A Hot Dog Is a Sandwich - Pastrami vs. Corned Beef
Episode Date: May 25, 2022This is the ultimate battle of the deli meats: pastrami vs corned beef! To learn more about listener data and our privacy practices visit: https://www.audacyinc.com/privacy-policy Learn more abo...ut your ad choices. Visit https://podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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This, this, this, this is Mythical.
Today's the ultimate battle of the deli meats, pastrami vs. corned beef.
Man, why have you got to pit two beefy queens against each other?
Mmm, I like when you say beefy queens. 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 sandwich.
What? Welcome to our podcast, 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 Inaydi.
And Nicole, today we're taking on two juggernauts of the Jewish deli world, even though neither of them are like traditionally maybe Jewish deli meats, but we grew up eating them at Jewish delis.
And even like delis aren't necessarily Jewish, but like we think of them.
Jewish style. It's like Jewish style style it's become a jewish tradition
via the diaspora in new york etc anyways point is corned beef versus pastrami some people think
they're the same thing they're not they're wrong which one do you choose i used to think they were
the same thing for the longest time as a kid i was just like i want the red meat i want the salty i
want the salty delicious one yeah yeah and both of one. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And both
of them are salty and delicious. Exactly. So I used
to not care. I lean
more towards pastrami.
That makes sense. Yeah, does it?
Why? Well, no, I mean, you're, you
are a woman of very discerning
taste. That sounded creepy. I am
a woman. No, it would have been creepier if I said
no, you're a female, right? Yeah. Now
females love, no, you're a female, right? Yeah. Now, females, love.
No, pastrami is just corned beef that has also been peppered and smoked.
Yum.
But isn't it fattier?
So, yeah, if you're going to break it down on, like, the minutiae, pastrami is typically made with a cut of beef called deckel.
Deckel.
That comes from, like, it has the top fattier part that's still like attached to it
whereas corned beef is traditionally made from brisket although if you like really really really
go into it you can start breaking those down and i think it's like somewhat safe to say that
pastrami is a peppered and smoked corned beef it can't be fattier but you can't also get fatty
corned beef corned beef doesn't necessarily have to come i guess traditionally it didn't i guess
maybe it's just i just think pastrami is
easier to come upon in this world.
Yeah, corned beef. Wait, what do you mean?
I don't know. I mean, when I'm thinking
of corned beef, I'm thinking of deli corned beef.
I'm not thinking of like, Irish.
Irish corned beef.
This sounds like my grandmother.
No, no, no. Sauerkraut and potatoes
and, you know, we're cooking the corned beef.
Sauerkraut's not Irish, dude.
What?
What do you mean?
Do you think sauerkraut is like the most German thing in the world?
Okay, but what about the people that eat like-
Corned beef and cabbage you're talking about.
Yeah, isn't cabbage sauerkraut?
Sauerkraut is lacto-fermented cabbage.
It's pickled cabbage.
Okay, I'm right.
Just saying I'm right.
Nicole, you-
Yay!
Oh my God, you are beauty.
You are grace.
You're the smartest person.
This is coming off the heels. we were playing Jeopardy today
Because we do that every day on the little app or whatever
Yeah yeah
And Nicole it was like what's the most northern island of Japan
And Nicole was like Hokkaido and I was like I don't think that's right
And I said Okinawa and then it was Hokkaido
So I need to trust Nicole's smarts more
And that's what we've learned today
Thank you that was really brave of you to say on a public platform
No problem Nicole
You deserve the credit where it is, it is due right at your face.
Josh, what do you like more, corned beef or pastrami?
I don't know. What do you like?
I told you what I like.
Okay. I agree with you that when I was a kid, because I grew up eating just large deli platters at any Jewish family gathering, right?
Sure. Like you'd be meeting for someone's birthday. And if it was between the hours of like 9 a.m. and noon,
you would have the bagel and lox platter.
If it was between like noon and 3 p.m.,
you just have the giant deli platter out there.
Yeah.
And that's what I grew up on.
And I used to not even think about the difference
between pastrami and corned beef
because I was like, they're both just salty, delicious.
Now that I've gotten older,
my palate has become more refined.
Yeah.
I prefer the purity of corned beef.
But how is it the purity if it's pastrami plus other things?
No, pastrami is corned beef plus other things.
No, it's not.
Yes, it is.
What do you mean?
What do you think pastrami is?
Describe the process of making pastrami.
No.
No, I thought, no, but this whole time.
So corned beef is like you make a brine and you let it sit and then you smoke it, right?
You don't know.
Corned beef isn't smoked.
Corned beef is brined and then boiled.
Brined and boiled.
Okay, okay.
But then pastrami is just meat that you like dry, like dry brine.
Well, so the interesting thing about that is pastrami the
root word of it you mentioned basturma earlier yeah basturma is uh i associate with turkey right
but also i mean i think it's armenian it's whatever yeah there it's you know across that
whole region uh the closest like root to the jewish pastrami that we have today is probably
brought from romanian jews And it's called pastarma.
