A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - Is Chili A Soup?
Episode Date: November 11, 2020The world loves spicy, greasy chili, but who cares about love when you can debate-- is chili soup? To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privac...y-policy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Slop it on top of hot dogs, slurp down a bowl with onions, and some weirdos in Ohio even put it on spaghetti.
The world loves spicy, greasy chili, but who cares about love when you can debate?
It's chili soup.
This is A Hot Dog is a Sandwich.
Ketchup is a smoothie.
Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what?
That makes no sense.
A hot dog is a sandwich. A hot dog is a smoothie. Yeah, I put ice in my cereal, so what? That makes no sense. A hot dog is a sandwich.
A hot dog is a sandwich.
What?
Welcome to our podcast, A Hot Dog is a Sandwich,
the show where we break down the world's biggest food debates.
I'm your host, Josh Scherer.
And I'm your host, Nicole Hendizadeh.
And today we're discussing, Nicole, this is a heavy hitter episode,
is chili soup.
I don't think this is a heavy hitter episode. Is chili soup. So I don't think this is a heavy hitter.
I think this is obvious.
No, this is not, Nicole.
Nothing is ever obvious on this podcast and nothing ever quite makes sense.
We're like Willy Wonka's Chocolate Factory, except we never killed kids on this podcast.
Those kids died, right?
Yeah.
Anyways, the reason we're now talking about is chili soup is because this came up on GMM
where we did a fast food soups taste test and we included
an entire chili round. That sparked a debate in the comments between people who either agreed or
did not agree that chili is soup. So several people, for whatever reason, Nicole, you and I
have become the authorities on these things as our inboxes on Twitter and Instagram have seen
anytime any influencer posts, there's a hot dog is a sandwich,
to drum up false levels of engagement
because they don't actually have anything interesting to say
or add to any conversation,
we are the authorities on this.
So now's the time to do it.
It's my turn to talk?
It's my turn to talk?
Sorry, I got all wound up.
I'm drinking a non-diet Red Bull.
What?
And I got the sugars.
I got the sugars right now. I've never have I ever seen you drink a non-diet Red Bull. What? And I got the sugars. I got the sugars right now.
I've never have I ever seen you drink a non, what is it called?
Sugar-free Red Bull?
I don't know.
I don't drink poison like that.
No, I'm going to say right now that chili is soup.
Why come?
Of course it is.
Why come chili is soup?
Why come?
Because it's a type of soup.
What do you mean?
You're just throwing it out there because it's just got liquid and broth and meats that it's a soup?
What do you think it is, a praise?
How simple.
No.
Okay.
God, again, Nicole, nothing is obvious.
Nothing is ever simple on this podcast.
Whose fault is that?
I don't know.
It could be yours.
It could be mine.
It's your fault.
That's because you bring up stuff like the complexity of the universe and string theory and spaghetti.
And I don't need that.
That's not what it's going to come down to.
This is going to come down to the Portuguese colonization of Goa on the Indian subcontinent.
But before we get there.
Oh, was that really the Portuguese?
Yeah, so the Portuguese colonized Goa in India.
Goa.
Yeah, which is why a lot of Goan food will include pork, and it has a lot of Portuguese influence.
Actually, there's a dish called pav bhaji that's one of my favorite Indian dishes, and pav literally means bread in Portuguese.
And a lot of people from Goa have very Latinate last names, which is very interesting to me.
And that does play into chili because I do not believe chili is a soup.
I also don't believe soup exists.
But that is a debate for another time.
I believe that chili, full name chili con carne, is a curry.
I believe it is a uniquely American form of curry.
And then, you know, a lot of people could is curry not
a soup i don't know if you got a bowl of chicken tikka masala would you consider that a soup
uh maybe i don't it's more of a stew no it's chili oh god that that gets down into a whole
other thing stew versus soup because because let me tell you in in my culture, stew is stew and soup is soup.
There is a clear distinction between the two.
And it's all about the viscosity of the liquid.
Oh, yeah, that's really interesting.
So I'm thinking of Persian soup like asha reshta, right?
Yeah.
That's a soup.
It is.
Whereas game is khorash or stew.
Yes, I'm so proud of your pronunciation.
You taught me so well.
Literally, I'm cheesing so hard
on the other side of this table right now.
I'm like, look at my son.
He knows how to pronounce words so well.
I'm so proud of you.
Give me my Persian Jewish bat mitzvah that I deserve.
I never had one either.
I went on a cruise to Alaska instead.
Did you know that?
I never had a bat mitzvah.
