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Do not have Italian food and whiskey for breakfast
Posted on 8/10/25 at 7:51 am
Posted on 8/10/25 at 7:51 am
That's my thread
Posted on 8/10/25 at 8:46 am to Harry Rex Vonner
Thanks a bunch. My Acid Reflux started acting up just by reading that. Time to take a Tumms.
Posted on 8/10/25 at 8:54 am to Harry Rex Vonner
I love Italian food, but it doesn't love me.
Posted on 8/10/25 at 10:59 am to Harry Rex Vonner
quote:
Do not have Italian food and whiskey for breakfast
If you are not a Sicilian
If you are a pussy
FIFY
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:05 pm to Harry Rex Vonner
. . . with some cold pizza makes a mighty fine breakfast.
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:07 pm to Harry Rex Vonner
Not if it's this !! Worked all day in Foggia Italy and we stopped late that night to eat before going to our hotel. Ordered this and it was served warm.


Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:18 pm to OK Roughneck
Mussels better be served warm. The heat opens them up. If they do not open you do not eat them, as the ones that do not open will put you in the hospital or cemetery with great haste.
Posted on 8/10/25 at 12:22 pm to Cheese Grits
I wanted pasta but it was so late they weren't serving it. 
Posted on 8/10/25 at 3:22 pm to OK Roughneck
I chill the pasta in the refrigerator to lower its GI response.
Posted on 8/10/25 at 11:01 pm to Harry Rex Vonner
What if you're in Italy? Isn't everything Italian food?
Posted on 8/11/25 at 8:56 am to 1BIGTigerFan
quote:
What if you're in Italy? Isn't everything Italian food?

Posted on 8/11/25 at 11:28 am to awestruck
quote:I used to hate rice as a kid, but now I love it. Chuan Jiang Hao and Kung Fu Noodles have great takeout.
And rice.
Posted on 8/11/25 at 11:43 am to 1BIGTigerFan
quote:
What if you're in Italy? Isn't everything Italian food?
Nope, lots of pasta courtesy of Marco Polo bringing Chinese food to Italy.
The oldest recorded references to noodles come from China, where a 4,000-year-old bowl of millet noodles was discovered at the Lajia archaeological site in northwestern China in 2005. This find, preserved in an overturned clay bowl, proved that China had been making noodles from millet long before wheat became a staple grain in the region. Ancient Chinese texts such as the Han Dynasty records (c. 206 BCE–220 CE) also describe the process of making noodles from various grains, indicating that wheat-based pasta was later introduced and refined over time.
Lot of what I ate as a kid was Roman / Italian grains that were more like barley than wheat.
Middle East played a crucial role in pasta’s development. Arabic culinary traditions from at least the 9th century CE mention a dried pasta known as “itriyya”, which was made from wheat and could be stored for long periods—perfect for trade and long journeys. A 9th-century text by Ibn al-Mibrad from modern-day Iraq describes boiled dough strips resembling vermicelli, one of the earliest clear references to what we might recognize as pasta today. The word itriyya later made its way to Sicily through Arab traders, influencing early Italian pasta-making traditions.
A longer and flatter noodle we recognize today
The Roman Empire also had its own pasta-like dishes. While they did not have the modern pasta we recognize today, they consumed laganae, a form of flat dough sheets that were cut into strips and cooked, similar to lasagna.
Probably true Roman / Italian food we know today
Most real cuisine of any area historically come from simple ingredients in a few miles from consumption. Meats come from areas with grain. Seafood comes from costal areas. Pizza from Italy is all about the dough and sauce (simple, inexpensive ingredients from close by) and is not about cheese and other topping. Red pizza would be more land people and white pizza would be more water people.
Posted on 8/11/25 at 7:17 pm to 1BIGTigerFan
I dont think I saw one menu that also had the menu in English while I was in Italy.
The Italian salesman I was traveling with asked me why Americans always expect the rest of the world to know the English language but we never try to learn theirs.
I told him because we are the reigning WW2 champs.
... 
The Italian salesman I was traveling with asked me why Americans always expect the rest of the world to know the English language but we never try to learn theirs.
I told him because we are the reigning WW2 champs.
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