But of course, same root word going back to like ancient Latin or whatever.
And that was typically made using a dry brine. And then it would actually be like cold smoked sometimes.
And it was typically made with, if it wasn't a Romanian Jew doing it,
if it was just a Romanian Romanian,
they would probably be doing it with pork or lamb sometimes.
But like there's even pastrami goose.
It's just like a way of curing.
It's a process.
Yeah, it's a preservation method.
Pastrami-ing something.
Exactly.
Well, but not pastrami-ing, pastrami-ing.
Pastrami-ing.
Because you don't get the word pastrami until you see it in Jewish delis in like, you know,
maybe the late 1800s, early 1900s in America.
And people, the operating theory, there's not like a ton of etymological research about
that, about this is that Romanian Jews who started opening up delis alongside German
Yiddish Jews in New York, they were just like, we see the word salami is popular, especially
because, you know, there were a ton of Italians living there at the time as well.
Cool.
We see the word salami is popular, past so they'll get it pastrami oh so they
just combined it yeah they just co-opted it cool and so when i think of like jewish corned beef i
just think of effectively unsmoked unpeppered pastrami but there's something about like the
purity nicole you know how much i love boiled meats. You are such a boiled meat man. Oh, boiled sliced meat. But there's such like a beautiful craft to corned beef.
I agree.
It definitely is.
There's something about it I really, really like though.
It's just good.
Yeah.
And it's like, it's aromatic.
Yeah.
Because like typically, so you mentioned like the Irish corned beef and cabbage, right?
Yeah.
So corned beef was really, really huge as an export from ireland and there's
a lot of historical reasons god dang nicole i'm about to spiral into a history lesson again i have
nothing better to do so i'm down to get edumacated okay cool so in the 1600s um britain was like
basically invaded and took over ireland right yeah and then the two economies, you say that like, you know, and then they passed like a cattle export ban.
So you couldn't like export cattle from Ireland to Britain for some odd reason.
But in Ireland, they, Ireland had a much lower salt tax than England.
So it was like one tenth the price.
Ireland had a much lower salt tax than England.
Salt was like the tax was literally one-tenth of what it was in England.
So basically they were like, we got a bunch of cattle.
We need to preserve it.
We're going to just use all this cheap-ass salt to just pack into the beefs.
And they would use every part of the cow for this.
And then they would typically can it.
And then this is like kind of later in the future a little bit uh they had a huge demand from navies at the time
where so like ireland was basically just exporting all this corned beef um but that said people in
ireland they were so exploited by the british um and all the the taxes and the tariffs and the
bans and all that that they like couldn't afford to eat the beef themselves oh wow so corned beef
is a big thing that like the irish saw as a huge luxury and they would export, that they couldn't afford to eat the beef themselves. Oh, wow. So corned beef was a big thing that the Irish saw as a huge luxury and they would export,
but they weren't eating that too much.
Then the Irish, especially during the Great Famine of the 1860s, Nicole, are you tracking
this, Nicole?
Are you tracking this?
I'm disassociating pretty hardcore, but it's nice for you to speak and make eye contact
with me.
So I'm like, here.
This is the quality time we get.
I understand.
I understand.
I'm following.
Great Famine in the 1860s the irish
because of the potatoes because the potato plate yeah there's a potato plate but it was more because
of the british extractionist crappy policies oh that made yeah so anyway anyways nicole's bored
i'm gonna wrap this up the irish move in large waves to new york city especially and they start
living next to who nico? The Jews. The Jews.
They start living.
They really did.
There's a bunch of songs from the early 1900s.
Oh, nice.
This is all from like 20 minutes of me reading about it.
I'm fascinated with this.
It is fascinating.
There are a bunch of songs from like the early 1900s
like about the Jewish-Irish connection.
Nice.
And like Romeo and Juliet stories and folk songs about it.
It's really cool.
Is Romeo and Juliet, is Romeo Jewish?
No.
Is Juliet Jewish?
I'm saying like that forbidden love between the Irish community and the Jewish community was a big thing in 1900 songs.
Anywho, so then the Irish get here and the Jewish deli owners are like, yo, we got these giant slabs of corned beef and beef in America is hella cheap.
And the Irish were making a lot more money in New York than they did in Ireland.
And they're like, yo, corned beef?
Like, that's stuff that we used to be deprived of?
Like, hell yeah, give that to me.
So it became a big Irish-American thing, even though corned beef, especially with cabbage, is, like, hardly eaten at all in Ireland itself.
Interesting.
Yeah.
So it's like an immigrant food.
Yeah, it's very much like an immigrant food.
It's like the orange chicken of Irish-Americans, right? Cool. That's really interesting. Yeah, it's very much like an immigrant food. It's like the orange chicken of Irish Americans. That's really
interesting. Yeah, and then so that became
a Jewish deli staple
in a big part because demand
from Irish Americans. Sure. And then
you have the Romanian Jews with their pastarma
via pastrami. And so now
we have these two delicious musicals that we get to
debate about and we get to choose. I know, we're so lucky.