My parents were just like,
you're going to go
look at glaciers and orca and i'm like okay thank you i'm a woman now maybe you saw shamu in alaska
you are a woman now mazel tov read read shamu passages from the torah exactly okay but but to
me to the untrained um ashkenazi eye who is only a casual fan of Persian food, the viscosity between those things is not very different.
Like, in my opinion.
Like, would you say there's a...
I think stew has to do with stew meat.
Okay.
But I mean, there has to be a world in which vegetarian stews exist.
Well, now, in the modern sense, sure.
But before, no.
Every single stew was made with beef or chicken or lamb.
So you're saying it's the idea of like a vegetarian stew is the same thing as a veggie burger.
The term stew comes from stewing meat for a long period of time.
Yes.
In the sense that the term burger comes from like grinding meat.
However, if you grind vegetables in the same fashion, it's still a burger.
Yeah.
That's interesting.
So the stew versus soup debate. It's certainly interesting. I think,
again, we talk about fluid dynamics a lot on this podcast, we talk about needing to get an actual
physicist to take viscosity measurements and flow rate measurements, which I think those are
technically the same thing. Every time I bring that up, I get like a handful of physicists in
my DMS, who are just like, hey, I'm an actual physicist.
What you said doesn't make sense.
I'm like, shut up, Meg.
Shut up, Meg.
Okay.
Okay.
So chicken tikka masala.
Let's go back to that analogy because that is, curries also do not exist.
Listen, that quote is going to be taken out of context.
No, no, no.
Are you going to run that back?
Oh, no, no, no.
I will absolutely explain this.
And any Indian person can tell you that curry does not exist in India.
It is simply not a word.
It's an Americanized?
Well, Britishization?
UKized?
Yeah, I mean, it's absolutely a function of colonization.
So the legend goes, actually, hold on.
Let me cite my source.
Okay, so a lot of this is kind of paraphrased from Lizzie Collingham's book.
It's called Curry, A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors.
And the initial kind of term curry, as we understand it,
pretty much across the world today because it's in Hong Kong, it's in Thailand,
it's in South Africa, it's in Australia, it's in America.
The term, as we understand it, likely comes from a Tamil word that's very similar.
It's pronounced like kadi, which can have different definitions based on how you pronounce it.
It can either mean like biting or it can mean seasoned.
But when the Portuguese got to Goa in around late 1400s, early 1500s, basically one Portuguese explorer was like,
yo, what am I eating?
And they were just like, kadi.
And then he just took that to mean any sort of dish that was stew-like and that was seasoned
heavily with spices.
And so you kind of start with this 500-year-old idea that anything with a vague Indian spice
flavor profile, because again, spices like, you know, like, I don't know,
coriander, like black pepper, like cardamom didn't exist in Europe at the time.
So they took any heavily spiced food that came from the Indian subcontinent,
they just kind of started calling it curry.
And then, you know, the British East India Company
and other British companies that had colonized India at the time
started selling what they called curry powder. And they even sort of sold it back to their colonized
subjects. And then that literally spread to anywhere that Britain was. So literally,
you think of the idea of Thai curry, because a lot of people bring that up when they're like,
well, Thai curries have existed for, you know, hundreds upon hundreds of years,
but they were never called curries. The Thai term for what we call curry is a guyang, I believe. And so curry is this kind of neologism that migrated its way
over there. So I would take curry to mean any sort of heavily spiced stew, essentially. And I think
chili satisfies that definition very, very vividly because to me it is aromatics. It is spices that
are, you know, somewhat either indigenous or indicative to a region that are stewed for a
long period of time. So to me, chili is absolutely an American, technically a Tejano curry that may
have roots in the Canary Islands, may have roots in Mexico. Who knows? So that is my big brain,
galaxy brain theory that chili is not a soup. It is a curry. Why don't you just call it a guisado?
So the Mexican roots of chili are really, really interesting. Also, it depends what you're talking
about when you say chili. So if you're talking about chile con carne, there are some people who
believe it literally has Aztec roots. There are historians that wrote about Aztec stews that were like chilies fried in lard with tomatoes, etc.
But the addition of a lot of the spices, which if you talk to anyone who makes chili, seriously, the spices are a huge part of it.
Some people think that that comes from a bunch of Canary Island immigrants who settled in San Antonio.
Interesting.
Yeah.
My friend is actually currently
in the Canary Islands right now. So funny to say. That's a trip. She's traveling around the world
right now. Do they tell you anything about the food? She just says that there's a lot of Spanish.
