The rule at our house was “Eat or talk, not both”. Some of us took that as this young person does. Some of us took it as Frazz does. Sixty years later, more or less, the ones in category ‘A’ are thinner than the ones in category ‘B’. Wonder how that happened! ;)
There used to be a very good pasty shop in Palo Alto, CA that has since moved to Ely, NV. I was heartbroken, but after moving up here, pasty shops are all over. Maybe not that abundant, but more so than in The SF Bay Area.
Calzoni and pasties differ in that the former is basically a pizza turnover, the latter is more like a pot pie (meat, vegetables, gravy). Calzoni are supposedly made with leavened dough but I don’t believe that’s true of pasties.
Haven’t had pasties, but from this metropolitan point of view, what they’re eating looks an awful lot like either empanadas (Latino) or “patties” (Jamaican). Both great.
Hope to sample pasties someday and find out the difference.
As something of connoisseur of such things … a pasty has a pie crust vs a pizza that has a more bread or cracker type of crust. Of course a pizza is open face, where a pasty is sealed. A Calzone uses the pizza crust to form a sealed item which is still different from a pasty which uses a pie crust. A traditional pasty would typically have something more like a stew center stabilized with flour, where a Calzone would typically have more of a filling similar to those on a pizza. An open faced pasty would be interesting – it would be something like a flat pie with toppings. Some forms of Shepard’s pie are like this.
Or at least, that is how I would answer her questions. After I had eaten my pasty hot. :-)
The question about the open-faced pasty and rutabaga pizza raises an interesting philosophical question: What’s the difference between any two things that don’t exist?
A lot of the names are based upon the country of origin of the idea. The English language has more words than other languages as we tend to make more distinctions. For instance Gravy and Sauce are based on synonymous words from different languages.
Concretionist about 3 years ago
The rule at our house was “Eat or talk, not both”. Some of us took that as this young person does. Some of us took it as Frazz does. Sixty years later, more or less, the ones in category ‘A’ are thinner than the ones in category ‘B’. Wonder how that happened! ;)
C about 3 years ago
Between chatter and IG, hot food may be unknown to one gender.
whahoppened about 3 years ago
Changing the name doesn’t change the taste.
some idiot from R'lyeh Premium Member about 3 years ago
Is a hot dog a sandwich?
Wars have been fought over less.
Doug K about 3 years ago
Less talk. More eat.
mobeydick about 3 years ago
Ain’t no yeast in a pasty…..
greyolddave about 3 years ago
I moved out of Michigan about 10 years ago and haven’t found a pasty since. They are good.
animemom50 about 3 years ago
The difference between a pasty and a pizza or a calzone is pasties don’t have sauce, they have gravy you pour on.
Jhony-Yermo about 3 years ago
Swedish flag Tee, in honor of the pastries?
Gandalf about 3 years ago
Now here’s the question that begins wars: catsup or gravy?
Ignatz Premium Member about 3 years ago
It’s a calzone.
If you can call something “pizza” that has ham and eggs but no sauce, you can call it a “calzone” if it has potatoes and onions.
sandpiper about 3 years ago
Tomorrow is Sunday. Wonder what enlightening subject will take up the next arc? Sure hope it’s not another food theme.
matzam Premium Member about 3 years ago
sugar
Flatlander, purveyor of fine covfefe about 3 years ago
Looks like a big perogie
trainnut1956 about 3 years ago
Must be an East Coast thing. In most places, “pasties” are what exotic dancers glue over their nipples, not a pastry.
slowalkintexan about 3 years ago
Jef has got to be from Western MIchigan,,,,home of more churches selling pasties, than anywhere else. Even if the pasty came from Cornwall to the UP>
Happy Tinkerbelle Premium Member about 3 years ago
our pasty place has breakfast ones now!!!!
Teto85 Premium Member about 3 years ago
There used to be a very good pasty shop in Palo Alto, CA that has since moved to Ely, NV. I was heartbroken, but after moving up here, pasty shops are all over. Maybe not that abundant, but more so than in The SF Bay Area.
AndrewSihler about 3 years ago
Calzoni and pasties differ in that the former is basically a pizza turnover, the latter is more like a pot pie (meat, vegetables, gravy). Calzoni are supposedly made with leavened dough but I don’t believe that’s true of pasties.
The Brooklyn Accent Premium Member about 3 years ago
Haven’t had pasties, but from this metropolitan point of view, what they’re eating looks an awful lot like either empanadas (Latino) or “patties” (Jamaican). Both great.
Hope to sample pasties someday and find out the difference.
Thinkingblade about 3 years ago
As something of connoisseur of such things … a pasty has a pie crust vs a pizza that has a more bread or cracker type of crust. Of course a pizza is open face, where a pasty is sealed. A Calzone uses the pizza crust to form a sealed item which is still different from a pasty which uses a pie crust. A traditional pasty would typically have something more like a stew center stabilized with flour, where a Calzone would typically have more of a filling similar to those on a pizza. An open faced pasty would be interesting – it would be something like a flat pie with toppings. Some forms of Shepard’s pie are like this.
Or at least, that is how I would answer her questions. After I had eaten my pasty hot. :-)
prrdh about 3 years ago
The question about the open-faced pasty and rutabaga pizza raises an interesting philosophical question: What’s the difference between any two things that don’t exist?
RevvieQuar about 3 years ago
Kinda like a runza I used to get when I lived in Nebraska. Can’t get ‘em in Chicago, I’ve looked.
kdpeter Premium Member about 3 years ago
Ha! A pasty with a rutabaga has to be a Michigan pasty, unlike a Pennsylvania or even a South Dakota pasty.
MFRXIM Premium Member about 3 years ago
It’s meat pie! British or Aussie.
The Orange Mailman about 3 years ago
No love for stromboli.
Concretionist about 3 years ago
I’ve never had rutabaga in a pasty. Carrots, though.
cymusiker about 3 years ago
They’re the same in that reading about them makes me hungry.
DM2860 about 3 years ago
A lot of the names are based upon the country of origin of the idea. The English language has more words than other languages as we tend to make more distinctions. For instance Gravy and Sauce are based on synonymous words from different languages.