We're so lucky. So what's your go-to
sandwich out of jelly other than, what is it,
liver or chopped onion? What's the other one?
Other than your liver. My delicious chopped onion.
What's your other one? When you're at a
deli, you're always going towards
the corned beef?
Corned beef Reuben? Pastrami Reuben?
This is tough. So Reuben is typically made with
pastrami. Yes. And Reuben
is typically made with sauerkraut, Russian dressing
and Swiss cheese. Marble rye.ussian dressing and swiss cheese marble rye on marble rye good marble um i love the idea i love the idea of a reuben more than
i love an actual reuben sure i totally understand that you know what i mean yeah but a reuben like
you have your preferences with the reuben i feel like everyone does mine's pastrami if you're
wondering is that your standard order when you go to a deli?
No, it's not my standard order.
But there's something about a Reuben sandwich that I feel like every human needs to like
zero in on.
Yeah.
And you need to find out what meat you like.
I just like a pastrami sandwich.
I think I actually said this in the last podcast, the 100 foods you need to eat before you die.
I think it was a pastrami sandwich on some sort of bread.
I don't remember the bread with mustard.
Well, what kind of bread do you go?
Like, we're at a deli right now.
We're going to Brent's in Northridge, Nicole.
Fun field trip.
I've never been to Brent's,
but I had a friend who worked there,
and I was always like,
hey, Lily, can I come?
And she's like, no.
It's a great Jewish deli.
Yeah.
It's just a schlep.
It's a schlep.
I've heard Brent's is very, very good.
I'm going to get,
well, it depends what kind of bread they have.
I really do like just a rye.
I do like rye bread.
Marble or just like a good caraway seeded?
Just regular rye, caraway seeded rye.
And I like it only lightly toasted on one side.
I don't get toasted.
You get toasted on your like sandwich?
Yes.
I would never get it toasted.
Let me tell you what it is.
You have to toast it and then you put the mustard on the untoasted part.
And then so you can have the crunchy bread and then the soft bread.
That is, listen, I respect the discernment of your taste.
Yeah.
Do you like coleslaw in your pastrami slash corned beef sandwiches?
No.
But that's a big thing.
Okay.
So the last time, the only time I've been to a legit New York deli.
Nicole, are you ready for the the jewishness of this sentence i met i met i went to kats's deli with the feldman brothers
who i met on birthright and they took me to kats's that's cool it was really cool i went as an
appetizer to another dinner that i was going to sounds like something that happens in new york a
lot yes is it true like people like eat, like they have like first
dinner and then second dinner. Everything's so close
to each other and everything's open so
and then we went bar hopping. We just went to like eight different places.
That's fun. But
went to Katz's. I didn't know how to take the subway
so I walked two and a half miles there and I was like
afraid to hail a cab because I literally thought
I'd try and hail a cab and the cabbie would be like, that's not how
you do it, idiot! And drive away.
Because that's how everyone in New York talks and so I just walked and I showed up there sweaty
because I thought it was cold in New York and I only brought long pants any whom I get there I'm
super hungry um I get a corned beef sandwich on rye with chopped liver on it and that to me is
the ideal deli did anybody look at you funny no's just like a... Is that a normal thing to get?
It must be. That's so incredible.
I love chopped liver. That's what I'm saying.
I never knew that was a thing I could get. And I love it
as a condiment on a deli sandwich
in the same way that you'd put pate
on like a bun mee, right? Sure, absolutely.
And so that is my ideal deli sandwich. And I don't even
need mustard on the sandwich. I have mustard
on the side. For dipping. And like, of course, you go
to Katz's and the sandwiches are nine inches
tall. Double decker, yeah. And so you're just
eating half the meat plain on its own, dipping
it in mustard. And then we got a knish
and then we got a hot dog and I had to try the Reuben. What's a knish?
What's a knish? I don't eat knishes.
Oh my god, Nicole, I get to teach you about our culture.
It's like a flaky pastry that's typically
filled with potato. Yeah.
Ashkenazi juice.
Yum! We figured out how to put starch on starch. Sounds like a borek. Yeah, really similarazi juice. Yum. We figured out
how to put starch on starch.
Sounds like a borek.
Sounds like a borek.
Yeah, really similar, yeah.
It's like a German-Yiddish borek.
I don't know, man.
I love both so much,
but I just lean towards pastrami.
Have you ever had the hat before?
Yes, I've had.
I've never been to the hat, but every single time I pass one of those billboards, I'm like, damn it.
I really got to go to the hat.
Okay, so the hat is like a Southern California institution.
There was some by me where I grew up in Orange County, about 50 miles south of LA.
And the pastrami that they serve, it is like, if you think of Jewish jelly pastrami, right?
You're thinking of like that fatty deco or brisket that's been smoked super long.
It's super tender.
Like I remember watching the pastrami jiggle at Katz's, Nicole.
At Katz's, they brine their pastrami for three weeks.
They boil it for three days.
They smoke it for three days.
And then they steam it before they slice it.
Wow.
So it is just a jiggly, fatty deliciousness.
