American butter is shit tbf

  • @callouscomic@lemm.ee
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    1314 months ago

    A good example why nationalism and pride about it makes no sense. Most people had no choice in where they are from, and had no influence on something like this. Having pride in something you did not influence and had no choice in is really weird and kind of narcissistic.

    This is why it gets toxic and dangerous easily. We see similar issues with fans of sports teams, even though the fan has literally nothing to do with the team.

    • Ben Hur Horse Race
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      614 months ago

      its just an ancient tribal instinct. oh, you’re from the squirrel bones tribe? pssh, your berry bushes are shit. rat skull tribe have best berry bushes, and we have stream. squirrel bones tribe have no stream and bad berry bushes

      • @WhatAmLemmy@lemmy.world
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        Your sportsball team is shit. WE smashed you!

        We!?! Really bob? Pretty sure you passed out and pissed yourself that night…

    • @TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee
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      reminds me of JP Sartre: by disparaging the jews, the anti-semite instantly puts himself into a superior group without having to actually do anything.

      Nationalism works the same way. “I belong to THIS socially constructed group! We do such great things!” as if they built the community from the ground up and weren’t just thrown into a world with systems already in place independent of them that helped produce the things they’re proud of…

      Like sure community is a thing but at a certain point doesn’t it get quite arbitrary what you take credit for? and doesn’t that also mean we have to take credit for all the bad things too? every Palestinian would become Hamas and every American a drone pilot. those are precisely the reasons I am not patriotic and i dont find “shut up, frog” jokes funny. “just” tribalism? “just” a wee cheeky bit o fash in the mornin?

    • @PugJesus@lemmy.worldOP
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      Having pride in something you did not influence and had no choice in is really weird and kind of narcissistic.

      what

      When someone says “I’ve been sober for a year” and a commenter says “I’m proud of you, OP”, is that narcissistic? Pride in this sense is a sense of community accomplishment. As a social species, we share in the achievements of others as necessarily related to our own - it’s a form of creating bonds and encouraging behavior. Whether you dislike the idea of nations or not, having pride in something you didn’t influence and had no choice in is perfectly normal and not at all narcissistic.

      • @Seleni@lemmy.world
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        94 months ago

        Not the same. A more apt version using your comparison would be someone saying ‘I’ve been sober for a year!’ and the other person (who still drinks, but perhaps cheered them on now and again from the sidelines) says either ‘You mean we’ve been sober for a year!’ or ‘Yes, and it’s all thanks to me!’ - never mind they didn’t actively step in to help, or try to go dry themselves.

        What the complaint you quoted was objecting to are people claiming full part of something they had no control over and no (or not much) involvement in, just to make themselves feel more important.

        Yes we as a social species like to share in accomplishments, and that’s fine! But there is a line, that unfortunately gets crossed quite a lot, where people start to feel that they themselves were involved in the accomplishments of others, and that’s not so good. To paraphrase an above poster, we didn’t win the Super Bowl.

        And also, some things people take ‘group pride’ in aren’t accomplishments at all. Being born in a specific place, for instance, or having a specific skin color. Or even just trying to share credit with every inventor/creator/whatever of the same gender. It does all tie back to our instinctive tribalism, but that doesn’t make it a good thing.

        • @PugJesus@lemmy.worldOP
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          24 months ago

          Not the same. A more apt version using your comparison would be someone saying ‘I’ve been sober for a year!’ and the other person (who still drinks, but perhaps cheered them on now and again from the sidelines) says either ‘You mean we’ve been sober for a year!’ or ‘Yes, and it’s all thanks to me!’ - never mind they didn’t actively step in to help, or try to go dry themselves.

          That’s literally not the claim being made by these people in the OP taking pride in their community’s accomplishments though.

      • @barsoap@lemm.ee
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        When someone says “I’ve been sober for a year” and a commenter says “I’m proud of you, OP”, is that narcissistic?

        No, it’s an instance where what people say is not what they feel: The second doesn’t comment on their own pride, but is expressing something like admiration. At the most, pride in being friends with such a fine chap who would manage to be sober for a year.

        Mostly, though, it’s just a fixed phrase of encouragement and praise, unrelated to the actual words used. The fixed phrase could be “cowabunga!” and it’d mean the same.