She's like, it's like a lot of Spanish influence. And like, there's no actual traditional food or
people there in the Canary Islands. Man, speaking of colonization, but yeah, I mean,
Spain would have brought spices from Morocco to the Canary Islands,
which explains, you know, how something like cumin would end up in Chile con carne.
Interesting.
So what does this have to do with the 15 lovely Southern men cooking up chili
up until, you know, they have their necks and ground beef and
beans and spices how does this colonization and the competitions of chili and it being a soup or
a stew or a curry or a guisado have to do with this podcast it has it has everything to do with
everything nicole okay so especially like when you think about chili, we now sort of think about the canned chili movement, right?
Like Hormel is a big player in that game.
Oh my gosh, yeah. You know, them domestic servitude to be able to just microwave up a can of fresh horn-milled chili, get a spicy taste of the southwest of exotic New Mexico in your kitchen.
And so that kind of happened.
And it sort of like took chili away from its roots in a sense.
It was also kind of the first mass-produced, if we consider chili to be a Mexican food.
And that is how it was marketed a lot of the times.
And there's a really fascinating story behind what are known as the chili queens of San Antonio serving chili con carne. But if
you consider chili to be like of Mexican origin, America sort of took that and then very, very much
whitewashed it to be this sort of like Southwest American universal flavor that everyone can enjoy
in their own home. Like put a can of chili into your, you know, microwave hard taco shell or something like
that.
So I think it transcends soup in that way.
Do you think manwich is chili?
No, manwich ain't no chili.
Manwich is agri-
Manwich is chili.
No, manwich is agri-dolce.
The first time I bought a can of manwich was for GMM.
And I was like, hey, Josh, am I supposed to buy ground beef and put it in here?
Or is it in here?
And you're like, yeah, Nicole, you have to buy ground beef.
And I'm like, wow, you Americans are so interesting.
Yeah, they can't afford to put all the beef in the can.
They just give you the slop.
But they do it for Hormel.
I was like, they can do it for Hormel.
Why can't they do it for Manwich?
Yeah, but there's hardly any beef in Hormel. I think Manwich is more chili than chili is soup.
I don't, I mean, to me.
I think a sloppy joe sandwich and a bowl of chili are more related than any sort of soup stew, whatever.
Wait, I thought you said chili was a soup.
But now that you talked about colonization and everything else, my brain was just like, nope.
Yeah, because I mean, there's like, if you go to a diner, right?
Yes.
They'll generally have two soup options.
Three, maybe if you're lucky.
They got clam chowder, which I also believe is a soup insofar as soups exist, which to be clear, they do not.
You just said they don't.
See?
Soups don't exist.
You're also a flip flopper.
No, Nicole, Nicole.
I'm not flip flopping.
I'm not flip flopping i'm not flip flopping sir you're sure as someone who wears flip flops a lot you are a flip flop can you hear
my flip flops i'm literally recording i can hear sir this is a wendy's drive-thru please stop
yelling about chili and colonization okay diners diners would typically have three soup options
you got clam chowder, you got chili,
and then you got miscellaneous soup of the day.
So like I understand the function
that chili is a wet food that you eat with a spoon.
So I understand the function
of putting it in the category of soup.
However, if there is sort of a rule
in what do they call it?
Constitutional philosophy or something
that if there is a more specific term for a food, then you use that term.
Can that argument be flipped against me in almost any argument that we have had on this show?
Of course.
Of course.
I just choose not to because I respect you.
And if I, like, overpower you in a debate, you might fire me.
No, that's not true.
That wouldn't happen.
I mean, it happened to the ones before you, but it wouldn't happen to you.
There were ones before me?
My heart.
I am generally fascinated with like chili culture.
Y'all put beans in your chili?
Yeah, for real.
Because there's so many people
that have so many specific weird memories
and styles of chili that they've eaten.
Like a lot of the opinion cast roles we've gotten are people from,
I believe Kansas city,
Missouri area who are like,
you don't eat cinnamon rolls with your chili.
Yeah.
I remember when we used to get those comments.
It's like,
what?
No,
I do not.
I also don't put spaghetti with my chili,
but that does sound good actually.
I mean,
that's another entire thing.
If you,
if you talk about the Cincinnati five way,
which is not a grotesque sexual act, but rather spaghetti.
I just raised my eyebrows at Josh like, oh, yeah, is that true?
Y'all never had a Cincinnati Five-Way?
So Cincinnati Five-Way is spaghetti covered in Cincinnati style chili, which is very, very sweet and sweet spice, too, with like cinnamon, cloves, stuff like that.