You go to a place like The Hat, they're slinging like fast and dirty pastrami sandwiches.
That stuff's just coming from a factory.
I still want to try.
Does it have like the pepper on the side of it and it's like curled a little bit?
Yeah, it's curled because the fat's still kind of hard.
You'll get some gristly pieces.
Oh, wow.
That represents the two different kinds of pastrami, right?
Yeah, but I feel like you don't get that sort of spectrum with corned beef.
You don't.
And I think that's a problem.
I want more corned beef specialists out there.
Give me the young, cool, hipster Jews.
Nicole, there's like hipster Jews making like cool Ashkenazi Jewish,
like smoked and kippered fish.
Yeah.
You know, they're doing like burnt habanero and cilantro stem,
you know, kippered salmon. Cool. Why know, they're doing like burnt habanero and cilantro stem, you know, kippered salmon.
Cool.
Why can't we get that with corned beef?
Well, there's a pop-up called The Bad Jew and she makes pork strommy.
She's making pork strommy. Which is pretty freaking cool if you ask me.
But I don't know.
I don't know.
I just can't wrap my head around why.
There's something about the two of them.
Like if I saw them both on a plate, which one would I eat?
Like on its own?
I don't know.
Pastrami is more inviting.
Pastrami is sexier.
Pastrami and Nicole's a sexier meat.
I kind of think corned beef is sexier on its own.
In the way that like.
No, I'm flip-flopping.
I don't know.
You ever like, you know, really like see your partner without makeup and you're like, man,
that's like, that's true.
That's true sexiness right there.
That is beauty. There's something about just the naked. That's true sexiness right there. That is beauty.
There's something about just the naked club.
That's like unadorned corned beef.
It doesn't, Nicole, corned beef, sexy queen, sexy beefy queen corned beef
doesn't need the adornment of the pepper, of the spices, of the smoke.
No, it's there.
I kind of like, like right now I'm like having like a moment in my mind.
Like I have, like i literally right here
okay yeah i'm imagining it imagining it there's one plate of pastrami and there's one plate of
corned beef and you're literally supposed to just try one which one are you going for because right
now my like my initial instinct is pastrami but now that we've been talking about it so much maybe
it's corned beef nicole lean into the wet supplements of the corned
beef. It gets so wet.
It is the meat designed to be soaked.
If that's not sexy, I don't know what is. The soaked
beef sheets.
And there's like a level of like
fat sometimes on the top
and you're like, wow.
Just poached
fat. Meggie, are you okay?
Gelatinous, white, and jiggling Maggie.
Just imagine that.
You give it a little slap.
Maggie needs to leave.
Maggie's Google searching soaked beef sheets right now.
What do we got?
Not nearly as dirty as we thought the results would be.
Have you ever had the Hillshire Farm ones that are like, corned beef, strong.
You're talking about just straight lunch meat.
The one with the red Tupperware top.
Yes, yes, yes.
I love those too though.
I do too.
There's a place for those too.
That's what I grew up on.
Yeah, me too.
If you had to choose between, if I'm choosing on those, Nicole, I'm going pastrami.
I'm going pastrami just because it has pepper on the side.
Same, same, same.
I've been, big news in my life, I've been buying a lot of lunch meat recently.
Good for you. I found that
I really enjoy if I need a nice, healthy snack, I'll grab a fistful of ham. You have ham in the
house? Yeah, it must be nice, right? I listen, we're modern. I'm kidding. Okay, so what I want
to know is what about all of the different kinds of corned beef? Because corned beef means different
things to different people aside from the Jewish deli stuff.
What about the canned stuff?
Nicole, I have an entire case
of Pure Foods brand corned beef
from the Philippines.
One of my best friends, Emil,
shout out, Emil, thanks for bringing all the nice Filipino snacks
as a gift. I was like, hey man, thanks for letting me
stay here tonight. Here's a pallet of
corned beef. What a gentleman.
And I also grew up on corned beef hash in a can.
Yeah, there's like corned beef hash.
And then Libby's the one where you have to use like the weird like pin to open it.
Yeah.
Why are they called corned beef?
Okay.
Well, so it is corned.
Like the corning process.
Corn referred to the size of the salt kernels.
This is just information that I know.
This is so interesting.
This isn't like planning. This is just something I know. It looks like corn kernels. This is just information that I know. This is so interesting. This isn't like planning for this.
This is just something I know.
So you're not kosher.
It looks like corn kernels.
Okay.
And so they would just dump a bunch of these corn ass looking salt kernels.
What kind of salt?
Into a tub.
It was just sea.
Sea salt, Nicole, from this Irish sea.
Any questions?
So koshering and corning are the same thing.
Yeah, man.
Come on.
It's just all salt.
And you're just all salt and all the beefs.
Actually, did you know, hold on.
Did you know the original corned beef recipe in Ireland, Nicole, they actually used sea ash.
They would burn, Nicole, check this out.
They would burn salty seaweed and then cover that in ash.
Wow.
Yeah, yeah.
That sounds great.
And I won't be surprised if some weirdo makes an L.A. pop-up about that.