    • @Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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      24 months ago

      Also in this case it’s kind of a great example of how positive nationalism and pride quickly turns negative. The US has more dairy farmland than any other country, im sure there is plenty of fancy boutique butter. It’s a pretty weak premise, almost certainly drawn completely from negative stereotypes.

  • @Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee
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    834 months ago

    The secret is the west coasts.

    The french guy was talking about butter from Bretagne. West coast Irish butter is amazing. West coast Scottish butter is amazing.

    Know why? Because it absolutely pisses down with rain almost every fucking day in west coast Atlantic areas, the grass grows like triffids and the cows eat themselves silly

    Quite simple

  • Rob Bos
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    814 months ago

    There are excellent American-made butters done traditionally. I hate that they’re making me defend the US but they have no monopoly on shitty food. It’s kinda just another form of exceptionalism.

    There’s no secret to good butter. Grass fed cows, fermented milk, and high fat content. It’s just expensive.

    • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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      464 months ago

      In average American food is terrible.

      That doesn’t mean there isn’t great American food, it just means that the stuff that’s sold the most is horridly heavily processed, thoroughly artificial and/or intensively farmed/raised crap.

      It’s not a lack of knowledge or capable people in that domain, it’s that the system pushes cheap crap that whilst it own’t kill you outright it will shorten your Life Expectation by almost two decades compared to most Europeans.

      • Transporter Room 3
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        534 months ago

        I think a more accurate conclusion then, would be “the average American is too poor to afford good food”

        • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          The CAP in Europe subsidizes more traditional farming and farming produce, not corn + hormone beef.

          Also there are all sorts of local legislation that limit the extent to which crap food can be passed as real food: a lot of what can be sold as “cheese” in America can’t be sold as “fromage” in France and similarly a “sausage” in Britain has a very strict definition of what can go into it (the crap stuff is called a “banger” since BY LAW it can’t be called a “sausage”).

          A lot of the bad practices would be just as cost-saving to do in Europe as in the US, it’s just that the legislation is way tighter and to some level (depending on the country) consumers are much more demanding (plus also due to the legislation, producers can’t just name the fake stuff the same as the real stuff).

          The impression I have from talking to Americans is that to eat good food in the US you need to really make an effort, whilst in Europe for most things comparativelly higher quality ingredients are widespread (often the default), easy to find it and there are quite a lot of restrictions on what producers can put in it (or how it’s farmed or raised).

          • @aidan@lemmy.world
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            24 months ago

            The impression I have from talking to Americans is that to eat good food in the US you need to really make an effort,

            I promise, not anymore than the US. Actually, I’d argue especially in less urban areas getting fresh ingredients is more convenient from the prevalence of driving. The problem is if you can’t drive you’re screwed.

          • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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            44 months ago

            Yeah, I too think it’s a mix.

            You see some kinds of shit food also being pushed in Europe, and then you see different outcomes per country, depending on local food culture and also legislation - people expect some thing and won’t settle for less plus certain things are simply not allowed by Law to be sold as food or be branded in some ways (for example, there UK has very strict demands of what can go into what can be called a “sausage”, which is why the shit stuff is called “bangers”).

            Also in Europe vs the US you see a major difference in where farming subsidies go to - if more traditional farming is subsidized instead of corn raising and hormone-filled cattle breeding, the better quality stuff is what’s cheaper not the crap stuff.

        • @LotrOrc@lemmy.world
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          No it’s not it’s specifically that companies can sell Americans the same food they sell in other countries but in those countries, the same food is made with much better ingredients.

          Look at the difference between the ingredient list in a Heinz ketchup bottle in the EU vs in America.

      • @ColeSloth@discuss.tchncs.de
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        84 months ago

        You’re just talking about the pre made shit you get at the grocery store in the frozen foods isle.

        The US has the most varied and some of the best foods in the world, because there’s no other nation on earth that has such a merltings pot worth of cultures, heritages, and people. Our BBQ and smoked meats are the best. Chicago’s take on pizza is better that traditional Italian pizza. Our “chinese food” isn’t really Chinese cuisine. It’s a hybrid version and mainly was created in the US. Hamburgers are American creations. Key lime pie. Jambalaya! I mean, we made chocolate chip cookies. The Reuben sandwich that everyone assumes came from like Germany? Nope. USA. American made Chili is also great.

        You can have your handful of French cuisine. The US has everyone’s menu.

        • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          54 months ago

          You’re confusing eating out with what people normally eat in their day to day.

          In my experience every large city in a prosperous enough nation has restaurants from the best culinary traditions, and that was also my experience when visiting the US.

          However what’s available for people to prepare food at home and what people normally eat, is a whole different story.

            • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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              14 months ago

              Which part of

              restaurants from the best culinary traditions, and that was also my experience when visiting the US.

              has led you to believe I was talking about chain restaurants?

      • @Junkhead@slrpnk.net
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        84 months ago

        i will skullfuck you, american food is literally the only thing we do well because our cuisine is so fucking diverse holy shit are you completely and totally wrong. You just generalized an entire country full of diverse palates and tastes.

      • @aidan@lemmy.world
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        84 months ago

        In average American food is terrible.

        No, not really compared to most of the rest of the world. I live in Europe, every time I go to the US there is a lot of food I enjoy. My partner was surprised when I showed him actually good tasting American food. In terms of produce quality, fruits are by far better in most of the US then where I live in Europe(Central Europe). A lot of Europe (Germany, UK, Ireland, Scandinavia, Czech Republic, etc) has pretty bland food for the most part.

        • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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          For starters, you seem to be falling into the trap of comparing the food you eat when you visit a place and go to restaurants with the food you eat at home and have to cook from available ingredients.

          Further, having lived in both the UK and Germany I have to disagree on your “blandness” assessment, unless you’re talking about the local culinary tradition alone, in which case that is true for the UK, but then again the US to doesn’t really have a local culinary tradition so a like to like comparison of local cuisine with it wouldn’t exactly put the US on top.

          As for the rest, in my experience all large international cities in the West (at least the couple I lived in and the ones I visited) have lots of great and tasty cuisine in restaurants, because they all have available culinary traditions from just about anywhere - unlike what some seem to think, the US doesn’t have a monopoly on receiving immigrants from all over the World. (Even smaller places like Berlin, Amsterdam or Brussels have great variety of food in restaurants).

          The point I’m making is about the “average” (hence why I actually used the word “average” in my post), not the way outside the average places which are the main cities and it’s about the food people normally eat, and that doesn’t mean the restaurant trade (unless you’re telling me most Americans eat the majority of their meals at restaurants) which tends to be great pretty much in any large city of the World in any nation rich enough to attract people from all over the place.

          • @aidan@lemmy.world
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            34 months ago

            For starters, you seem to be falling into the trap of comparing the food you eat when you visit a place and go to restaurants with the food you eat at home and have to cook from available ingredients.

            No. I lived in the US for the first 18 years of my life.

            unless you’re talking about the local culinary tradition alone

            Sort of both, of course metropolises will have a lot of immigrant cuisine, but I’ve found at least in continental Europe(I can’t speak for the UK) that immigrants often tone down stronger flavors in restaurant food- immigrant foods I grew up with are also harder to find in Europe(Czech Republic doesn’t have any Ethiopian restaurants for example, and at least the ones I went to in Vienna were not very good).

            the US to doesn’t really have a local culinary tradition

            That’s simply untrue. Just because foods had foreign inspiration has nothing to do if its locally american food, from Chinese-American Chinese food, to American Pizza, to more traditionally american foods like chilli and gumbo(and other cajun food), american style bbq and fried chicken- etc. Tempura being based on fried foods brought by Portugese doesn’t make it not Japanese.

            As for the rest, in my experience all large international cities in the West

            What does the west mean to you? But yeah I would agree large international cities all have immigrants, though I would argue the US has much better coverage of a variety of foods in smaller/medium sized cities. But that’s also not exactly relevant. I didn’t say the US as a whole is not terrible compared to large international western cities, I said compared to the rest of the world- then mentioned specifically countries(or regions) that I believe to have blander food than the US(on average).

            (Even smaller places like Berlin, Amsterdam or Brussels have great variety of food in restaurants).

            … Smaller places are not capital cities of major countries for the most part. And those are actually bigger than many European capital cities, and Berlin is very large.

