WVHUNTER
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I have been going West for a hunt about every year for the last twenty years and with all the chain restaurants most of the food is the same but there is some differences between East and West.
We don't do much lamb and mutton, you could find it if you wanted it but there wouldn't be much. Tri-tip is hard to find. And of course no Hatch chili.
Chili here is chili con carne with hamburger, kidney beans, onions and red chili pepper. I have had Hatch chili verde with pork and hatch chili in Colorado I think it was. I have a friend that makes "white chili" with chicken breast, navy beans and Jalapenos to flavor it.
We are the home of the pepperoni roll. Just a yeast roll with slices of pepperoni in it. You can buy them at convenience stores. A coal miner fighting with his wife can stop at a convenience store and get a can of skoal, fill up his coffee thermos and get a bag of pepperoni rolls for lunch and be set for the day. A cook in Wyoming said she made Jalapeno rolls in similar way.
We have ramps, most of you probably don't know what they are. They grow wild, you can just go dig them in the woods in the spring. They aren't an onion but they are something like a green onion. Pungent odor and taste. They are good Covid protection. After you eat them no one will stay within six feet of you.
Cornbread and pinto beans is a staple here, all the people that grew up during the depression said they would have starved without. It was cheap. You have to get a little farther South before grits become a big thing. I did see a Wendy's in New Mexico that had a Jalapeno burger. Wouldn't see that here.
We eat cole slaw on our chili dogs, I think that's a regional thing not even an Eastern thing. Also eat cole slaw on a pulled pork barbeque but I think other people do that also.
That's all I can think of for now but interested to see what you guys have to say.
We don't do much lamb and mutton, you could find it if you wanted it but there wouldn't be much. Tri-tip is hard to find. And of course no Hatch chili.
Chili here is chili con carne with hamburger, kidney beans, onions and red chili pepper. I have had Hatch chili verde with pork and hatch chili in Colorado I think it was. I have a friend that makes "white chili" with chicken breast, navy beans and Jalapenos to flavor it.
We are the home of the pepperoni roll. Just a yeast roll with slices of pepperoni in it. You can buy them at convenience stores. A coal miner fighting with his wife can stop at a convenience store and get a can of skoal, fill up his coffee thermos and get a bag of pepperoni rolls for lunch and be set for the day. A cook in Wyoming said she made Jalapeno rolls in similar way.
We have ramps, most of you probably don't know what they are. They grow wild, you can just go dig them in the woods in the spring. They aren't an onion but they are something like a green onion. Pungent odor and taste. They are good Covid protection. After you eat them no one will stay within six feet of you.
Cornbread and pinto beans is a staple here, all the people that grew up during the depression said they would have starved without. It was cheap. You have to get a little farther South before grits become a big thing. I did see a Wendy's in New Mexico that had a Jalapeno burger. Wouldn't see that here.
We eat cole slaw on our chili dogs, I think that's a regional thing not even an Eastern thing. Also eat cole slaw on a pulled pork barbeque but I think other people do that also.
That's all I can think of for now but interested to see what you guys have to say.