Chili, spaghetti, kidney beans, cheese, and onions on it, I believe.
Maybe sour cream.
Really delicious.
I'm a fan.
But if you look at the chili like that, it's not a soup at all.
I mean, it's like a bolognese, which is why they put it on skeddy.
Okay.
I am changing my tune. Chili is a bolognese, which is why they put it on Skeddy. Okay, I am changing my tune.
Chili is a bolognese.
Manwich is a bolognese.
Chili is a bolognese.
Spagbowl is bolognese.
I never had spagbowl, mate.
One time I went on a date with this little guy, yeah, little bugger,
and he made me a bowl of spagbowl, and I was like, what?
Spagbowl is what the Brits call spaghetti bolognese.
Yeah.
I watch a lot of British dating shows, like little snippets on YouTube whenever I'm bored.
And then there's like blind dates and somehow spag bol gets mentioned far too much.
It's like a great first date food, you know?
It's really weird the way that certain things like don't translate across cultures. Like's weird that in america we refer to almost any tomato based pasta sauce as marinara
yes where that's just like not a thing like marinara is a very unique like neapolitan dish
literally means like fishermen's from the sea exactly yeah yeah and then if you go to australia
where there's a very huge italian kind of influence food culture. They specifically refer to tomato sauce as passata.
Passata.
Passata.
And I think it comes from like literally to pass the tomatoes through like a tomato crusher.
Like a sieve.
Yeah, exactly.
Oh, that's so interesting.
It's so cool.
Back to chili being a bolognese.
Even if there's beans in that chili, you're calling it a bolognese?
Yeah, of course. What's your definition of bolognese? Because bolognese literally just if there's beans in that chili, you're calling it a bolognese? Yeah, of course.
What's your definition of bolognese?
Because bolognese literally just means from the city of Bologna.
Bolognese is very, very simple.
It is a red sauce plus meat plus seasonings.
You want to add beans in there?
Go ahead.
I'm not going to judge you.
I don't care.
I guess, yeah.
I've had like, I don't know, some kind of like southern Italian like chickpea bolognese.
Sure, I have. I knew you were going to say chickpeas. Sure, I have had like, I don't know, some kind of like southern Italian like chickpea bolognese.
Sure I have.
No, I knew you were going to say chickpeas. Sure I have.
No, you haven't.
Yeah, dude.
Where?
Well, you know, at the place.
No, it was some hipster Italian chef though in LA, I just realized.
So it doesn't count because they make like wild.
It was the same dude that makes the like soup dumpling tortellini in Brodo.
Oh, you mean Alimento?
Zach Pollock from Alimento.
Yeah, yeah.
Heck of a chef.
But like for me to go ahead and be like, that's authentic italian that's that's tough i
don't doubt that he's done his research etc etc but he's got a style uniquely of his own um but
wait hold on i was gonna say something but i lost it my brain's all fudged up today man chili oh
it's okay the common problem that we're running into with the is chili soup debate is one, I keep insisting nouns don't exist.
But two, you can't pigeonhole chili to be one thing
because there are so many different kinds.
The difference between like, say, legit San Antonio chili con carne
versus Cincinnati style chili versus a Coney Island chili dog chili
that's just like a runny vinegary weird meat sauce
yeah it's so fast so the term chili became so important to like american cuisine and there
were so many imitators because of how popular it was in the 1950s that it simply means too many
things i remember going to a chili cook-off uh that i should have won. But this one drunk lady.
You entered a chili contest?
Yeah, did I enter a chili contest?
I did this like really dope.
I didn't know that.
Yeah, I did this dope like smoke.
It was like a small one,
like 20 people sponsored by something.
But I made this like great,
like smoked short rib,
charred tomatillo chili, yada, yada.
But some drunk lady went around
and bribed all the judges.
But she made like a white chili,
which to me, like what is a white chicken chili? Like, how does that have any sort of, you know, resemblance to a bowl of Texas red or even Cincinnati style chili?
Like it was just a can of Ortega green chilies and some like chicken breast and it was white.
I mean, we've made white chili on the show, but that shows how powerful the term chili has become in the sense that we use it as a generic term to describe any sort of like spiced American-ish, maybe Southwest inspired stew in the same way that we use curry to describe any stew that has a vaguely Indian flavor profile.
You know what I'm saying?
Yeah.
No, no, no.
That makes total sense to me.
But again, I still don't know.
Is it soup?