            The point I’m making is about the “average” (hence why I actually used the word “average” in my post),

            You’re talking about the average but listing above average cities. Compare Louisville, KY, a very average american city in terms of food, size, and income, to Prague, CZ, a capital city twice the size- there is far more variety of food available in Louisville, the only thing keeping Prague alive in terms of options is the Vietnamese immigrant community.

            not the way outside the average places which are the main cities and it’s about the food people normally eat, and that doesn’t mean the restaurant trade

            Again, I have found more variety and quality of produce in stores in the US- stores that I tend to go to in the US also tend to have more variety in general. But that’s mostly because in the US its common to drive to larger stores, rather than going to smaller local stores- and big stores in Europe also of course have a lot of options. (Something very weird though, I was cooking chilli for my partner and I- and we could only find ground beef mixed with pork in our local grocers and not purely ground beef- but that’s just a weird quirk of our area.)

            which tends to be great pretty much in any large city of the World in any nation rich enough to attract people from all over the place.

            From restaurants that tend to be affordable? No, I don’t agree. I keep mentioning Ethiopian food just because its something important to me that would be impractical for me to cook myself, but all of Poland didn’t have an Ethiopian restaurant until about a year ago. (Granted the one that opened in Warsaw now is very good.)

            • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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              I think we’re going out on a tangent.

              The point I was making was about what people normally eat - so mainly at home - and the nutritional value and healthiness of food not how tasty and varied (in its culinary traditions) it is, so your post, whilst interesting and informative, doesn’t really cover it.

              Mostly due to legislation on farming, husbandry and food safety (in everything from hormones in beef and allowed pesticides and herbicides to how the EU uses the Precautionary Principle in approving food additives whilst the US does not) the quality of the average ingredients in Europe is superior to the US and the prices of fresh produce are lower (because Farming Subsidies are aimed at maintaining more traditional farming, so they’ll end up in things like apples, lettuce and olive oil, not intensivelly reared beef and corn).

              Absolutelly, you can find good quality ingredients in the US - that’s the point of places like Whole Foods - but what’s available in abundance and for the average person to affordably make their own meals is not as good.

        • @drosophila@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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          The US has lower rates of food contamination from e.g. Salmonella or E coli, which I think is what that study is measuring. However, I think food in the EU generally has superior, better tasting, ingredients. There are two reasons I believe this to be the case. The first one probably has a smaller impact than the second.

          The first reason that in the US an ingredient must be proven to be harmful before the FDA is allowed to ban it. In the EU an ingredient must be proven to be safe before it is allowed in commercial products.

          The second reason is that while both the US and EU have farming subsidies, the way these subsidies are structured means that in the US they tend to incentivize the use of high fructose corn syrup and the production of highly processed foods while in the EU highly processed foods tend to be more expensive and “whole foods” tend to be cheaper.

          As a result people in the EU tend to eat less processed food as a percentage of their caloric intake:

          https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/34647997/

          https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8921104/

          • @aidan@lemmy.world
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            54 months ago

            The second reason is that while both the US and EU have farming subsidies, the way these subsidies are structured means that in the US they tend to incentivize the use of high fructose corn syrup

            Yes, but that is actually not solely subsidies- but also overregulation. Sugar imports are taxed. Though, it would be better for people’s health to try to transition away from caloric sugars to substitutes like aspartame.

            the production of highly processed foods

            Source?

            highly processed foods tend to be more expensive and “whole foods” tend to be cheaper.

            This is just the blog of a guy selling a book.

            As a result people in the EU tend to eat less processed food as a percentage of their caloric intake:

            So we were talking about supply, not consumption. But regardless, yes americans choose to eat processed foods more on average. So? The predominant cheap form of calories/proteins in Europe are cereals and tubers, those aren’t exactly lacking in the US. (Btw, its just because they’re cheap everywhere,

            Though its not like either Americans or Europeans are significantly different in food group consumption for the most part The other differences being a much higher preference for meat in the US, also supported by the US actually getting majority of its protein from meat sources

            Americans can afford raw potatoes too, they choose not to buy it. In fact, despite buying meat something supposedly 25% of Europeans cannot afford to eat every second day(though I don’t believe that statistic to be honest)- Americans spend significantly less of their budget on food.

            And to preempt a possible argument, American antiobiotic use in livestock is on par with some of Europe and much lower than some of Europe

            • @drosophila@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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              the production of highly processed foods

              Source?