Dude, yeah.
Yeah.
Corn beef with sea ash.
We got 900-year-old corn beef recipe covered in sea ash.
Why don't you do that for us?
Why don't you do that for the Meals of History show?
Oh, that'd be good.
Yeah.
Oh, hey.
Yeah.
Oh, that's a great pitch.
Thanks.
You know what?
You know what?
You know what I think is really cool?
There's been a big pastrami resurgence.
Yeah, pastrami sexy.
Pastrami sexy again.
There was when I was doing my pop-up at Smorgasburg, Stony Bologna Artisanal Chimichangas.
How many years ago was that?
Like five years ago?
Yeah, and it's all I can seem to talk about.
But that said, I lost $5,000.
Not a great time for me.
We're proud of the work that we did.
But the dude next to me nicole the dude next
to me i'm such a good businessman the dude next to me ugly drum pastrami oh yeah i feel like he
kicked off a wave of like crap pastrami where like you take the it's really good the brisket or the
deckle and you do it almost texas style and like that's the way you slice it and he's really just
thick it is a thick salted brined peppery brisket that jiggles like Texas brisket.
Yeah.
You know?
You know who's also doing it really good?
I love Wexler's.
Yeah?
Wexler's is a really good.
Another new school cool kid deli in Los Angeles is making Kraft pastrami.
Wait, no.
I think, do they make their own?
I think Ugly Drum makes pastrami for Wexler's.
Do they?
I don't know.
I could be talking
out of my tuchus here nicole um but that said there hasn't been a cool kid craft corned beef
resurgence what if we're the ones to do it i'm i have nothing better like i said i have nothing
better to do do you think we can make corned beef sexy again yeah i think so We just got to change the name. Corned has a negative connotation to it.
Salt beef.
No.
More.
Horn beef.
Come on down and get some of that horn beef.
You're all horned up for some beef, aren't you?
Come down to Josh and Nicole's Horned Beef Emporium.
Horned Emporium.
Horned Emporium.
Hardcore horned beef.
We got a lot of horns.
Yeah, they should do a, they should make like, well, not us of horns yeah they should do a they should make like well not us
but like someone should do
hard corn
hard corn beef
okay it takes
it's a stretch to get you there
from the pun
but I do
respect and appreciate it
you ever had pastrami
like in a dish
that doesn't typically
have pastrami
and you're like
hey now
what the heck's going on here you're a rock star like pastrami like in a dish that doesn't typically have pastrami and you're like, hey now, what the heck's going on here?
You're a rock star.
Like pastrami fries or pastrami burger?
Pastrami fries.
Pastrami burger?
Pastrami burger.
Well, I'm thinking specifically of there's a restaurant that makes a pastrami pad kee mau.
It's like a Thai stir fried noodle with a bunch of pastrami in it.
Yes, I've had that before.
How do you feel about that?
It's okay.
It doesn't like change my life.
It was a good dish.
There's like pastrami tacos at a spot in New York.
A chef named Alex Stupak was doing it.
I remember that was a big deal back in the day.
I feel like the best application of pastrami is on a sandwich.
I agree.
I do love a good pastrami sandwich.
I do love a good pastrami burger, though.
That's a part of our childhoods growing up.
Pastrami burgers, kind of fire with a nice onion ring in there.
Oh, one of my one of my favorite genre of restaurants.
And this is something that is like somewhat unique to Southern California, typically because of our, you know, big multicultural influence.
And a lot of these places were owned by Greek immigrants, which is funny.
Yeah.
But it is like a diner style but
like not a sit-down diner like an order at the counter diner and they serve charbroiled burgers
hot dogs bean burritos crispy beef tacos pastrami sandwiches and teriyaki bowls are you talking
about johnny pastrami right now i'm talking about johnny pastrami i'm talking about king's burgers
yeah which also now has a sushi bar
inside of it. Incredible. But to me, that's like you go there in the pastrami is not good. It's
not like the best craft pastrami you're ever going to have. Yeah. But the best part about it is that
you can get a plate of like chili cheese fries topped with pastrami, a pastrami burger with like
blue cheese on it and then like a teriyaki bowl for dessert and that to me is a
really beautiful thing i have a story about johnny pastrami what's your story i went for my 21st
birthday to johnny pastrami why what a place to celebrate i don't know i was dating a weird guy
at that time but it was a really good sandwich it was like soft that's the story yeah that's it
yeah i just i you're right we need a corned beef resurgence in the U.S. today.
Yeah.
We need to make it sexy again.
We need to rebrand it.
We need to make it as sexy as pastrami is.
But I just don't know how to do it.
I do.
Okay, how do you do it?
You need two sexy spokespeople.
Nicole, you need two young, sexy, 30, flirty, and thriving corned beef,
corned beef spokespeople.
I'm 29.
Well, wait, we need to get our business plan together.
Okay.
And then Josh and Nicole's Horned Beef Emporium can open up probably somewhere in like Lancaster.
It's going to be maybe 50 miles outside of LA.