Is it stew
is it just a boiled brothy beefy situation like what do we what can we classify it as or does it
not even need to be classified is it just chili is it its own category i don't think it can be
classified because nicole are you ready for this one chili doesn doesn't exist. Chili does not exist. Oh, my God. Chili does not exist.
There are too many kinds that when you say, it's like saying unicorns exist, right?
It's like, well, what do you mean by unicorn?
Do you mean a horse that someone taped a bone to its head?
No, but I'm saying that like there's-
No, Josh, that's not a unicorn.
There's no universal understanding of what a unicorn is.
Does a unicorn have wings?
Does it fart out sparkles? Does it poo rainbows?
Is it just a horse with a bone
sticking out its head? There's no universal
definition of what a unicorn
is, so unicorn cannot possibly exist.
It's a horse with a horn on it. No.
No. What are its magic powers?
Listen, I was a unicorn
girl, okay? Listen to me right now. I know
I don't look like one now, but I used to be a unicorn
girl. These are the requirements to be a unicorn girl okay listen to me right now i know i don't look like one now but i used to be a unicorn girl these are the these are the requirements to be a unicorn a noble steed
a noble steed a horn on your head and you have to be some sort of magical being
and if you meet those requirements you're a unicorn but we have never in the history of mankind have documented and proved
the authenticity of a unicorn but i've had a bowl of chili before josh
why is soup so politicized or is it because chili is not soup i agree chili is not soup i what it
was but now it's really not speaking of politics, Macedonia is in the news.
They're trying to, hold on.
I know nothing about Macedonian politics.
I know there's something going on with them and the Greek government.
But the reason I'm bringing up Macedonia is because Cincinnati-style chili was actually created by a Macedonian immigrant.
And the spices and flavor profiles are actually that of a Macedonian or I believe Northern Greek style stews that often take like sweet red wine, cinnamon and tomatoes and stew them with meat.
do with the dish chili con carne and is its very own unique kind of Macedonian American diaspora beautiful immigrant business story of a dude who knew that people bought thick red bowls of food
called chili and he kind of turned this Macedonian dish into that and then slopped it on top of
spaghetti and the Cincinnati five-way was born and you shouldn't urban dictionary that. I don't eat chili. Did you know that?
Yeah, I think.
The last time I ate chili was maybe eight years ago at Johnny Rockets.
Why does this conversation always go back to Johnny Rockets?
Did Johnny Rockets file for bankruptcy or can we finally secure that Johnny Rockets?
I want to buy.
Josh, I've been so good to you these past almost two years. Can you buy me a Johnny Rockets, please? I'm not buying you a Johnny Rockets. Josh, I've been so good to you these past almost two years.
Can you buy me a Johnny Rockets, please?
I'm not buying you a Johnny Rockets.
I'll get you one of the paper hats from Johnny Rockets
and I'll get you some microwave onion rings
and you'll be happy with it.
But maybe it's not our opinions that count,
which I know is a very tough thing to say,
but maybe there's experts out there, Nicole,
who have more formed opinions on this.
But I think they're biased opinions
because this is what Brie Toland,
vice president of the International Chili Society. Whose son are you that you got named
vice president of the International Chili Society? I will call your credentials into
question, sir or madam. I don't know if Brie's a man or woman or what they identify as. Okay,
but Brie says, it is the official opinion of International Chili Society that chili is not and should not be considered a soup.
True chili is not too thin nor too thick, making it neither a soup nor a stew.
That's BS.
I don't buy that.
Because, like, if it's in between a stew and a soup, again, we bring up Rachel Ray a lot.
She is our goddess.
Stoop.
Yeah, Rachel Ray called it a stoop.
Stoop kids afraid to eat a stoop.
Oh, it's the, hey Arnold.
Hey Arnold.
I didn't watch it.
Were you a stoop kid?
No, I didn't.
You were a stoop kid.
I was a stoop kid.
Yeah.
I hung out on stoops and I threw a small firecrackers at people.
Yes, you monster.
Yeah, those little poppers.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah.
Then we got Campbell's vice president of marketing lynn vanderveer who again
these people are all coming in with reasons to try and sway your opinion the international chili
society wants you to think that chili is special so they don't want you to think it's a soup
campbell's wants you to think it's soup so they can sell more chili under the guise of soup they
say be who you are and focus on who you want to be if chili wants to be a soup be a soup if cereal wants
to be a soup be a soup i agree with that one though we welcome any food or beverage that wants
to be considered a soup with open arms you do you chili one that is some millennial wow that is some
millennial participation trophy bs campbell's vice president not everything can be a soup. You're just, you're warping terms here.