              The US congressional research service thinks EU subsidies are more spread out among all types of crops, including fruits and vegetables, whereas US policy focuses more on grains, sugars, dairy, and oil seeds: https://crsreports.congress.gov/product/pdf/R/R46811

              That’s not a direct subsidy of food processing of course, but the crops the US chooses to support ends up incentivizing it.

              And this paper also makes it sound like subsidized crops in the US end up in processed foods: https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamainternalmedicine/fullarticle/2530901

              So we were talking about supply, not consumption. But regardless, yes americans choose to eat processed foods more on average. So?

              Cultural factors are a thing but I think they’re used far too often to explain away trends at the population level and the effects of public policy.

              • @aidan@lemmy.world
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                14 months ago

                The US congressional research service thinks EU subsidies are more spread out among all types of crops, including fruits and vegetables, whereas US policy focuses more on grains, sugars, dairy, and oil seeds:

                Okay, but the data I just showed showed that Americans eat similar amounts to European countries of those things. A lit bit on the lower end of oils, definitely on the lower end of grain consumption, on the higher end of non-tuber, non-grain fruit and vegetable consumption, and a little bit on the lower end of dairy consumption. (And some European countries eat much more dairy)

                That’s not a direct subsidy of food processing of course, but the crops the US chooses to support ends up incentivizing it.

                Yes, but Americans eat less of those crops and more fruits, vegetables, and meat.

                Cultural factors are a thing but I think they’re used far too often to explain away trends at the population level and the effects of public policy.

                I agree, another big part is that Americans are able to afford it, a lot of fast food chains for example have been billed as a bit of a more luxury choice internationally as compared to the US, just because the prices are similar to US prices but wages are much lower. Basically labor costs are lower in the agricultural centers of the EU- and manufacturing machinery costs are higher.

          • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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            24 months ago

            As somebody else pointed out in the other place you quoted that metric, that metric is about the likelihood of food contamination, not about the food’s nutritional value and certainly not about how healthy it is in the long term.

              • @Aceticon@lemmy.world
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                There is not a single thing in there about food additives, under nutrients micronutrient coverage is ridiculously narrow (only one kind of vitamin and two minerals), fat and fat quality are absent (and the other health-related macronutrient present - sugar - shows very below average scoring), the protein quality criteria seems designed to reward meat-heavy diets (which would’ve been penalized on any fat criteria but, surprise, surprise, that’s not included in that metric) and most of that entry is about “standards” (i.e. talk, not action) - “we know how to do things right” is not the same as “we do things right” when it comes to policy (that whole section is especially hilarious given that none of the best food practices in the World as show by actual life expectancy, such as the Mediterranean Diet, are at all the result of having a good “national nutrition plan” - you really got to be taking the piss or designing your model to yield specific conclusions if you’re measuring “food quality” on the quality of the “national nutrition plan”).

                Oh, and there’s nothing there about long term outcomes, such as obesity rates and life expectation.

                This being The Economist I’m not surprised at the model design: they seem to have gone for “measuring only that which is easy to measure” in order to get Worldwide coverage, plus quite some results-oriented model design - which is a common practice of theirs - which would explain things like their weird choice of micro nutrients, excluding fat (of all things!) or looking at national nutrition standards instead of looking at food related health outcomes (such as obesity or cardivascular diseases).

      • I’m always surprised how homogeneous American food is. There are regional differences but only as rare exceptions. Supermarkets sell exactly the same thing everywhere.

    • @Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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      164 months ago

      Yeah, when people discuss american food they automatically think of off-the-shelf walmart stuff, mcdonalds, etc. When there are tons of artisanal food producers here, like a lot of them.

      • @scbasteve7@lemm.ee
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        194 months ago

        “American cheese isn’t even cheese”. I mean ‘american cheese’ is very processed. But go to Wisconsin and tell me we don’t have good cheese.

        There’s plenty of good quality stuff in America. We just can’t fucking afford it.

        • @Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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          54 months ago

          There is even american cheese that is simply the blend of the two cheeses. No extra emulsifiers, no preservatives, no plastic like qualities. It is fairly soft, and quite mild, but it is nothing like the kraft sheets. It is just two cheeses blended together.

          • @frezik@midwest.social
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            24 months ago

            In fact, if it can be labeled as cheese, that’s exactly what it is. Kraft Singles cannot be sold with a cheese label.

            American Cheese is also really good for melting into things. Like on burgers. If you look at how smash burgers are made, it’s basically a bunch of D-tier ingredients and cooking methods, including cheap American Cheese, that come together to be delicious.

