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Tim Tim is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

On Jan 20, 6:01*pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:

What is "real Italian food"? *


Not the punch press fodder you get at Olive Garden.

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Tim Tim is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

On Jan 20, 6:01*pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"Tim" wrote in message

...
On Jan 20, 4:08 pm, HK wrote:





Tim wrote:
On Jan 5, 6:45 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here
wrote:


your statement is correct about a lot of things. Some people think
that Taco Casa is a mexican resteraunt! however I do like to go to
OliveGardenfor *REAL* Itallian food.... HA!
OliveGarden, the McDonald's of Italian....


Yes, but look what's cooking tonight?


http://www.olivegarden.com/recipes/r..._detail.asp?re....


I suppose that OG decided with all the fakers out there, they thought
they'd post their's so you could at least get it right...or wrong.


Olive Garden isn't haute cuisine, but it certainly is decent food at a
decent price. As someone who was born in and grew up in a city with a
huge percentage of recently immigrant Italian families, and as someone
who dated "extensively" many lovely Italian girls in my youth, I have a
taste for "real Italian food." There are several "Italian cuisines"
extant in Italy and in this country, and they are marvelously different
from each other.


I don't frequent Olive Garden but I have eaten there a few times over
the years, and I can't recall having a "bad meal." Was the food I
ordered and ate "genuine Italian," whatever that is? Surely not, but it
was "Italianate," as they say.


We have an immigrant Italian family in the area. They operate two
first-class family Italian restaurants, sort of like Louis Restaurant in
the Bronx (from Godfather I) but a little fancier.


Reggie, as usual, is demonstrating he doesn't know his ass from a hole
in the wall. For a guy who never discusses his life, his family, his
possessions, et cetera, he certainly has much in the way of criticism of
others.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Well, I never order their pasta sauce dish's like spaghetti or
ravioli. I figure I can eat Chef-boy-r-di out of a can at home. Not
imressive stuff, so I go with the more odd things that you just dont'
get anywhere.

I know what you mean by REAL italian food. In St. Louis there's an
area called "Dago Hill" in the late 1800's it was home to gobs of
italian immigrants and that's what the place is called even by the
italians.

There's several family run resturants there that have been in business
for many generations. *When you go into the place and see pictures of
the Virgin and Crrcifix's on the walls, with "Mama" and Papa" still
speaking in destinctive accents, and the old traditional wine bottles
with globs of candle was dripped over them, you know you're in the
right spot. OG's be hanged. but I still like eating they're chicken
marsala....

What is "real Italian food"? *Being married to a part Italian from the
Northern Italians, and having traveled somewhat in Italy, there are
different cuisines depending on region. *The Northern / Swiss Italian's are
not as much into the heavy red sauces. *And Chippino is a Genovese regional
dish. *Which means it also has a lot of Catalan influence.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


After ww2 isn't northern Italy now southern Austria?

Well, I dont' think many "Italian" resturaunts offer "Schnitzle"

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HK HK is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

Tim wrote:
On Jan 20, 6:01 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"Tim" wrote in message

...
On Jan 20, 4:08 pm, HK wrote:





Tim wrote:
On Jan 5, 6:45 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here
wrote:
your statement is correct about a lot of things. Some people think
that Taco Casa is a mexican resteraunt! however I do like to go to
OliveGardenfor *REAL* Itallian food.... HA!
OliveGarden, the McDonald's of Italian....
Yes, but look what's cooking tonight?
http://www.olivegarden.com/recipes/r..._detail.asp?re...
I suppose that OG decided with all the fakers out there, they thought
they'd post their's so you could at least get it right...or wrong.
Olive Garden isn't haute cuisine, but it certainly is decent food at a
decent price. As someone who was born in and grew up in a city with a
huge percentage of recently immigrant Italian families, and as someone
who dated "extensively" many lovely Italian girls in my youth, I have a
taste for "real Italian food." There are several "Italian cuisines"
extant in Italy and in this country, and they are marvelously different
from each other.
I don't frequent Olive Garden but I have eaten there a few times over
the years, and I can't recall having a "bad meal." Was the food I
ordered and ate "genuine Italian," whatever that is? Surely not, but it
was "Italianate," as they say.
We have an immigrant Italian family in the area. They operate two
first-class family Italian restaurants, sort of like Louis Restaurant in
the Bronx (from Godfather I) but a little fancier.
Reggie, as usual, is demonstrating he doesn't know his ass from a hole
in the wall. For a guy who never discusses his life, his family, his
possessions, et cetera, he certainly has much in the way of criticism of
others.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -

Well, I never order their pasta sauce dish's like spaghetti or
ravioli. I figure I can eat Chef-boy-r-di out of a can at home. Not
imressive stuff, so I go with the more odd things that you just dont'
get anywhere.

I know what you mean by REAL italian food. In St. Louis there's an
area called "Dago Hill" in the late 1800's it was home to gobs of
italian immigrants and that's what the place is called even by the
italians.

There's several family run resturants there that have been in business
for many generations. When you go into the place and see pictures of
the Virgin and Crrcifix's on the walls, with "Mama" and Papa" still
speaking in destinctive accents, and the old traditional wine bottles
with globs of candle was dripped over them, you know you're in the
right spot. OG's be hanged. but I still like eating they're chicken
marsala....