No, no, no. Color me impressed. I love this. This is literally every single thing that you say,
just in a concise, concrete sentence. This is literally every single point you make.
It's just more, you know, millennial savvy. That's why you don't like it because it's easy to digest.
I actually do like it. This is kind of weirdly beautiful to me in a way. I never thought I would shed a tear.
Super accepting, super inclusive. It's all 2020 is about, man.
Radical soup inclusionism.
Love it.
Maybe I can get down with that. But here's the thing. Campbell's soup sales are down.
Young people, they ain't been eating canned soup
Like the Ted Cruz's of the world do
You'll only get that reference
If you know that Ted Cruz travels with his own
Cans of soup because that's what he enjoys
Eating and that is the most Ted Cruz thing
That you could ever do
What kind of soup?
I don't know what kind of soup do you think Ted Cruz eats
Just like beef and barley
Like it's canned it's not in a box
Like a cardboard box is canned.
Yeah, yeah, the cheap stuff.
Cheddar.
Yeah.
Cheddar.
Condensed cheddar soup.
Ted Cruz just sucking down nacho cheese out of Campbell's can.
For sure, for sure.
Continue with your point.
I think Campbell's is trying to grease the tracks a little bit to try and up their soup sales because they know people ain't buying soup no more so like yeah everyone come and be soup if you want to be soup free love
buy campbell's i'm not necessarily buying that i am sticking with my original statement that chili
is not a soup because soup does not exist but also chili does not exist i'm saying that chili
is technically a curry which i can't stress this enough, also does not exist. Is that clear?
Yeah, I got that.
All right, Nicole, we've heard what you and I have to say.
Now it's time to find out what other wacky ideas are rattling around there in the Twitterverse.
It's time for a segment we call...
Opinions on light casseroles!
I just let you do it that time.
I kind of like that.
mythical arcia says fruit loops plus milk plus peanut butter equals bliss i love old people cereals so sometimes i could take cheerios and a spoonful of peanut butter and milk and that's a
really really good snack i also do that with stop laughing at my old people cereals i also do that
with cornflakes sometimes and i also do it with with Weetabix, which is the biscuit ones.
That's so funny.
I do something really similar.
My favorite is Special K red berries plus milk plus Nutella.
Oh, yum.
I love that Nutella and peanut butter do not dissolve into the milk at all.
And I love that you just get like gobs of it and it's just kind of floating around.
Little floaters.
Oh, little floaters of just consolidated fat.
I love it.
Love it.
All right. That weird Asian one.
I like taking waffles, eggs, bacon, and syrup and making a breakfast taco slash burrito with it.
Wow, you're so brave.
No, I actually hate this.
Me, one of the worst flavor combinations in all of food are eggs and maple syrup.
I love maple syrup on pancakes.
Love it on bacon and sausage.
Cannot stand when it touches my eggs or potatoes for that matter.
You're so sensitive.
I'm a Puritan.
I love this and I would do this.
So don't worry.
I support you.
Even though it's pretty basic.
I am a Puritan.
I have never even had a Cincinnati five-way.
Dale underscore Mark says,
a food revelation passed on to me by an adventurous and brave friend.
Dash of Diet Coke in your chicken flavored ramen will change your instant ramen game for good.
What the heck?
I love these little, I love these silly little hacks of how to make ramen taste better.
Like putting a gob of peanut butter or like putting a bunch of fish sauce.
I even think of, I see people put like slap on some American cheese into their ramen.
Hey man, i'm not
gonna judge you i think this is awesome and like cool and i'm honestly probably gonna try it because
i hate diet coke so maybe it'll make me like diet coke this isn't a way for you to enjoy ramen more
it's a way for you to enjoy diet coke more i don't you really lumped in like adding peanut
butter or an egg or fish sauce to your ramen with a dash of diet coke those are
not the same things like fish sauce and ramen makes sense there's a lot of like you know fish
based soups out there peanut butter yeah but that's kind of like the you know uh forgive the
uncouth parlance that but in my neck of the woods that's called white trash pad thai and it's
delicious yeah yeah uh dash i don't know if it's something with like aspartame or the caramel
coloring or just the weird kind of like heady uh artificial flavorings in it but i'm interested in
trying it you've got our curiosities peaked for sure okay this this one's interesting at fidelis
y'all cheese does not belong on chicken sandwiches i agree very hard with this one.
And this is a weird opinion for me to maybe have,
but I've discussed,
I don't like cheese as much as people think I like cheese.
