it - it works. I'm not quite sure what fugly means but it >sounds like it wasn't pretty. I have had Canadian bacon and spinach >pizza and it tasted good to me. My favorite is pepperoni or margherita. > >BTW How long did it take you to come up with that name? I came up with >Bull in about 30 seconds. Or maybe they didn't cook the spinach enough. What name? I didn't come up with "calzone". It's a real word. |
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![]() "jmcquown" > wrote in message ... > > "David Dyer-Bennet" > wrote in message > ... >> "Christopher M." > writes: >> >>> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >>> >>> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >>> >>> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >> -- > > I share that opinion. I would never have ham or asparagus on pizza. > > Jill > Sorry, I don't know where I came up with "asparagus"! I do like spinach on pizza, but not ham. I don't think I'd like asparagus on pizza, either ![]() Jill |
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"jmcquown" > wrote:
> "David Dyer-Bennet" > wrote in message ... >> "Christopher M." > writes: >> >>> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >>> >>> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >>> >>> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >> -- > I share that opinion. I would never have ham or asparagus on pizza. > > Jill Canadian bacon and onion. Old favorite with me. I like mushrooms, but don't usually order it. I also like onion, but don't usually order that. Just because I'm cheap. Other good stuff with me. Egg plant, cauliflower, dried tomatoes, sliced tomatoes, but please, no broccoli. If it's Italian, got have eggplant on the menu. Greg |
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On Mar 15, 1:00*pm, "Christopher M." > wrote:
> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? I'm not fond of ham anyway, and don't want it on pizza. Soon, my cup will runneth over with home-grown spinach. I have lots of it sprouted in both my community garden plot, and a small raised bed in my back yard. > > W. Pooh (AKA Winnie P.) --Bryan |
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On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 21:16:32 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote: > > > Sorry, I don't know where I came up with "asparagus"! I do like spinach on > pizza, but not ham. I don't think I'd like asparagus on pizza, either ![]() > Maybe you'd just read and online recipe that put asparagus on pizza. http://umamigirl.com/2009/05/spring-...ble-pizza.html -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 16:47:06 -0700 (PDT), Chemo the Clown
> wrote: > On Mar 15, 3:23*pm, Bull > wrote: > > In article >, > > *George M. Middius > wrote: > > > > > Christopher M. wrote: > > > > > >But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > > >Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > > > > That combo works in a calzone, so why shouldn't it work on pizza? > > > Maybe they used too much spinach. > > > > If you like it - it works. *I'm not quite sure what fugly means but it > > sounds like it wasn't pretty. *I have had Canadian bacon and spinach > > pizza and it tasted good to me. *My favorite is pepperoni or margherita. > > > > BTW How long did it take you to come up with that name? *I came up with > > Bull in about 30 seconds. > > > > BULL > > That's a bunch of bull. It's obvious that his pen name is self explanatory. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 18:29:11 -0700 (PDT), Bryan
> wrote: > On Mar 15, 1:00*pm, "Christopher M." > wrote: > > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > > > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > > > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > I'm not fond of ham anyway, and don't want it on pizza. Soon, my cup > will runneth over with home-grown spinach. I have lots of it sprouted > in both my community garden plot, and a small raised bed in my back > yard. > > Do you grow chard too? -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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sf linked:
> http://umamigirl.com/2009/05/spring-...ble-pizza.html I think I'd use Gruyere instead of Pecorino Romano cheese. Besides the fact that it melts better, I think the flavor would match the other ingredients better. But the term "spring vegetable pizza" seems a bit misleading, since it's an asparagus-and-mushroom pizza, and mushrooms are not particular harbingers of spring the way that green peas, asparagus, and artichokes are. Bob |
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Christine wrote:
>> But the term "spring vegetable pizza" seems a bit >> misleading, since it's an asparagus-and-mushroom pizza, and mushrooms >> are not particular harbingers of spring the way that green peas, >> asparagus, and artichokes are. > > Unless you count Morels, which as far as I know, are very much > harbingers of spring. ![]() I think of morels as more of a pre-spring thing: You know how every winter you get a few days when it *feels* like spring is here, then the winter comes howling back? That's when morels show up. Bob |
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Christine wrote:
>> I think of morels as more of a pre-spring thing: You know how every >> winter you get a few days when it *feels* like spring is here, then the >> winter comes howling back? That's when morels show up. > > Well, I have some friends who are morel hunters..and they go searching > for them in the spring..not in the pre-spring months. > > And I have seen them featured a lot in spring menus in cookbooks that > I have. And when I see them in the Berkeley produce markets, it is > definitely springtime. Usually at the same time the first decent > strawberries are showing up. Okay. Maybe I've just gotten the ones which showed up at an odd time of year. Back to the topic at hand, would you put morels on a pizza with asparagus, and if you did, what herbs, cheese, and sauce would you use? Bob |
