Dish? Ya' mean, like, food? Cooking? Or do ya' mean dish, like, "Wow, that girl is a real dish!"? If you mean food, how 'bout roast buffalo meat? Baron Max
Scarlette Johnassen..she's a real dish! I know...I know... (walking over to the corner, putting on "fuckwit" hat. "What's up Peta, you here too?")
Yes, food, I would have thought that was obvious since no one has used the term "dish" to describe a chick since about 1940.
yeah thats why I wrote this: look pal...every food in every world was not invented just in that country...the knowledge comes from other nations as well.
Oh...I see now...you ask Americans to name "American" food, and then you show us how it's actually from another country. Another U.S. bashing thread...great.
Did U know that... It is believed that the original potato chip recipe was created by Native American/African American chef George Crum, at Moon's Lake House near Saratoga Springs, New York, on August 24, 1853. He was fed up with a customer — by some accounts Cornelius Vanderbilt (although this has been called into question[1]) — who continued to send his fried potatoes back, because he thought they were too thick and soggy. Crum decided to slice the potatoes so thin that they couldn't be eaten with a fork, nor fried normally in a pan, so he decided to stir-fry the potato slices. Against Crum's expectation, the guest was ecstatic about the new chips. They became a regular item on the lodge's menu under the name "Saratoga Chips." They soon became popular throughout New York and New England. Eventually, potato chips spread beyond chef-cooked restaurant fare and began to be mass produced for home consumption; Dayton, Ohio-based Mike-sell's Potato Chip Company, founded in 1910, calls itself the "oldest potato chip company in the United States
LOL, I knew that at the very beginning. Please Register or Log in to view the hidden image! Its why I went with yams.