Aren't there a lot of religious zealots in Lancaster?
Yeah.
We just need to get them on our side.
We need to convince them.
We need to convince them that like, I don't know, I can't speak to the anti-Semitic nature
of the Lancaster potentially.
Okay. But like, you know, we'll cater to their church potlucks or whatever. Sure. I don't know. I can't speak to the anti-Semitic nature of the Lancaster potentially. Okay.
But like, you know, we'll cater their church potlucks or whatever.
Sure.
I don't know.
We'll figure it out.
Okay.
But either way, come down to Josh and Nicole's Horned Beef Emporium down in Lancaster, California, circa 2024.
And we'll get your beef sheets nice and wet.
Let's get corny.
That's the Josh and Nicole guarantee.
Wow, I'm making noises today. I had
110 grams of just whey protein
before noon today, and that's a problem.
Alright, Nicole, we've heard what you and I have to say.
Now it's time to find out what other wacky ideas are
rattling out there in the Twitterverse.
It's time for a segment we call...
Opinions on that casserole!
I need an antacid, dude.
I need something to quell my tummy pains because it is a gurgling...
Drink water.
I already had a diet Red Bull.
It's not water!
No, it's better than water
it's got nutrients in it there's no nutrient content ew ew ew ew do you need a spit bucket
i don't know what happened now we're good okay start the first one please if you can all right
first up we got hey nicole you're a fan of podcasts right i love podcasts can i can i can i
pitch you on a new podcast listen dude you mind if I do that right now?
I mean, I don't know if I have time, but make it quick.
Make it quick.
Listen, listen.
Okay, so I'll make it quick.
So Trevor Talks Too Much is hosted by Trevor Evers.
He's a member of the Mythical Kitchen that we all know and love.
Yes, I'm familiar.
And what he does, Nicole, is he sits down with somebody who's part of an industry that you love,
such as gaming or maybe even sports.
Sometimes they dance.
Sometimes they sing.
And then Trevor has a really great conversation with them.
His episode with Justa Minx is one of the funniest damn things I've ever heard.
And Justa Minx is, I mean, just what a precocious, very vulgar woman.
She ends up paying Trevor $24 because she can't stop swearing.
It was a whole thing.
All right.
At the Nick Novak, the combination of peanut butter, chili, and crushed Doritos are fantastic and deeply underrated hot dog toppings together.
He recommends peanut butter on the bun, chili, followed by Doritos on top of the dog.
Peanut butter.
No.
Yeah.
No.
Wait, you're not into this?
No.
Peanut butter and chili.
I add peanut butter to my chili, which all the Texans are going to really love and respect.
They're going to go, wow, Josh.
No.
I know that that follows
several savory peanut butter adaptations
of international recipes.
You seem very smart. I do like the chili
and crushed Doritos, but the peanut butter?
Nah, I can't. I can't do that.
You're wrong. No, I'm not. You're wrong.
I'm not wrong. Vince DeLong
says sweet pickles are not pickles.
They should be called whole relish.
I agree. Sign me up.
Where do I petition for this?
I am 100% down for that.
We issued the decree.
Sweet pickles have been plaguing us for too long.
They are now whole relish, and I know to stay away from them.
Because I love little chopped pickles on things.
I do not enjoy pre-prepared pickle relish.
I love pickled relish.
You love pickled relish?
Yes.
It serves its purpose.
It's sweet and gloopy.
Yeah.
It's good on a hot dog. It's good on gloopy. Yeah. It's good on a hot dog.
It's good on a hot dog.
It's really good on a hot dog.
I haven't had a hot dog in a long time.
I got a hot dog from Katz's.
It was just a fine hot dog.
Why did you get a hot dog?
Because he said you got to get the hot dog.
That's like going to a sushi restaurant and getting a pasta.
What are you talking about?
I'll get a sushi pasta.
I don't care.
You're weird.
At Nathan Bring 4, French fried onions make basically any savory dish better.
It's criminal
they only show up on tables on thanksgiving uh yeah uh these are great yeah i got a story about
this oh yeah this is involved going on a date on your 21st birthday to the french onion factory
yeah nicole i went to the french onion factory a restaurant that absolutely oh you're talking
about like the french's onion factory not not a restaurant called the French Onion Factory, like the Cheesecake Factory.
Obviously.
Where all they serve are 40 varieties of French onion soup.
Obviously, bro.
Keep up.
No.
Okay.
So one, Julia refused to throw anything away.
Yes.
We had like half a can of French's fried onions left over after last Thanksgiving because we only went through one and a half cans for our green bean casserole.
So that's just been sitting in our pantry for forever.
I started using them as salad croutons.
Yes.
That's the end of the story.
That's a great story.
I kind of thought there was more there, and then there wasn't.
But I did that.
It's good as hell.
Such a good story.
I love that story.
Terrible story, for being honest.
Innovation, innovation.
