Re: Dinner in the year of our lord 20241031.

Liste des GroupesRevenir à rf cooking 
Sujet : Re: Dinner in the year of our lord 20241031.
De : j_mcquown (at) *nospam* comcast.net (jmcquown)
Groupes : rec.food.cooking
Date : 03. Nov 2024, 01:05:57
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <vg6epk$uh6$2@dont-email.me>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8
User-Agent : Mozilla Thunderbird
On 11/2/2024 6:33 PM, Michael Trew wrote:
On 11/2/2024 5:17 PM, jmcquown wrote:
On 11/2/2024 5:02 PM, ItsJoanNotJoAnn wrote:
>
You're probably right and I just can't seem to grasp
paying $20 for a burger, fries, and drink at Five Guys.
Whataburger was super unimpressive, and I even gave them
a second chance just in case it was an off day for them
or me.
>
There is a 'Five Guys' in Beaufort.  I know some people who went there and they were definitely not impressed and said the price was outrageous.
>
I have to ask, what's the big fascination with "smash burgers"?  Anyone ever heard of the Maillard reaction?  Restaurants charge a lot of money for something anyone can do at home by simply calling it a "smash burger".  Got a hot skillet?  Got a spatula?  You can make a smash burger for less than half the cost of having someone flatten it for you.
 Same deal as Primanti brothers.  Overpriced and over-hyped chain restaurant food.
I suppose I just don't understand why people pay for overpriced food they could easily make at home, especially something as simple as hamburgers.  Give it a fancy name such as "smash burger" and some people are all over it.  It's a hamburger cooked hot and fast in a skillet in butter, smashed down with a spatula.  It does not warrant a $20 price tag.  Funny thing, for years chefs urged people to not press burgers with a spatula when cooking them because they'd be dry.  Now smashing them is all the rage.  Go figure. :)
Jill

Date Sujet#  Auteur
9 Jul 25 o 

Haut de la page

Les messages affichés proviennent d'usenet.

NewsPortal