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Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
I may be late to this party, but anything stuffed between something else and one can carry around while eating is a sandwich, so clearly a hamburger is a sandwich. Who ever invented the "Hamburger", weather it was Charlie Nagreen, or Dave from Texas, or someone from Hamburg NY, they were all coming up with a name for their "new" sandwich ideas. A sandwich, something wedged in between something else. This includes, a PnJ, a Ham N chz, a grinder, a sub, a gyro, a hot dog, a stuffed pizza, and a wrap. What is different between something like a hamburger and a sub or a hot dog is the way they are built and products used in creating them, but they all fall under the sandwich umbrella.
I may be late to this party, but anything stuffed between something else and one can carry around while eating is a sandwich, so clearly a hamburger is a sandwich. Who ever invented the "Hamburger", weather it was Charlie Nagreen, or Dave from Texas, or someone from Hamburg NY, they were all coming up with a name for their "new" sandwich ideas. A sandwich, something wedged in between something else. This includes, a PnJ, a Ham N chz, a grinder, a sub, a gyro, a hot dog, a stuffed pizza, and a wrap. What is different between something like a hamburger and a sub or a hot dog is the way they are built and products used in creating them, but they all fall under the sandwich umbrella.
Look ladies and gents, I worked at Red Robin Gourmet Burgers[/b][/u] and Spirits fer a damn long while back in the day. They were not called sandwiches, just burgers.
I've written lots of menus. I don't list burgers under Entrees. They go under Sandwiches. They come with chips/fries/slaw/potato salad and a pickle like all the other listings. Also this: History The beginnings of the hamburger sandwich as we all know it today was really quite simple. One day in 1900, a gentleman hurriedly walked into Louis' Lunch and told proprietor Louis Lassen he was in a rush and wanted something he could eat on the run. In an instant, Louis placed his own blend of ground steak trimmings between two slices of toast and sent the gentleman on his way. And so, the most recognizable American sandwich was born.
Look ladies and gents, I worked at Red Robin Gourmet Burgers
[/b][/u] and Spirits fer a damn long while back in the day. They were not called sandwiches, just burgers.
End. Of. Story.[/quote]
Thank you! If someone says "You guys want to go out for sandwiches?," and we walk into a Red Robin I would feel duped. The terms evoke very different expectations.
I've written lots of menus. I don't list burgers under Entrees. They go under Sandwiches. They come with chips/fries/slaw/potato salad and a pickle like all the other listings. Also this: History The beginnings of the hamburger sandwich as we all know it today was really quite simple. One day in 1900, a gentleman hurriedly walked into Louis' Lunch and told proprietor Louis Lassen he was in a rush and wanted something he could eat on the run. In an instant, Louis placed his own blend of ground steak trimmings between two slices of toast and sent the gentleman on his way. And so, the most recognizable American sandwich was born.
Go ahead and lock it up.
I only liked this post because Louis' Lunch is in CT! We can't claim much up here... A few casinos, ESPN, insurance companies, rich snobs... and Louis' Lunch.
Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
I've written lots of menus. I don't list burgers under Entrees. They go under Sandwiches. They come with chips/fries/slaw/potato salad and a pickle like all the other listings. Also this: History The beginnings of the hamburger sandwich as we all know it today was really quite simple. One day in 1900, a gentleman hurriedly walked into Louis' Lunch and told proprietor Louis Lassen he was in a rush and wanted something he could eat on the run. In an instant, Louis placed his own blend of ground steak trimmings between two slices of toast and sent the gentleman on his way. And so, the most recognizable American sandwich was born.
Go ahead and lock it up.
I only liked this post because Louis' Lunch is in CT! We can't claim much up here... A few casinos, ESPN, insurance companies, rich snobs... and Louis' Lunch.
Since you left the WWF/WWE and the mean streets of Greenwich, CT. off your list I'm going to flying elbow you through a table. Titties!
Look ladies and gents, I worked at Red Robin Gourmet Burgers
[/b][/u] and Spirits fer a damn long while back in the day. They were not called sandwiches, just burgers.