What is "real Italian food"? Being married to a part Italian from the
Northern Italians, and having traveled somewhat in Italy, there are
different cuisines depending on region. The Northern / Swiss Italian's are
not as much into the heavy red sauces. And Chippino is a Genovese regional
dish. Which means it also has a lot of Catalan influence.- Hide quoted text -

- Show quoted text -


After ww2 isn't northern Italy now southern Austria?

Well, I dont' think many "Italian" resturaunts offer "Schnitzle"



The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to Germany
and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as French in the
last few hundred years.
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.


"Tim" wrote in message
...
On Jan 20, 6:01 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
"Tim" wrote in message

...
On Jan 20, 4:08 pm, HK wrote:





Tim wrote:
On Jan 5, 6:45 am, "Reginald P. Smithers III" "Reggie is Here
wrote:


your statement is correct about a lot of things. Some people think
that Taco Casa is a mexican resteraunt! however I do like to go to
OliveGardenfor *REAL* Itallian food.... HA!
OliveGarden, the McDonald's of Italian....


Yes, but look what's cooking tonight?


http://www.olivegarden.com/recipes/r..._detail.asp?re...


I suppose that OG decided with all the fakers out there, they thought
they'd post their's so you could at least get it right...or wrong.


Olive Garden isn't haute cuisine, but it certainly is decent food at a
decent price. As someone who was born in and grew up in a city with a
huge percentage of recently immigrant Italian families, and as someone
who dated "extensively" many lovely Italian girls in my youth, I have a
taste for "real Italian food." There are several "Italian cuisines"
extant in Italy and in this country, and they are marvelously different
from each other.


I don't frequent Olive Garden but I have eaten there a few times over
the years, and I can't recall having a "bad meal." Was the food I
ordered and ate "genuine Italian," whatever that is? Surely not, but it
was "Italianate," as they say.


We have an immigrant Italian family in the area. They operate two
first-class family Italian restaurants, sort of like Louis Restaurant in
the Bronx (from Godfather I) but a little fancier.


Reggie, as usual, is demonstrating he doesn't know his ass from a hole
in the wall. For a guy who never discusses his life, his family, his
possessions, et cetera, he certainly has much in the way of criticism of
others.- Hide quoted text -


- Show quoted text -


Well, I never order their pasta sauce dish's like spaghetti or
ravioli. I figure I can eat Chef-boy-r-di out of a can at home. Not
imressive stuff, so I go with the more odd things that you just dont'
get anywhere.

I know what you mean by REAL italian food. In St. Louis there's an
area called "Dago Hill" in the late 1800's it was home to gobs of
italian immigrants and that's what the place is called even by the
italians.

There's several family run resturants there that have been in business
for many generations. When you go into the place and see pictures of
the Virgin and Crrcifix's on the walls, with "Mama" and Papa" still
speaking in destinctive accents, and the old traditional wine bottles
with globs of candle was dripped over them, you know you're in the
right spot. OG's be hanged. but I still like eating they're chicken
marsala....

What is "real Italian food"? Being married to a part Italian from the
Northern Italians, and having traveled somewhat in Italy, there are
different cuisines depending on region. The Northern / Swiss Italian's are
not as much into the heavy red sauces. And Chippino is a Genovese regional
dish. Which means it also has a lot of Catalan influence.- Hide quoted
text -

- Show quoted text -


After ww2 isn't northern Italy now southern Austria?

Well, I dont' think many "Italian" resturaunts offer "Schnitzle"

The Northern Italy my wifes Great grandmother came from is actually 20 miles
into Switzerland. Lots of the Swiss-Italians immigrated to California. The
Susanville area and dairy farms on the Marin coast. Plus a few wine makers.


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Tim Tim is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

On Jan 20, 7:53*pm, HK wrote:
Tim wrote:


The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to Germany
and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as French in the
last few hundred years.- Hide quoted text -

In town was a local guy that married a german girl right after WW2
and brought her here to the states.

She spoke good english but never lost the heavy low german accent. And
she told me how during "ze var", Her family took decent care of french
prisoners on their family farm. I asked her why, French were taken
better care of then other nationalities. and she said it was out of
courtesy because over history....."Sometimes they vin!"

Make of it what you will, but I thought it was a candid aproach.




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BAR BAR is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

HK wrote:
The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to Germany
and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as French in the
last few hundred years.


Does this restaurant have a name?


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HK HK is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to Germany
and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as French in the
last few hundred years.


Does this restaurant have a name?




Sure does, and you don't want to miss the desserts.



  #58   Report Post  
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HK HK is offline
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: May 2007
Posts: 13,347
Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

HK wrote:
BAR wrote:
HK wrote:
The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to
Germany and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as
French in the last few hundred years.


Does this restaurant have a name?




Sure does, and you don't want to miss the desserts.



Ooops...forgot the URL:


http://www.laubergechezfrancois.com/


--
George W. Bush - the 43rd Best President Ever!
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 22:48:55 -0500, BAR wrote:

HK wrote:
The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to Germany
and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as French in the
last few hundred years.


Does this restaurant have a name?


Le Roi D'Hamburger.
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BAR BAR is offline
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Default Later all Time to go to a NYE gig.

Short Wave Sportfishing wrote:
On Sun, 20 Jan 2008 22:48:55 -0500, BAR wrote:

HK wrote:
The best French restaurant in the metro DC area is owned by a family
from Alsace, which is just barely France - an area adjacent to Germany
and Switzerland. In fact, it has been German as often as French in the
last few hundred years.

Does this restaurant have a name?


Le Roi D'Hamburger.


I am so glad they re-opened the Le Roi D'Hamburger in this area.
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