LawHall88 said:
HollywoodBQ said:
LawHall88 said:
Zombie Jon Snow said:
Squadron7 said:
I'm not getting the BBQ sauce reference. What brand did they bring him again and what was the meaning of it?
there was a reference to that Arthur Bryan'ts BBQ sauce in season 1 - Ted saying something about it making him feel like he teleported home.
so this was some serious karma/fate here with him saying bring me whatever and she happened to choose that sauce. really making him feel at home.
I think the whole restaurant scene was, in part, foreshadowing Ted's return to the States.
Guy is in Amsterdam for a night and wants to eat American food.
This is actually pretty common for somebody who has been an Expat for a long time. Especially if they're in an environment that doesn't have any American comfort foods.
Quick example - the 7 oz can of Herdez salsa I get at the grocery store for $1.39 used to cost me $7 in the American specialty food section at the green grocer in Sydney. So even if you can find it, it might be cost prohibitive.
In Sydney, I could get a passable burrito but I could never really find a decent burger. And onion rings, forget about it. There were a couple of fish n chips shops that made OK french fries (sadly they didn't have freedom fries).
So, when I would travel to places like Singapore, Hong Kong, Tokyo, etc., even Bangalore, I'd be on the prowl for American food. I could get planty of curry, Thai food, Malaysian food, etc. in Sydney. But an American style burger, impossible. An Aussie burger includes rocket lettuce and freaking beetroot. Sometimes even an egg.
At the Chili's in Bangalore, they have a Buffalo Burger which was pretty good.
But the best burger I've had overseas was at an American themed burger restaurant in Hong Kong near Central train station. I don't know where they got their cheese but it was magnificent. Only problem was fending off the African hookers after dinner.
That's interesting. I'll admit that it would be real tough to go months without a decent cheeseburger and fries.
Try years.Got a little story for you Ags.
Back in the 70s American Fast Food was not available outside the US much. 1975-1977 dad was stationed in Seoul, SK for 2 years with family in tow and I was 9-11 years old in that time.
Of course as a kid I loved fast food burgers - McDs of course but AW&W was my favorite and Burger King was around as well as DQ and Big Boy restaurants.
Well absolutely none of those were in Seoul SK at the time. Not one American fast food chain in fact, not even KFC or Pizza Hut which were international by then as well. Seoul is very westernized now, but at the time it was not at all. There was nothing American to speak of outside the base walls.
For a kid it was a painful existence. I could get burgers but only at the base (Yongsan) country club or the rec center had like a snack counter. But they were just ok burgers. And there were always burgers grilling at football/baseball game field locations on weekends.
But for a kid, fast food and TV were the things we missed the most. The only American TV we had was via Armed Forces Network which was ONE channel running crappy repeats and news. Movies were also brought to US bases but typically 6 months or so after release in the US which is why we saw Jaws in the winter of 1975-76 and I had not even heard about Star Wars before returning to the states in July 1977.
Anyway, in May of 1977 before returning to the US we took a short trip to Hong Kong and they had a McDonald's. My sister and I flipped out of course and I think we ate there every day or at least every time my parents allowed it. So on the last day my sister and I decided to reward our friends back in Seoul and bring back a bunch of burgers. I think we just got basic cheeseburgers but we had like 6-8 of them and took them to the airport to hand carry back to base. We did not take any fries though. Well South Koreas security, especially then, is legendary. Their customs people could not understand why we were bringing in hamburgers and we got detained extra long (to my dads displeasure) as they proceeded to literally pull apart and inspect every single burger. I'm not sure but I think somehow they thought we were smuggling drugs inside hamburgers.
But they finally let us through. Now with checkin and a 4 hour flight and then our inspection, it had been 8+ hours since we got the burgers by the time we got back to base. We rang up and summoned all our friends to meet at this rec center place and talked them into letting us use their oven to at least warm these burgers up a bit. Then we sat around with about 10 kids and passed out the cheeseburgers. Everybody took a bite or two as they passed them around and more people joined in as well. Everyone was so happy to have a few bites of a fast food burger and reacting with moans of satisfaction. That taste of home was awesome.