          • @Tikiporch@lemmy.world
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            74 months ago

            Time to share this nugget from the crusty vaults of my memory. At Kroger, the price tag on the shelf for their Land o’ Lakes White American Cheese read: “LOL White American”

            It’s stuck with me for years.

    • BlanketsWithSmallpox
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      44 months ago

      Yep, some store brands are better than others. A quick Google with Best X brand will usually weed out the terrible ones. After that flavor is king.

    • @Chewget@lemm.ee
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      24 months ago

      It’s mostly that the percentage of water aloud in butter in America is higher than most

  • Flying Squid
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    274 months ago

    If the guide who was saying that about butter was not wearing a scarf around his neck and smoking a Gauloises, he needs to lose his French license.

  • @The25002@lemmings.world
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    214 months ago

    IDK man is this one of those things where as an American I grew up with like super processed chocolate and regular chocolate would just taste strange to me?

    • @PugJesus@lemmy.worldOP
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      Funny enough, I also grew up on super processed chocolate, and I thought I just didn’t like chocolate that much, until I got some real chocolate when I was a teen.

      God, Hershey’s tastes like pain and sadness.

      • AItoothbrush
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        174 months ago

        In an upper middle class european family I often ate swiss chocolate and once my dad went to the us and bought some hersheys for us to taste. / It was like 2 girls one cup in my mouth for my refined european taste buds /s

      • Ben Hur Horse Race
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        94 months ago

        ok this conversation was about butter if you fucking come at Hershey’s imma throw hands (I dont like cadburry’s but I dont try to make people feel bad about it!!) lindt is pretty dope. for a second I thought I liked ritter sport but realized nope. I understand hershey’s isnt for everyone and if you dont grow up with it you may not think much of it. however, because I detect you are a gentleman and are wise of the ways of the world: I implore you to try Hershey’s nuggets w/ almonds, hershey’s w/ almonds or even a Mr. Goodbar (which is just hershey’s w/ peanuts).

        • @PugJesus@lemmy.worldOP
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          14 months ago

          Nah man, I’ve eaten those wax candies with the goo inside, they’re awful, but Hershey’s is several steps below.

    • @Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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      214 months ago

      Chocolate is a big one.

      I’m talking specifically big brands, not chocolatiers, but something like Hershey’s is absurd.

      American chocolate is way too crumbly and oil-without-flavor with some weird mustiness; pretty much every country has better chocolate than the US.

      American to international chocolate is like ketchup on a tortilla compared to a gourmet pizza.

    • @IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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      The difference isn’t even really noticeable in most dishes.

      If you are doing something where butter is a main component you can use it to finish off your dish for some extra texture mostly. It’s just more creamy out of the box.

      For anything pan fried or where “tasting butter” is a component the vast majority of folks couldn’t pass a blind taste test reliably at all.

      Also, regular dark chocolate is garbage and more of this smugness. If you want 98% dark chocolate bitter shit, fine. But don’t let smug redditors and lemmy lounge lizards bully you into liking sweet chocolate. Same with American beer, we have some of the worlds best. It’s all gatekeeping smugness.

      • blargerer
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        304 months ago

        The American chocolate thing isn’t about chocolate %. An American came up with a process to help preserve the dairy, however this creates an amount of butyric acid as a bi-product. Completely fine health wise, but the only time a normal person would otherwise encounter butyric acid is when vomiting. Its largely responsible for the iconic taste and smell associated with vomit. So for people that didn’t grow up eating American chocolate, American chocolate literally tastes like vomit.

        • @Pazuzu@midwest.social
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          94 months ago

          the only time a normal person would otherwise encounter butyric acid is when vomiting

          On the contrary, it’s also the delicious tang in Parmesan cheese. American chocolate tastes as much like vomit as real Parmesan cheese does

        • @FireTower@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          You misunderstood the situation. Imagine someone flew to Finland had a can of kalakukko then went off for the rest of their life that all of the EU has dog shit food and is a cultural hellhole.

          • @KombatWombat@lemmy.world
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            34 months ago

            Exactly. People aren’t taking issue with the idea that their country’s product compares poorly to another country’s product, it’s that some random person’s random encounters are enough to make that judgement. Sweeping generalizations very often do more harm than good.