And I think, especially a fried chicken sandwich,
but even a grilled chicken sandwich, to me, it just does not go together.
Like cheese and beef go together,
cheese and chicken,
not in this context for whatever reason.
I sometimes like cheese on my
chicken sandwiches like a nice provolone just blanketed on top with a bunch of mushrooms
and a little bit of onion i think is perfect um but that's like more of like a homemade thing
like if i go out and eat a chicken sandwich chances are i don't want cheese on it yeah
but like at home when i'm doing a homemade little, you know, situation.
Maybe.
I understand like a sharp cheese.
Like you get one of those
like provolone picantes on there.
It's actually adding some flavor.
I actually hate pepper jack cheese.
Did you know that?
Why do you hate pepper jack?
It's such a weird thing to hate.
Pepper jack is nasty.
It's like the little dots in there
like make me think of like worms.
Why do we both have
irrational cheese opinions pepper jack cheese
first of all tastes like booty flakes and also in my mind the little flakes are actually booty flakes
we should market a cereal called booty flakes they're great that's already a slogan i was
gonna say we're just gonna try and buy that off of Frosted Flakes for our booty flakes.
They're booty.
Is that better?
Yeah.
Has anyone ever said the term bootylicious before?
Did we just invent that?
No.
No, we got it.
That's ours.
They're bootylicious.
Jackson064 says, Scrapple, fried hard with grape jelly, sweet gherkins, and cheddar cheese.
In parentheses, sharp.
We had Scrapple together together and we loved it a lot.
Scrapple's good.
Scrapple in a roll with grape jelly.
Instead of sweet gherkins, I would go a hard fried egg.
Oh, really?
I would have a little bit of mustard.
And mustard too, but a Scrapple and egg sandwich
with grape jelly and mustard, to me, fan-freaking-tastic.
Scrapple is the best.
Yeah, people need to eat more Scrapple.
Eat more weird organs ground up and fried.
I'm telling you, it's good for you.
It makes you strong, makes your bones strong.
All right, we got at Welp MFS1.
Garlic powder, onion powder, salt, pepper.
Required for seasoning meat.
Tell your husband I said, you're welcome.
And then rolling on the floor
laughing. Whose husband? What is going on here? Okay. The person's implying that garlic, onion,
salt, and pepper are required for seasoning all meats. That is a very delicious, very basic rub.
I would also add paprika into that because I like the color red. But yeah, that'll honestly
make most meats taste pretty delicious. I think if
you're going to have five seasonings in a cabinet, that is not a bad way to go.
Yeah, I agree. I think garlic powder, onion powder, salt, pepper, paprika are staples,
and everyone should have them in their pantry.
Yeah, and some sort of green flake. That can be parsley.
Josh, tell your husband they said you're welcome.
You're welcome, hubby.
XOXO.
Beth Ann M. Smith says,
black olives smell like ass,
as do cooked beef ramen noodles.
Okay.
I got a theory.
I got a theory for Beth Ann Smith.
I think they're going on a very small sample size.
I think one time they opened a can of black olives
and someone tooted,
and this is probably her husband, and she went hubby did you did you make toot again did you make air biscuits
and he was like honey no i would never make air biscuits to you and then she assumed it was olives
and i think the same thing happened when she cooked beef ramen noodles beth ann smith you
gotta tell hubby to quit making little toots when you're trying to eat your ramen because no i have no idea what the hell you're talking about at matt is evergreen this one nicole i saw this one and i
said this is going to induce a reaction can restaurants and legit everywhere stop putting
onions in and on everything it's a weak ass crutch that smells rank and you should try harder
you should try harder matt is evergreen you should try harder
to freaking be more inclusive and understand that onions are the building blocks of flavor in so
many different culture cuisines matt is evergreen you should try harder and enjoy your damn life
you should change your name to matt is ever mean because this is a dumb opinion and onions are bomb
and you know what's a crutch that people use? Truffle oil.
Truffle oil is a crutch. That's a real crutch.
Onions are the building blocks of flavor along with garlic.
Like, what are you talking about?
You're just trying to be controversial for no reason.
Matt is ever mean.
Edgelord.
Matt is edgelord.
Matt is ever always edgelord, man.
Glad we could agree on that one.
Okay.
Hey, underscore, underscore, it's me.
My sister used to dip hard taco shells in applesauce.
She okay?
Do we need to call somebody?
A lot of people dip in weird stuff in applesauce.
So here's what I'll say about that.
There needs to be a more codified snack that you should dip in applesauce.