Dietary Fiber says, the best milkshake is a butter milkshake, vanilla ice cream base,
a tad of vanilla extract, and a heaping healthy of them sweet cultured cream remains um i've never had one but i there are people out there that
drink buttermilk uh i've never been that person but you i mean this does look good look real good
something gets me all hot and heavy when you're talking about a heaping helping of sweet cultured
cream remains and i effing love
buttermilk ice cream i made a bunch of buttermilk ice cream cool um yeah no isn't that the coolest
thing i've ever heard wow oh my god because you're like wow you make ice cream out of milk and cream
but buttermilk that's that is cool i'm not being i'm not being a dick i'm being honest i think it's
cool and you know what i did with one of them with one of those batch nicole i made a milkshake out
of it oh was it good oh Oh my God, so good.
Did you put salt in it?
Yeah.
Because we love salted malted milkshakes in the Mythical Kitchen.
There's one thing you know about the Mythical Kitchen.
We love salted malted milkshakes.
Correct, correct.
All right, at xmansburger15, scones or scones if you're British, they're like some, oh, scones are garbage is what they said.
They're like someone was trying to make a muffin But used Bisquick
Instead of love
Um
Scones
Okay here's
Here's how you know
Scones are garbage
Every time you go to a coffee shop
And late in the day
And you want a pastry
They go
All that's left are scones
And you go
You know why
Because they suck
Yeah
Um
I love a good scone
And I like a good fruit scone
I don't like a chocolate scone.
Oxymoron.
The term good scone doesn't exist.
I like scones.
Well, the thing is, is it a scone or a scone?
Because scones, I feel like, are the ones with the ridges on the outside.
Are they? And a scone is the one that's like freeform.
I don't know.
I mean, we consider like a scone in America.
So Brits don't have biscuits.
I mean, they're biscuits or cookies, of course.
But an American biscuit to a Brit is likely the closest equivalent is a scone, right?
Sure.
Or a scone.
But in America, we make scones and we're dropping all kinds of fruits in it, maybe some chocolate, whatever.
I like a scone.
I just like it less than any other pastry that anyone would likely have.
You know what I mean?
A good scone is good, man.
I used to make these incredible fig and cheese scones.
They were like, and chocolate scones.
Oh, they were fire.
It's good.
I like things that are kind of intentionally crappy that makes either coffee or tea taste
better.
You know what I mean?
This is one of those things.
Like, I love like, one of my favorite things is like a concha, right?
Oh, sure.
Which like by itself, it's, you know, it's very kind of crusty.
It's a little bit dry.
It's a little bit sweet. But when you're drinking it it with or when you're eating it with coffee that's an
incredible experience you're dipping it you're sipping it it's a great time so that's how i feel
about a scone it needs to be with a liquid okay not nate mustay 22 says warm dr pepper is a better
compliment to any smoked or grilled meat than any commercially available sauce. Sure. I understand why you feel this way.
I've never done it.
This is a good hot take.
Yeah, this is smart.
You know, people will like spritz down barbecued meats with like apple cider vinegar or something.
Yes.
I would just do that with straight Dr. Pepper.
It would create a nice little caramelly bark on it.
Tons of complexity in there.
There's more aromatics in Dr. Pepper than there is in your barbecue sauce.
This sounds like a heck of an
invention. I want to do it. Same. I've never
done it. This is a good idea. Just straight
Dr. Pepper ribs? Dang. Good stuff.
Ooh, terrible opinion coming up.
At KaneWJ, Kraft Singles dipped in
chocolate pudding is delicious. Wow, sharp
left. Yeah, that's a big turn. This is a sharp
left. Kane, I
really respect that you have such
developed tastes and that you seem to really know
what you want out of life, which is great,
but I dislike the fact that you've ruined
my day. This sounds gross. Sorry.
Tapioca, though.
Sign me the F up.
The problem isn't cheese and pudding.
No, it's the chocolate. It's the chocolate of it all.
It's upsetting, but the chocolate. Butterscotch?
That'd be great.
That's worse. That's worse? Why? Now I'm thinking in my head why that would be better. Butterscotch? That'd be great. That's worse. That's worse? Why? Oh, wait. And now I'm
thinking in my head why that would be better.
Butterscotch will be better because it would remind me of
Brunost. Yeah.
Or Jettost. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Jettost.
Big Jettost fan. What's it like a Norwegian
caramelized cheese?
It's basically a caramelized American cheese.
So good. You're making that. Yeah. Hey, Cain, just
maybe try switching to butterscotch pudding. Yeah.
I mean, if you think chocolate is the best, but, you know, try it.
We're experts.
Yeah.
We are professional food people.
JDZX4 says mashed potatoes should be utilized in more breakfast dishes.
Oh.
Oh.
Oh.
Yeah, I'm going to go ahead and flip that one.
I think shredded potatoes should be utilized in more lunch and dinner dishes.
I love mashed potatoes.
Mashed potatoes are my favorite.
How would you utilize it in a breakfast dish?
I would put a bed of mashed potatoes, and then I would put sunny side eggs, and then bacon.
You treat it like grits?
Yeah.
Kind of sounds nice.
Sounds really nice.
A little soft egg in mashed potatoes?
I'm kind of in.
