- cross-posted to:
- coolguides@lemmy.ca
Fartons? At least that name didn’t come from an English speaking country.
They look tasty though. Fartons in my mouth please.
Surprised by the name too! https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fartons
Literally came to the comments to confirm that the top comment would be about fartons. Thank you.
In french, “fart” is the wax you put on skis. “Farter” is the verb, to wax or polish something
Looking at the picture they should have been c’mons
Who’s General Tso and why have I been given the cooked remains of his chicken?
I stopped asking questions and just eat increasingly unhealthy portions of it.
Edit: I started asking questions again and turns out, he was a real person.
I always thought it was named after the Three Kingdoms era military leader Cao Cao. I blame it on Wade-Giles making no goddamn sense to me. Tso vs Ts’ao.
Whelp time to re-download dynasty warriors. Thank you.
I think there’s a Netflix documentary about this …
Didn’t know bubble tea is actually that old.
Same here, I genuinely thought they were invented in the past 5 or so years
Spaghetti Carbonara was Italy’s way of saying “sorry we let things get out of hand”. Pretty strong apology, I’d say.
HAHA “Fart-ons”
Caesar salad was a big surprise to me when I learned about it, both the location and date. Tijuana MX 1924. Of course I learned this 25-30 years ago. It was more recent then.
We stopped inventing new food in the 2000s???
Are we sure about Apple Crumble? I’m pretty sure it’s a typical treat of France and mostly German for quite some time. Won’t surprise me if it slightly evolved in GB recently but to be invented…
I found a reference to crumble pies from saxony from 1584. Although a bit different, using crumbles over fruit pies isnt that much different and i’d bet my left nipple, that it has been baked in the centuries before. The date of invention in this case looks like it is being determined through dated recipes of which earlier ones may have been lost.
Some of those I’m surprised they are as old as they are. Nachos seems like something the 70s came up with.
I would love to have a doner here in America
Blended iced coffee is definitely older than the 1980s, though it wasn’t widely popular I think
Either that or stories of grandma making her coffee, putting ice in it, and running it through the food processor to make “a coffee treat every morning” are actually evidence that Grandma was 30 years ahead of the curve
ETA: mentioned it to my wife and she told me that her uncle apparently ran a small coffee shop in TX in the late 70s that did that exact concept, and he claimed that the idea was widespread before he got the idea to put it on his menu for money. So it’s definitely older than the 1980s
Okay, attribution doner kebab to Germany because they put it on bread is just ridiculous!
EDIT Looking into it, it was invented in Turkey, popularised by Turkish immigrants in Berlin. They’ve always been stuffed into bread, like lavaş, pita, etc.
So Germany didn’t even put it on bread, it’s straight up Turkish.
While I didn’t know specific dates, I’m not surprised by the ones I know by name here, tbh. Flavorful food was a luxury for most until relatively recently, and along with the large cultural changes going on last century, these all make sense.
Hawaiian pizza is Canadian? I am shocked
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