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On Mar 15, 11:24*pm, sf > wrote:
> On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 18:29:11 -0700 (PDT), Bryan > > > wrote: > > On Mar 15, 1:00*pm, "Christopher M." > wrote: > > > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > > > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly.. > > > > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > > I'm not fond of ham anyway, and don't want it on pizza. *Soon, my cup > > will runneth over with home-grown spinach. *I have lots of it sprouted > > in both my community garden plot, and a small raised bed in my back > > yard. > > Do you grow chard too? > No. Spinach, lettuce, onions, shallots and radishes right now, and the strawberries are still there. Later, tomatoes and peppers. We also have blackberries, raspberries, cherries (both pie and sweet, a peach tree and this year is the first that we might get plums. The apples are still two or three years from bearing. Oh, and I put a piece of sunchoke into the ground in an isolated area. Lots of flowers too, daffodils, tulips, Virginia bluebells, bleeding hearts, poppies, peonies, Easter lilies and roses. --Bryan |
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![]() "sf" > wrote in message ... > On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 21:16:32 -0400, "jmcquown" > > wrote: >> > >> Sorry, I don't know where I came up with "asparagus"! I do like spinach >> on >> pizza, but not ham. I don't think I'd like asparagus on pizza, either ![]() >> > Maybe you'd just read and online recipe that put asparagus on pizza. > http://umamigirl.com/2009/05/spring-...ble-pizza.html > Possibly... but that image looks awful! I wouldn't do that to asparagus ![]() Jill |
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Chemo the Clown > writes:
> On Mar 15, 11:39*am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: >> "Christopher M." > writes: >> > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >> >> > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >> >> > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > > Who says? You can put anything you like on pizza. Not and have me accept it as pizza you can't. Chicken does not belong on pizza. Barbecue sauce does not belong on pizza. Potatoes do not belong on pizza. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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Sqwertz > writes:
> On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 13:39:30 -0500, David Dyer-Bennet wrote: > >> "Christopher M." > writes: >> >>> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >>> >>> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >>> >>> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > > There's 8 times as many hits on Google for "Asparagus Pizza" (155,000) > as there is for "Enchilada Gravy" (19,000). > > So while you think that gravy goes on enchiladas, multitudes more > people think that asparagus goes on pizza. > > :-) (I think) And I don't claim anything for the term "enchilada gravy" except that it's the term I learned from the cookbook that finally told me how to make that stuff that went over enchiladas (I couldn't figure it out on my own), and that the google evidence at least shows it's not a term unique to me. Now, there are times when I like flat bread-food. For example, shrimp is not a pizza ingredient, but a piece of bread dough with tomato sauce, shrimp, well-chosen veggies, and cheese on it can be quite good. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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merryb > writes:
> On Mar 15, 11:39*am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: >> "Christopher M." > writes: >> > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >> >> > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. >> >> > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > > What about prosciutto? I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no place on pizza. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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On Mar 16, 8:14*am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote:
> merryb > writes: > > On Mar 15, 11:39*am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: > >> "Christopher M." > writes: > >> > I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. > > >> > But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was fugly. > > >> > Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? > > >> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. > > > What about prosciutto? > > I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no place > on pizza. > -- > David Dyer-Bennet, ;http://dd-b.net/ > Snapshots:http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ > Photos:http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ > Dragaera:http://dragaera.info Hmmm, when I was in Italy this last summer, I saw it on every pizza menu....I even ate some! |
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David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
>>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >> >> What about prosciutto? > >I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no place >on pizza. Your viewpoint is eccentric, but I'm sure you knew that. |
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George M. Middius > writes:
> David Dyer-Bennet wrote: > >>>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >>> >>> What about prosciutto? >> >>I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no place >>on pizza. > > Your viewpoint is eccentric, but I'm sure you knew that. I think of it as "traditional"; pizza ingredients were quite stable for the first decade or so I knew about pizza, and then suddenly people started adding just anything. And nearly all the new stuff goes badly on pizza. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
> George M. Middius > writes: > >> David Dyer-Bennet wrote: >> >>>>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >>>> >>>> What about prosciutto? >>> >>>I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no place >>>on pizza. >> >> Your viewpoint is eccentric, but I'm sure you knew that. > > I think of it as "traditional"; pizza ingredients were quite stable for > the first decade or so I knew about pizza, and then suddenly people > started adding just anything. And nearly all the new stuff goes badly > on pizza. To me if you want to be a traditionally oriented kind of talker about food, when you say prosciutto you are talking about something that is not smoked -- you have to say smoked prosciutto or speck if that's what you mean. I'm not going to say anything about ribs. |
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David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
>>>the general rule is that smoked meats have no place on pizza. >> >> Your viewpoint is eccentric, but I'm sure you knew that. > >I think of it as "traditional"; pizza ingredients were quite stable for >the first decade or so I knew about pizza, and then suddenly people >started adding just anything. And nearly all the new stuff goes badly >on pizza. .... also provincial to the point of being insular. |
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tert in seattle > writes:
> David Dyer-Bennet wrote: >> George M. Middius > writes: >> >>> David Dyer-Bennet wrote: >>> >>>>>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >>>>> >>>>> What about prosciutto? >>>> >>>>I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no place >>>>on pizza. >>> >>> Your viewpoint is eccentric, but I'm sure you knew that. >> >> I think of it as "traditional"; pizza ingredients were quite stable for >> the first decade or so I knew about pizza, and then suddenly people >> started adding just anything. And nearly all the new stuff goes badly >> on pizza. > > To me if you want to be a traditionally oriented kind of talker about > food, when you say prosciutto you are talking about something that is > not smoked -- you have to say smoked prosciutto or speck if that's what > you mean. Okay, I'm not expert on the prep details of the various old-world preserved meat types. > I'm not going to say anything about ribs. It's a safe topic for me. I don't especially care for them, or hate them especially strongly, and can see virtues in at least two of the common preparation styles. But basically, I don't like rib meat that much, there's too much stuff that's not food in it. -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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George M. Middius > writes:
> David Dyer-Bennet wrote: > >>>>the general rule is that smoked meats have no place on pizza. >>> >>> Your viewpoint is eccentric, but I'm sure you knew that. >> >>I think of it as "traditional"; pizza ingredients were quite stable for >>the first decade or so I knew about pizza, and then suddenly people >>started adding just anything. And nearly all the new stuff goes badly >>on pizza. > > ... also provincial to the point of being insular. A continent is, after all, just a big island. I think the usage has caught on among my friends because it had become hard to answer the question "what do you like on pizza". Used to be I could say "anything except green olives or dead fish". Now it would take 10 minutes and I'd probably forget or not know about many of the things people have put on pizza. So it's a very useful short-hand to say "only actual pizza ingredients, no green olives or dead fish". (The joke is partly a reference to Germany's Reinheitsgebot, and a local ad campaign by a regional brewer that talked about "real beer ingredients".) -- David Dyer-Bennet, ; http://dd-b.net/ Snapshots: http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ Photos: http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ Dragaera: http://dragaera.info |
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On Fri, 16 Mar 2012 04:32:01 -0700 (PDT), Bryan
> wrote: > On Mar 15, 11:24*pm, sf > wrote: > > On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 18:29:11 -0700 (PDT), Bryan > > > > > > Do you grow chard too? > > > No. Spinach, lettuce, onions, shallots and radishes right now, and > the strawberries are still there. Later, tomatoes and peppers. We > also have blackberries, raspberries, cherries (both pie and sweet, a > peach tree and this year is the first that we might get plums. The > apples are still two or three years from bearing. Oh, and I put a > piece of sunchoke into the ground in an isolated area. > Lots of flowers too, daffodils, tulips, Virginia bluebells, bleeding > hearts, poppies, peonies, Easter lilies and roses. > I grow chard because it likes the weather here and survives on neglect. It goes well in bean soups, so it's a good winter vegetable to have around. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Fri, 16 Mar 2012 02:33:59 -0700, Christine Dabney
> wrote: > > Well, I have some friends who are morel hunters..and they go searching > for them in the spring..not in the pre-spring months. Lucky you! I used to know morel hunters but even though we were good friends, we weren't good enough friends for me to score any and they certainly weren't going to tell me where they found them. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On Fri, 16 Mar 2012 10:18:09 -0400, "jmcquown" >
