vinnydbass t1_iv86e50 wrote
Reply to comment by KypDurron in TIL that Scotland's favorite soft drink, Irn-Bru originated in New York, USA in 1889 as IRONBREW. by ManiacMango33
Different availability or legality of British or Canadian products/ingredients. I live in Ontario and can get Irn Bru anytime. I know Americans don’t have ketchup or dill pickle chips for example. Also certain Cadbury products or Kinder products. Crush cream soda is exclusively Canadian and was the first cream soda I’d had as a kid. I wasn’t sure if all cream soda was Canadian.
Besides, they makes tons of food products tailored to specific regions. McDonalds menus vary from country to country as an example. Not only that, but ingredients legal in the States may not be legal in Canada or Europe. Americans don’t have unpasteurized goods available like cheese or honey, so yea things do taste different depending where you are. Mexican coke is sweeter than American coke. Canadian candies dont use the same dyes as American ones. American chocolates use butyric acid, so Brits think it tastes like vomit. If you’ve never eaten pizza in Naples, someone from Naples might tell you that you have never tasted pizza. An Irishman will swear that Guinness not only tastes better in Ireland but is different than what we have here. The list goes on.
Creeggsbnl t1_iv9hhcg wrote
American here, I've never seen ketchup chips but dill pickle chips are everywhere, even off-brands usually have that flavor.
vinnydbass t1_ivb52k3 wrote
Do you guys have hickory sticks? All-dressed? Smoky Bacon?
KRONKCHEF t1_iv9ktu4 wrote
Another good example is hellmans mayonnaise, it's totally different country to country based on national tastes. Some are yellower/paler, some are more creamy, others more citrus notes etc
Nega_Rosenberg t1_ivbffav wrote
American chocolate does taste like vomit. Can't stand it
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