Postby Bobtheduck » Tue Aug 25, 2009 2:23 am
American food:
Hamburgers, in most stories, were said to have originated in the US, though the name lends itself to Germany. They were, most certainly, first SOLD in the US, in Wisconsin.
Besides that, my favorite all-American food is Biscuits and Gravy. This is primarily a southern dish, but one with much more widespread appeal than, say, grits. Gravy is a rather loose term (much like "curry" or "pizza") but Biscuits and Gravy is much more narrow in definition. The gravy should be made with sausage and lots of flour, to make it thicker than gravy that usually accompanies meals of chicken or beef or pork chops. The biscuits (not to be confused with what the commonwealth countries would call biscuits, which we call cookies... Wiki says scones fit the American definition, but that doesn't seem quite right, either) need to be a certain type, too. They should be flaky and easily fall apart. In any case, biscuits and gravy is a very important American dish.
Another American dish that people don't often think about, because the dish as a whole originated in Italy, is Pizza. Pizza may have originated in Italy (in Naples), but in a very different form than most people are used to today. There are essentially three types of Pizza known worldwide, and all three originated in the US. Those are California Pizza, Chicago Pizza, and New York Pizza. There are, of course, many other varieties, but they don't tend to travel as far as those three, and this includes native Italian pizzas.
As far as American customs go, well... There are a lot of things that have come out of the US and made their way into other nations. Our particular form of Government (a democratic republic) has made its way into many other countries, albeit with slight alterations. There is also an overall love for individualism, if it often only manifests itself as an idea rather than a practice. This probably stems from European culture, but I think in no other nation has it developed as strongly and ubiquitously as in the US.
Due to such an emphasis on individuality, you'd be much better off discussing state cultures than a national one, and even then, in big cities you won't find much solidarity. The state of California is even further set apart, acting as a sort of America in Miniature, broken into 2 or 3 (depending on who you ask) portions: Southern, central, and Northern. Southern California has a strong LA and Hollywood influence, which tapers off when you go toward San Diego. Central California is all farm town. Dairy farms and orchards and such. Northern California is influenced by San Francisco and, to a lesser extent, by Sacramento. At the very least, there is a huge divide, "culturally" between Southern and Northern California. Northern California is where Berkley is, and that half of the state is often the source of protests. Political discussion and arguments seem to be much bigger in the Northern half of the state, due to the Berkley influence. This isn't to say they don't exist nationwide... Just more concentrated there.
Oh, and American Football has long since replaced Baseball as the most popular sport in the US, though world football (or soccer, as we call it) is a slowly rising star, mostly due to immigrants.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=evcNPfZlrZs Watch this movie なう。 It's legal, free... And it's more than its premise. It's not saying Fast Food is good food. Just watch it.
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