        • Ben Hur Horse Race
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          104 months ago

          What’s also amusing is how people sometimes understandably, but mistakenly, display the out-group homogeniety bias in their thinking and believe they’re scoring a win in some national pride pissing contest they started themselves

        • @IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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          54 months ago

          Lololol we have EU style butter. It’s in every supermarket. It’s two different tools. Not my problem heathens don’t know how to cook or haven’t actually experienced food outside your Internet bubble.

      • @aleph@lemm.ee
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        4 months ago

        As a cooking ingredient, maybe, but if you’re using butter on toast, bread, etc. then Irish/French/British butter is clearly better.

        Also, the superiority of European chocolate isn’t to do with the cocoa content or the sweetness - it’s just creamier and has a smoother texture.

        I’ll agree with you on the beer, though.

        • @IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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          64 months ago

          The difference is subtle and not noticeable to most people. You’ll do better in your testing and get better results switching to salted butter for things like toast. The difference just isn’t that big.

          • @aleph@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago
            1. No it’s not.
            2. I already use salted butter for toast – American is still worse.
            3. Yes it is.
        • @curbstickle@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          34 months ago

          American here - Irish/French butter is the clear winner for buttered bread.

          Unfortunately found out I can’t eat anything with gluten, and rice based bread and other similar garbage doesn’t absorb properly, so it’s not longer something I get to enjoy.

          Still. Irish butter is my personal preferred.

        • @boonhet@lemm.ee
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          14 months ago

          I’ll agree with you on the beer, though.

          Funnily enough, when I visited the US, it was the beer that was utter shit, but otherwise I really liked the food in most places I visited.

          Okay I had one or two good beers too, but I actually like lagers and pilsners (Urquell being my favourite), but the Yuengling that a local acquainteance really wanted me to try, felt disgusting.

          • @aleph@lemm.ee
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            4 months ago

            Oh, don’t get me wrong - Budweiser/Coors/Michelob etc. are all awful. However, most US states have good local breweries and craft beers. Lagers are generally not as popular as IPAs, but you can still get good ones. Admittedly, this varies quite a bit depending on where you are in the US.

      • ASeriesOfPoorChoices
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        124 months ago

        Given the number of Americans who have had their tastebuds destroyed by covid, I can understand your palate.

      • @RecluseRamble@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        4 months ago

        American beer, we have some of the worlds best

        Such as? I’m not at all a beer gourmet and don’t particularly dislike American beer (not even the light variants) but I’ve been to multiple states and never got a beer I considered top notch.

        For example I’ve been to Florida just recently and apparently IPA is the shit nowadays. Didn’t like a single one of them, they all tasted artificial.

        Edit: Also, I hope your bar for European beer isn’t stuff like Heineken or Beck’s. They are not bad but pretty basic stuff sold worldwide. Nobody in Europe considers those particularly great.

        • @IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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          94 months ago

          Sounds like you are probably going to generic restaurants and ordering mass produced IPAs and getting our version of becks. I can happily suggest a fantastic beer if you want to give me your style of choice.

        • @noli@lemmy.zip
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          84 months ago

          As a belgian, America having some of the best beer sounds like cope to me when belgium, germany, czechia exist

          • @IsThisAnAI@lemmy.world
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            54 months ago

            German beer hasn’t been relevant in the competition scene in 10 years. The French and Dutch carry the Belgium scene. Id put our best up against the Belgium best any day and have mixed results depending on category.

            Never had anything from czechia though, no clue.

          • @zod000@lemmy.ml
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            34 months ago

            As both and American and a lover of Belgian ales, I’d be inclined to agree that we almost certainly don’t have better beer than you (or I) would prefer. We do have some excellent beer, but the focus is on other styles.

    • @Thomrade@lemm.ee
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      114 months ago

      I went to a house party once that was a lot of different nationalities of Europeans. Two French guys got increasingly drunk and belligerent about the aesthetic quality of French churches versus Irish churches. To the point they had to he asked to leave because they were close to starting a fight. I’ve met several frenfh people over the years and theres always some spontaneous comparison between something in france vs here. OPs story is not so far fetched.

  • @pseudo@jlai.lu
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    4 months ago

    Lemmy should celebrate French-Irish butter day. What do yo say? Your community or ours?

