User Panel
[#2]
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[#3]
Mid 70's
Grandma always made me eat a banana and marshmallow spread Sammie before going swimming....I couldn't eat it inside even with plastic covered furniture How did they always have 1 inch long ashes on their cigarettes and never in the food |
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[#4]
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[#5]
Remember when wonder bread had stickers in it so moms would buy it
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[#6]
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[#7]
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[#8]
It makes me laugh when folks get all wound up about MW , Helmans or dukes.
I think it might be about what you were raised on but the simple answer is use whatever tastes good to you . |
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[#10]
For me it was dark Pumpernickel rye bread, Liederkranz cheese, a slice of Spanish onion and slathered in yellow mustard.
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[#11]
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[#13]
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[#14]
I liked baloney and ketchup sandwiches as a kid.
Your sandwich sounds more fucked up than that OP. |
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[#15]
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[#16]
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[#17]
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[#20]
Quoted: White bread, thick slices of sweet onions, dill pickle chips, and miracle whip. Try it and thank me later View Quote No thanks. |
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[#21]
I remember the first time I had Fluff Marshmallow spread on my peanut butter and Jelly sandwich, it was elevated.
In the 1970's pickles, white bread, and spreads where all we had. |
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[#22]
I'd try it, then make up my own mind.
Hell, I tried a Glock before pronouncing it shit.(Perfection shit, but shit nonetheless) Be your own person. |
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[#23]
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[#24]
From my childhood in the 60's it would have to be a slider sized frita (Cuban burger) from the hole in the wall Fritas Domino on SW 8th St and 12th Avenue in the heart of Little Havana in Miami. They were a special treat whenever my parents could afford to take my brother and me there which wasn't often.
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[#26]
Quoted: white bread peanut butter and white sugar https://media.tenor.com/vJY--Pd2LQgAAAAM/pumped-woooo.gif View Quote That was the boot camp special. We couldn’t have desert but had unlimited access to bread, peanut butter, and sugar in the galley. |
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[#27]
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[#28]
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[#29]
Quoted: Until you figure out that by saying "white bread," he means Wonder Bread. Dude is from OH. View Quote View All Quotes View All Quotes Quoted: Quoted: Everything in that sandwich is gross except the white bread. Until you figure out that by saying "white bread," he means Wonder Bread. Dude is from OH. Wonder Bread is fine. Debasing it with pickles and onions and goblin gizz is not. |
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[#30]
Product of a large family..I get it.... " remember that time we threw some random items in the fridge together and ate it...that was soo good!"
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[#31]
Slice of white bread, open can of red kidney beans and dump some on bread, slap another piece of bread on top and chow down.
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[#32]
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[#33]
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[#34]
Quoted: @DamascusKnifemaker TheOatmeal covered this a long time ago. I disagree, but here it is for your viewing pleasure: https://s3.amazonaws.com/theoatmeal-img/comics/miracle_whip/1.png https://s3.amazonaws.com/theoatmeal-img/comics/miracle_whip/2.png View Quote |
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[#35]
Wonder bread
Slice of American cheese Mayo Handful of Doritos Smash it together. |
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[#36]
I recently had the worst sandwich....limberger and onion on rye with brown mustard.
I was drunk watching Charlie Chaplin movies and said to myself, "I need to order limberger cheese, like they eat in the old movies." So I did. It showed up 4 days later and stunk through the packaging. I was able to eat half before I threw it all in the trash. My wife was not amused. |
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[#38]
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[#39]
Quoted: I remember the first time I had Fluff Marshmallow spread on my peanut butter and Jelly sandwich, it was elevated. In the 1970's pickles, white bread, and spreads where all we had. View Quote I ate a boat load of mayo sandwiches, pickle sandwiches, or onion sandwiches growing up. Thank goodness for tomato season. |
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[#41]
Quoted: For me it was dark Pumpernickel rye bread, Liederkranz cheese, a slice of Spanish onion and slathered in yellow mustard. View Quote Damn. Osprey21, you have truly outdone yourself on this one. Excellent. My Dad used to buy Liederkranz cheese (Borden's sold it in the 1960s). Haven't seen it in years, I occasionally buy limburger. And enjoy it with onion on rye bread or crackers |
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[#43]
Quoted: Sounds like something my grandma ate during the Depression just to survive. View Quote My dad talked about the cornbread and onion sandwiches with a jar of pintos that he took to the field as a kid. His favorite meal all his life was breakfast because that was the only one of the day they had meat. |
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[#44]
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[#45]
That is the most Ohio thing I've read since I lived in the midwest.
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[#46]
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[#47]
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[#48]
Quoted: OP's home state explains everything. View Quote Quoted: 2nd post nailed it. View Quote Quoted: I’m good no thanks. View Quote |
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[#50]
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