I'm kind of in.
Who needs polenta, baby?
You got potatoes.
That's fair.
That's fair. At Ghostface Kayla. I'm kind of in. Who needs polenta, baby? You got potatoes. That's fair. That's fair.
At Ghostface Kayla,
great screen name, Kayla.
Good stuff.
Cake is better on its own
or without a ton of frosting.
Sometimes I feel frosting
hides bad or dry cake attempts.
I'm going to stop this right there.
Yes.
That's good.
What?
That's good that frosting
hides bad cake.
That's the point.
It's great.
Most cakes are not great.
A lot of people are bad
at making stuff. Sure. And then frosting fixes it. not, like, great. Like, a lot of people are bad at making stuff.
Sure.
And then frosting fixes it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Yeah, and then they go on to argue the cake is the most important part, and I feel a lot of times frosting overpowers the cake, which should be the star.
That's only if you're making great cake.
If you're making a good cake, and I'm talking about, like, maybe a blood orange upside down cake.
Oh, shoot.
If you're making that, you obviously don't need a frosting.
But if you're making a layer cake and you're making a box cake, use the frosting.
I understand.
They're making the Texas barbecue argument, right?
Oh, if it's so good you don't need barbecue sauce?
Yeah.
It's like that might be true.
Houndstever, 99% are not going to be to that level.
And so I'm going to do what I need to get it down.
Yeah.
One tip for making your cakes less dry,
poke some holes in them and then make a little milk soak out of a little bit of
vanilla extract and whole milk.
Yeah.
I'm curious what Ghostface Kayla would say about a cake soak.
Cakes.
You need to learn about cake soaks.
Well,
no,
I mean,
they may know,
but they may think that is an affront to the quality of cake too.
Like if you're good enough at making cake, your cake should stand alone.
Tres Leches has entered the chat.
Bro, yeah.
Come on.
Come on.
Best way to save a bad cake, soak it in as many kinds of milks as you can afford.
Tres Leches cake is one of the best cakes ever in the history of life.
Underrated.
We don't talk about it too much.
I want to make a pandan Tres Leches.
We have pandan leaves.
We have pandan leaves?
Yeah.
Dude, sick. But, like, where's the time? Where's the time? have pandan leaves. We have pandan leaves? Yeah. Dude, sick.
But like, where's the time?
Where's the time?
I know, I know.
Is it my turn?
Yeah.
Sunshine Nick says,
strawberry flavored things
taste better than strawberries.
Yes.
Strawberry medicine's my favorite.
My mom used to give me
strawberry medicine all the time.
And it turned out great.
I'm a cherry medicine guy.
Ew.
And, and, and, and, and.
Ew.
No, I, Nicole, I don't know if you know this about me I eat about
two to three pounds of strawberries a week
I didn't know you were a strawberry eater
I wasn't until Julia converted me that's one of our
fun little couple things
she makes you eat fruit
I ate two apples before 9am
today I just sat in like the little
foyer in the office and stared at people
I'm a huge fruit eater.
I didn't know that.
I eat all those frozen blueberries.
I had no idea you were such a fruit man.
You've seen my giant sacks
of blueberries in the freezer.
Yeah, but that's just blueberries.
Blueberries aren't real fruit.
What do you mean blueberries are real?
They're so dense with antioxidants.
They're fake.
I eat apples all the time.
I run through a ton of fresh pineapple.
Julie and I will take
a little bit of whipped cream
and like chopped strawberries.
We'll put just little dollops
of whipped cream
and sometimes,
Maggie, look at me,
and sometimes we'll put like some crushed granola on there.
And it's just fun.
It's so cute.
It's like a fun, healthy.
So cute, Josh being wholesome with his wife.
I love it.
Yeah, it's a good time.
It brings me much joy.
I love that.
It's a good time.
Yeah, we'll watch like, she likes watching Catfish, you know, the show.
Such a good show.
She's kind of watching Catfish eating strawberries and whipped cream.
You guys like that a lot of whipped cream? That's a good show. Just kind of watching catfish. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Eating strawberries and whipped cream. You guys got a lot of whipped cream at home?
That's a good.
You talk about eating whipped cream a lot at your house.
Oh, yeah.
Oh, we do.
We keep at least two to three bottles.
That's crazy, man.
Because once you run out of one, then, Nicole, that's like a warning.
Because you run out of one, your next night's not ruined.
You don't got to immediately go to the grocery store.
Do you have it every night?
No, probably three, four nights a week.
That's so cute.
It's a nice little treat.
You guys are so freaking cute.
Yeah, we're...
And on that note, thank you for listening to Hot Dog is a Sandwich.
If you want to hear more from us here in the Mythical Kitchen,
we got new episodes for you every Wednesday.
If you want to be featured on Opinions or Like Casseroles,
you can hit us up on Twitter at MythicalChef
or at AndyZonda with the hashtag OpinionCasserole.
And for more Mythical Kitchen, check us out
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And of course, if you want to share pictures of your dishes,
hit us up on Instagram at Mythical Kitchen.
See you next time.