wrote: > > "sf" > wrote in message > ... > > On Thu, 15 Mar 2012 21:16:32 -0400, "jmcquown" > > > wrote: > >> > > >> Sorry, I don't know where I came up with "asparagus"! I do like spinach > >> on > >> pizza, but not ham. I don't think I'd like asparagus on pizza, either ![]() > >> > > Maybe you'd just read and online recipe that put asparagus on pizza. > > http://umamigirl.com/2009/05/spring-...ble-pizza.html > > > > Possibly... but that image looks awful! I wouldn't do that to asparagus ![]() > You got what you got. I saw a better picture of asparagus pizza a few days ago, but I wasn't going to spend any time hunting for it. -- Food is an important part of a balanced diet. |
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On 15/03/2012 9:21 PM, gregz wrote:
> > Canadian bacon and onion. Old favorite with me. > I like mushrooms, but don't usually order it. I also like onion, but don't > usually order that. Just because I'm cheap. > > Other good stuff with me. Egg plant, cauliflower, dried tomatoes, sliced > tomatoes, but please, no broccoli. If it's Italian, got have eggplant on > the menu. I rarely eat pizza but about two years ago I one of the best slices I ever had from a local take out Italian place..... egplant and goat cheese. It was delicious. |
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gregz wrote:
> > Other good stuff with me. Egg plant, cauliflower, dried tomatoes, sliced > tomatoes, but please, no broccoli. Funny you should say that. One of my favorite homemade pizzas feature broccoli as the main topping. Everyone seems to like it.....I do too. Gary |
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Gary wrote:
>> I like mushrooms, but don't usually order it. I also like onion, but don't >> usually order that. Just because I'm cheap. > >May I suggest you stop being cheap at least for one meal. Whenever I order >pizza, one of my very favorite pizzas is a two topping and those are onions >and mushrooms. A distinctly different taste but I sure love it. So do I! Except you forgot the sausage and/or pepperoni. You're not a veggie, are you? |
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gregz wrote:
> > I like mushrooms, but don't usually order it. I also like onion, but don't > usually order that. Just because I'm cheap. May I suggest you stop being cheap at least for one meal. Whenever I order pizza, one of my very favorite pizzas is a two topping and those are onions and mushrooms. A distinctly different taste but I sure love it. Gary ![]() |
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merryb wrote:
> On Mar 16, 8:14 am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: >> merryb > writes: >>> On Mar 15, 11:39 am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: >>>> "Christopher M." > writes: >>>>> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >> >>>>> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was >>>>> fugly. >> >>>>> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >> >>>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >> >>> What about prosciutto? >> >> I would'nt think so; the general rule is that smoked meats have no >> place on pizza. >> -- >> David Dyer-Bennet, ;http://dd-b.net/ >> Snapshots:http://dd-b.net/dd-b/SnapshotAlbum/data/ >> Photos:http://dd-b.net/photography/gallery/ >> Dragaera:http://dragaera.info > > Hmmm, when I was in Italy this last summer, I saw it on every pizza > menu....I even ate some! The best "restaurant" in Italy is some grandmother's house. The restaurants in Italy are for the tourists. W. Pooh (AKA Winnie P.) |
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David Dyer-Bennet wrote:
> Chemo the Clown > writes: > >> On Mar 15, 11:39 am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: >>> "Christopher M." > writes: >>>> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >>> >>>> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was >>>> fugly. >>> >>>> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >>> >>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >> >> Who says? You can put anything you like on pizza. > > Not and have me accept it as pizza you can't. > > Chicken does not belong on pizza. Barbecue sauce does not belong on > pizza. Potatoes do not belong on pizza. Potatoes and pizza dough sounds like a lot of starch. W. Pooh (AKA Winnie P.) |
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"Christopher M." > wrote:
> David Dyer-Bennet wrote: >> Chemo the Clown > writes: >> >>> On Mar 15, 11:39 am, David Dyer-Bennet > wrote: >>>> "Christopher M." > writes: >>>>> I like to think of myself as a pretty open-minded person. >>>> >>>>> But I had some pizza today that had spinach and ham, and it was >>>>> fugly. >>>> >>>>> Maybe spinach and ham don't go together? >>>> >>>> They don't go on pizza; they're not pizza ingredients. >>> >>> Who says? You can put anything you like on pizza. >> >> Not and have me accept it as pizza you can't. >> >> Chicken does not belong on pizza. Barbecue sauce does not belong on >> pizza. Potatoes do not belong on pizza. > > Potatoes and pizza dough sounds like a lot of starch. > > > W. Pooh (AKA Winnie P.) You have to try a pierogi pizza. With onions ! Greg |
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Gary > wrote:
> gregz wrote: >> > >> Other good stuff with me. Egg plant, cauliflower, dried tomatoes, sliced >> tomatoes, but please, no broccoli. > > Funny you should say that. One of my favorite homemade pizzas feature > broccoli as the main topping. Everyone seems to like it.....I do too. > > Gary To be fair, I have not eaten hardly any broccoli pizza. It's on many menus in Pittsburgh. I'm also not fond of peppers on pizza. Greg |
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