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[NO DRAMA] /r/iamveryculinary ties themselves into knots over something called "hotdish"

https://old.reddit.com/r/iamveryculinary/comments/1h86kz8/is_this_applicable_here_really_pisses_me_off/

								

								

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17338201864771326.webp

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17338201866514122.webp

This is true poverty food. One /r/iamveryculinary user argues that insulting the hotdish is offensive due to its history, which is an incredible piece of self-unawareness for a user of a subreddit that wants to destroy Italian tradition piece by piece.

Hotdish, which by law must contain at least one "cream of …" soup, is the state dish of Minnesota. Possibly also of Wisconsin, but definitely Minnesota. A cherished dish eaten at all times of the year, but especially at church potlucks, funeral gatherings, and before a rousing game of duck, duck, grey duck. Lutheran girls (and more recently boys, too) are taught the arcane arts of assembling hotdish shortly before their confirmation.


This Redditor can't understand the concept of "sauces" and believes that soup is the only hot liquid that can be used in cooking.

I'm not even certain what scenario this person is referring to, like using cream of mushroom soup in a hot dish or something? Are they suggesting a notoriously casual working class weeknight meal should involve making an entire batch of soup from scratch?


This American is concerned that they're not getting enough salt or dairy in their diet and thinks that adding soup to food is a good way to solve that problem.

it adds salt, dairy and seasonings that you might have to get elsewhere. I use cream of chicken for a great pot pie base, with added veggies and herbs and I use tomato soup in my american chop suey instead of jarred pasta sauce.


More name gatekeeping smh:

It's a regional name in New England for what, in other areas, is often referred to as goulash or pasta casserole. You can look online for different recipes, but the core line up (that I grew up with at least) typically includes elbow macaroni, ground beef, onions, bell peppers & tomato sauce. The other commenter uses tomato soup instead of sauce.

I like to make mine with a ton of smoked paprika, but a lot of folks stick with Italian herb seasoning. It's tasty, and one of the few dishes I make that is a hit both with picky eaters, kids, and adults. Very versatile, and freezes well!

The Hungarian in me just shuddered, hamburger helper is not goulash FFS [-2]

It's a regional name for a dish, and it's literally not hamburger helper. You don't need to like it, but there's no need to be disrespectful. I was just being helpful by answering their question.


Maybe it's because many Americans are exhausted after working three jobs to pay for health and child care, and just need to get something on the table as quickly, and with the least amount of physical and mental effort, as possible before collapsing into bed, only to wake up and do all again a few hours later 🤷‍♀️

lol

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This is true poverty food.

Casseroles are very popular with wypipo (and I think :marseyblack:s too, for that matter) in America across the socioeconomic spectrum. :marseyindignant:

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This is true poverty food.

Nobody in that thread is actually poor, like depression-era poor

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Both you and @Geralt_of_Uganda are LOSERS for responding while sidemarseying me; you both owe me coins. :marseyraging: @kaamrev/ @DWHITE_CHRISTMAS_DYNAMITE we have to stop these people, they're a menace.

Regardless the actual answer is incidental to poverty rather than stemming from it: the double seamed modern tin can was only brought to the commercial market in the USA in 1904 and this was at a time when the availability of fruits and vegetables was still seasonally limited. Casseroles like this would have been popular in the rural Midwest regardless of class considerations in earlier generations had the option been there.

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My sidevote is intentional because your comment was that dumb. Once you learn to read properly I will continue upmarseying your comments

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You just didn't know the history of canning and that's ok but if you keep this up I'm going to teach you a modern history of caning that will make @X and the other :marseyxmassweatersingapore:s blush. :marseycracka:

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I'm going to teach you a modern history of caning that will make @X and the other s blush

Sure, go ahead. I'll read it

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@Nightcrawler ping me when you write it!

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@Nightcrawler Ping me too, so I can upmarsey and leave a semi-related comment pretending I read the whole thing.

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Take your coins and go, poorstrag

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How come every time one of my threads gets derailed then you're always involved?

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I've been talking about canning and casseroles which was the topic. :marseysoycry:

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It literally says that this specific casserole is made using canned soups and canned vegetables. It is undeniably poverty food at its roots

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If it uses canned soups it cannot be poverty and is also quite recent. Canned soups is a relatively modern thing and prior to it powdered soup was the poor option.

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So it's a recently invented poorstrag food, got it

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I like casseroles, cause they're quite tasty for the effort. Throwing everything into one dish and let it cook by itself, while you prepare other stuff also makes them great dishes for guests.

Another reason why I like salads (pasta, potatoe, rice, ...) when friends visit

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I like the American definition of salad which is basically "anything combined together and eaten cold", as though eating an actual healthy green salad would be a completely foreign concept.

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"anything combined together and eaten cold" is basically the literal definition of Salat in German. Not a burger thing.

May favourite one:

https://i.rdrama.net/images/17338404633935018.webp

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https://i.rdrama.net/images/17338411223729348.webp

This but Germany and "not".

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