Identify your food based on the location of structural starch. Is a hot dog a sandwich? No, it’s clearly a taco.

  • im stuff@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    2 years ago

    shoutout to the internet for combining semantics debate and a deeply aholistic understanding of human food culture to create truly one of my least favorite things on here

  • chris.@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    this site is one of my go tos for when i feel like starting a completely pointless argument 😂 just say “did y’all know pop tarts are technically a type of calzone?” & 30 seconds later you’re having the dumbest debate known to man with the entire friend group

  • spicy pancake@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    2 years ago

    This caused me to cry-laugh and share with all my math nerd friends who know topology. (I’m sure they will be 100% fine with this.)

  • Malgas@beehaw.org
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    2 years ago

    This analysis has an inconsistency regarding pie:

    A slice of pumpkin pie is listed as toast (starch on one side), but a slice of double-crusted pie is a taco (three sides), a whole key lime pie is a quiche (five sides), and a whole double-crusted pie is a calzone (six sides).

    In all cases save one, side crust is seen as distinct from bottom crust. A slice of pumpkin pie therefore has starch on two sides, making it a sandwich.

    • medgremlin@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 years ago

      Except that the sides are adjacent, so it would be a taco, wouldn’t it?

      Edit: On further reflection, I think that the designation of “bent toast” is just too much of a slippery slope given possible malformations a food could undergo leading to morphology changes. This is the whole problem with morphological naming schema. It’s carcinization all over again.