Because that's why people are dipping all these weird things.
No, you can't dip apples in applesauce.
It's like just... Why not?
It's like just dipping a slice of cheddar in nacho cheese.
That's weird, but...
No, it's not. Have you ever had a
freaking... Have you ever dipped
chicken into mayonnaise, which is, you know,
eggs?
That's a stretch. You know I do love
chicken dipped in mayonnaise, being the whitest
person on earth.
No, it's like putting ketchup on a slice of tomato and just eating it,
which, well, I guess I'd put Thousand Island on tomatoes.
Acceptable, acceptable, acceptable.
Yeah, yeah, dip apples in your applesauce.
That way you can prevent dipping hard taco shells in your applesauce.
That makes sense to me.
Apple chips.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
At Emilio Ortiz 07, burnt hot dogs taste better from a charcoal grill
as opposed to what burnt in a in the oven just microwave burnt a hot dog um best way to cook
a hot dog that might be one worth exploring do people can do people care about that because i've
said before that i prefer a hot dog that's been poached in lukewarm water for about 50 to 95 minutes
and then taken out and just put wet into a bun and then wrapped up.
But now thinking about a good charred hot dog from the grill, it gets me all excited.
My favorite way to eat a hot dog is I take a hot dog.
It has to be Hebrew national.
And then I slash it like 15 times.
And then it kind of looks like it's like been like through the ringer a lot
and then i take it on a searing searing searing searing searing hot pan and then i just like
let it naturally flip over on itself you can't see me right now but i'm flipping
i'm flipping my fingers i'm kidding i'm six i'm kidding i'm six. I'm kidding. I'm six. Lighten up.
No, it's you.
It's you.
It's you.
Squiddy Cake says, rolled gold pretzels and cream cheese tastes like, wait, wait, this person doesn't know what's going on.
Rolled gold pretzels pretzel and cream cheese tastes like popcorn popcorn.
Okay.
This is good.
I'm happy that you have found this out.
I don't think so.
I think this person has a concussion. Because happens right you get like weird what no not anosmia did dis dysphagia i'll
call it no dysphagia is a thing where you can't eat food properly they got a weird thing where
if you get a concussion you like smell popcorn maybe i think that's what happened don't fall asleep at dagny jackson growing up a treat in
quotes which is how you know it was not a treat we were given was pretzels on a plate with a dollop
of mayonnaise to dip them in why are you making burner accounts again josh we talked about this
last time enough enough no my treat was a frozen was a frozen McDonald's hamburger that I would microwave and put Thai sweet chili sauce on.
That was my treat.
And that's a real treat.
Yeah, just dipping pretzels in mayonnaise, though.
That sounds great to me.
Were they like soft pretzels or like hard pretzels, you think?
I'm guessing.
I was hoping soft.
I'm guessing hard pretzels.
I remember the first time I took my high school girlfriend on a date to like a nice restaurant, you know, one where you had to spend like a hundred dollars on like a whole dinner.
There's this nice Italian restaurant called Te Amo Ristorante in Laguna Beach. Uh, and they like
brought out their free bread type of thing, which were a Grissini or Italian breadsticks.
And what we thought was whipped butter, but it was just like a cup of mayonnaise.
I'm guessing it was aioli or something. I've done that before. I've definitely done that before. Yeah. And I was into it. And my high school girlfriend was like like a cup of mayonnaise i'm guessing it was aioli or something i've done that before i've definitely done that before yeah and i was into it and my high school girlfriend
was like stop eating the mayonnaise and i'm like this is going to frame my love life for years to
come isn't it she said yes josh i am from the future 314 cheller says chocolate tastes great
sandwich between two chips. Yeah.
Yeah, yeah.
It sure does.
This is what we call a stoner snack.
Yeah, yeah.
This is a stoner snack for sure.
And as someone who once operated a failed pop-up where I lost several thousand dollars
called Stoney Bologna, I can fully, fully endorse the fact that chocolate tastes great
when sandwiched between two chips.
Potato chips and chocolate.
What's that one, Jimmy Fallon ice cream where they do that or whatever?
The Tonight Dough.
Tonight Dough.
No, no, Netflix.
I think it's Netflix and Chill,
but their version of Netflix and Chill, actually.
Why was he always laughing in the background of sketches?
Ruined him.
He ruined so many sketches.
Friend of the show, Jimmy Fallon.
We love Jimmy Fallon.
Ruined sketches.
And on that note,
thank you for listening to A Hot Dog is a Sandwich.
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Bring a bowl of chili.