[General] Toppings

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Barb_D

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Fudruckers. It's Fudruckers that has the Fixins Bar. And my gosh are those good burgers. I haven't had one in ages, but maybe one will open near here some day.

I'm literally salivating thinking about those burgers. A complete Pavlovian response.
 

5jj

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SoothingDave

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Fudruckers. It's Fudruckers that has the Fixins Bar. And my gosh are those good burgers. I haven't had one in ages, but maybe one will open near here some day.

I'm literally salivating thinking about those burgers. A complete Pavlovian response.

Roy Rogers has a "fixins bar"

800px-Roys_New_Germantown.jpg
 

emsr2d2

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No, I think we just look at sandwiches in a different way on our side of the Atlantic. For us, a traditional sandwich is simply two slices of bread and butter with something in between. That something is the filling.

Just before I read 5jj's response, I realised the same thing. All the American responses have mentioned burgers, whereas you and I are both thinking about two slices of normal bread with some stuff inside (cheese, salad, houmous, sliced ham, etc), not a meat pattie/burger inside a burger bun.

Here, for example, is the quintessentially English cucumber sandwich

I, too, would call the extras which go on top of the meat/veggie pattie/burger inside a bun "toppings", not fillings.

It never occurred to me this would get so confusing!
 

SoothingDave

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It's not just burgers. A place like Subway makes a whole bunch of different kinds of submarine sandwiches. You order the basic (say turkey or Italian or ham) and then you tell them what you want on it.

I don't think we here think of a sandwich as a blank slate. It's something between bread which can optionally have something else on top of it.
 

emsr2d2

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It's not just burgers. A place like Subway makes a whole bunch of different kinds of submarine sandwiches. You order the basic (say turkey or Italian or ham) and then you tell them what you want on it.

I don't think we here think of a sandwich as a blank slate. It's something between bread which can optionally have something else on top of it.

I think we've got to the crux of the matter with your last sentence. A sandwich starts with two slices of bread and something, and then you add other stuff. The absolute basics of a British sandwich is two slices of bread (possibly buttered) and that's it.
Am I right in understanding though, that you do refer to a meat pattie inside a burger bun (with or without salad etc) as a "sandwich"?
 

SoothingDave

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I think we've got to the crux of the matter with your last sentence. A sandwich starts with two slices of bread and something, and then you add other stuff. The absolute basics of a British sandwich is two slices of bread (possibly buttered) and that's it.
Am I right in understanding though, that you do refer to a meat pattie inside a burger bun (with or without salad etc) as a "sandwich"?

No, I'd call it a burger. But, if asked to classify it scientifically, a burger would be a type of sandwich.
 

BobSmith

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No, I'd call it a burger. But, if asked to classify it scientifically, a burger would be a type of sandwich.

I remember a psych class where the instructor asked the hundred of us all to name a sandwich. After tallying the results, she then asked why no one named a hamburger, and whether or not it is a sandwich. It is, but we don't think of it as one.

Also, I just got done heating my soup at the microwave (at the coffee station) and the woman behind me started heating up a frozen (prepackaged) chicken pot pie. So, I guess adults do eat them here. I'd never have guessed that. Although in my defense, she often talks in a rather annoying baby voice.
 
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