End. Of. Story.[/quote]
Thank you! If someone says "You guys want to go out for sandwiches?," and we walk into a Red Robin I would feel duped. The terms evoke very different expectations. [/quote]
Thank you! If someone says "You guys want to go out for sandwiches?," and we walk into a Red Robin I would feel duped. The terms evoke very different expectations.
I only liked this post because Louis' Lunch is in CT! We can't claim much up here... A few casinos, ESPN, insurance companies, rich snobs... and Louis' Lunch.
Since you left the WWF/WWE and the mean streets of Greenwich, CT. off your list I'm going to flying elbow you through a table. Titties!
The former is nothing to be proud of and the latter was part of the rich snob part. I was trying to avoid saying, "We are the richest state, so in your face."
Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
I only liked this post because Louis' Lunch is in CT! We can't claim much up here... A few casinos, ESPN, insurance companies, rich snobs... and Louis' Lunch.
Since you left the WWF/WWE and the mean streets of Greenwich, CT. off your list I'm going to flying elbow you through a table. Titties!
Since you left the WWF/WWE and the mean streets of Greenwich, CT. off your list I'm going to flying elbow you through a table. Titties!
The former is nothing to be proud of and the latter was part of the rich snob part. I was trying to avoid saying, "We are the richest state, so in your face."
The former...the former what? I will pray for your future sons, since they are clearly going to grow up stunted and weak, without the Macho Man Randy Savage shaping their young, impressionable minds.
The latter was related to the wrestling, Greenwich can suck my b*lls.
Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
When Vince McMahon wanted to become the villainous face of the WWF/WWE, he devised this whole "mean streets of Greenwich" persona, and those guys posted on the last page rocking sweet pastels and sweater vests were the "Mean Street Posse." It was one of the worst (and as a result, one of the best) wrestling story lines ever.
Good thing McMahon doesn't encourage steroid abuse.
Welcome back Bonz, but I do not find it strange that your presence being requested in the Orgy thread and then you showing up, like it was the quacking Bonzai Bat Signal.
When Vince McMahon wanted to become the villainous face of the WWF/WWE, he devised this whole "mean streets of Greenwich" persona, and those guys posted on the last page rocking sweet pastels and sweater vests were the "Mean Street Posse." It was one of the worst (and as a result, one of the best) wrestling story lines ever.
Good thing McMahon doesn't encourage steroid abuse.
Dam, pretty ripped for a 66 year old. Unfortunately his balls are the size of baby peas.
At issue in the case, White City Shopping Center v. PR Restaurant, was the meaning of a lease for a shopping center sandwich shop that promised no other leases would be given to stores that sold primarily sandwiches. The shopping center leased to a restaurant that would sell burritos, tacos, and quesadillas.
The court ruled that the second lease was allowed based partly on a dictionary definition that defined “sandwich” as “two thin pieces of bread, usually buttered, with a thin layer (as of meat, cheese, or savory mixture) spread between them.”
“As is often the case, the court got the definition wrong,” [Federal Appellate Judge Richard] Posner writes. “A sandwich does not have to have two slices of bread; it can have more than two (a club sandwich) and it can have just one (an open-faced sandwich). The slices of bread do not have to be thin, and the layer between them does not have to be thin either. The slices do not have to be slices of bread: a hamburger is regarded as a sandwich, and also a hot dog—and some people regard tacos and burritos as sandwiches, and a quesadilla is even more sandwich-like. Dictionaries are mazes in which judges are soon lost. A dictionary-centered textualism is hopeless.”
George Mason University law professor David Bernstein picks up the sandwich debate in a post at the Volokh Conspiracy. “In my experience, ‘sandwich shops’ like Corner Bakery don’t sell hamburgers,” Bernstein writes, “and I’d be very surprised if someone offered me a sandwich and then handed me a hamburger[/color]. I’d be even more surprised to be offered a hot dog. Tacos, burritos, and quesadillas seem even further removed from what I think of as a ‘sandwich.’ ”