  • @Treczoks@lemmy.world
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    174 months ago

    Irish butter is good in the summer. The Irish butter they sell in winter usually has been frozen stuff from the summer production.

    • @Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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      244 months ago

      Yes, there is butter that is like a bland grease block. Then there is stuff like Irish butter that has noticeable, variable, taste. The emulsion from high quality butter is silky smooth, creamy, and surprising light on the tongue, as opposed to leaving a greasy coating on it. The emulsion holds better as the butter melts, with better butter. The way it softens differs in ways that make it nice to cook, and bake, with. It spreads much more nicely. There really is a major difference between industrial production butter, and butter from a real creamery.

      I highly suggest you get some huge corp butter, from a big box grocer, and a block of butter from a quality creamery, and then compare them. You will instantly notice the difference. Melt some of each, cook with some of each, spread some of each on some good bread, have toast with each, etc. It will be the whole experience that has improved, not just the taste.

      • bitwolf
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        124 months ago

        US citizen here.

        I recall making butter from scratch in grade school and it was significantly better than what we get from the supermarket.

        Kind of sad that some grade schoolers can do better than a large corporation.

        …come to think of it. That could have been what started my obsession with whole foods from quality sources.

        • @scbasteve7@lemm.ee
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          84 months ago

          The US has built its empire on convenience. There’s plenty of solid brands out there, but the biggest and well known are the companies that cut corners and quantity so they can keep prices low. And us US citizens just eat that shit up.

          Amish style butter is some of the best butter I’ve ever had. You can find it all over the place in the Midwest and Amish heavy states.

          • Phunter
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            24 months ago

            Love me my Amish butter log. I put that baby in the freezer and carve out little chunks for use during the week.

        • @booly@sh.itjust.works
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          84 months ago

          Kind of sad that some grade schoolers can do better than a large corporation.

          Better at what metric?

          The cynical take is that the corporations did optimize for the best butter, only that their definition of “best” is different from yours.

          • bitwolf
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            44 months ago

            Hah definitely! Perhaps the better take is that the priorities don’t align.

        • wreel
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          4 months ago

          Being an American I would implore other Americans to make their own butter at home at least once to know just how much better it is. Then imagine that being done with quality milk. That’s what these folks are talking about.

        • @Jiggle_Physics@lemmy.world
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          It is most likely because you didn’t have the additives, and machines, to get a significantly lower fat butter to fully emulsify.

          I have been making more butter myself, and working on cheese now. There are a bunch of farms, in every state, that will sell raw milk “for animal use”. I have bought this, and the ultra pasteurized stuff, as I learn how to make cheese. The raw milk makes a noticeable difference in flavor when everything else was identical.

      • FlashMobOfOne
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        64 months ago

        Oh, you misunderstand.

        I definitely think there’s ‘less good’ butter.

        But ‘bad’ butter?

        Absurd.

    • @samus12345@lemmy.world
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      124 months ago

      Betty Botta bought some butter;

      “But,” said she, “this butter’s bitter!

      If I put it in my batter

      It will make my batter bitter.

      But a bit o’ better butter

      Will but make my batter better.”

      Then she bought a bit o’ butter

      Better than the bitter butter,

      Made her bitter batter better.

      So ’twas better Betty Botta

      Bought a bit o’ better butter.

      • @jdeath@lemm.ee
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        44 months ago

        i think i haven’t heard that in 30 years or something. totally forgot about it! my brain has a funny feeling now

        • @samus12345@lemmy.world
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          4 months ago

          Same. I don’t even remember where I read it, but when I saw “bad butter,” it came back to me. And I looked it up, of course.

      • @BluesF@lemmy.world
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        24 months ago

        Huh, that’s a lot longer that the version I knew growing up:

        "Betty bought some butter, but the butter Betty bought was bitter

        So Betty bought some better butter, better than the bitter butter Betty bought before"

    • @Chewget@lemm.ee
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      If they don’t take out enough of the water it makes soggy toast, but still not truly bad

  • @WhatYouNeed@lemmy.world
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    104 months ago

    Butter from tropical South Pacific countries is high in salt. It help with replenishing minerals your body loses due to sweating.

  • @then_three_more@lemmy.world
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    104 months ago

    Why are Americans so into Irish butter? It’s ok, but just about the same as British butter. French and danish butter though are completely different. It’s fermented.