• HubertManne@piefed.social
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    13 hours ago

    I really would not come here atm but its gonna be hard to say without knowing where you are going. new york is not like la or chicago.

  • LordMayor@piefed.social
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    14 hours ago

    Really depends where in the USA you’re going.

    Potato chips in a bewildering variety of flavors.

    Find an event labeled “Festival” or “Fair(e)”, try fried things that you haven’t had fried before.

    Philadelphia: soft pretzels. Not from the chain place but they’re ok in a pinch. Bernie’s in Clifton Heights is worth the detour.

    Chicago: hot dogs. There’s good hot dogs in many places. If you make hot dogs an event, though, do it in Chicago if you can.

    Kettle corn. Can find good versions in lots of places. If they’re making it right there it’s better.

    Funnel cake. It’s a fair or amusement park treat. Don’t order it unless you know they make it right there.

  • Zorsith@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    20 hours ago

    (IIRC you’re UK-based) Authentic Mexican foods, and other things that are hard to come by in the UK. I was a picky eater as a child and didn’t care for it, but I spent my early childhood on RAF Feltwell hearing people wishing they could get good Mexican food.

    For common american foods? Jerky, smoked meats (brisket 🤤), fried… everything.

    Edit: food culture varies wildly based on region. Generally “what country colonized and/or immigrated to this area” and “what ingredients are readily available and cheap in this area”.

  • Sterile_Technique@lemmy.world
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    20 hours ago

    The best food in the US is the variety we’ve attracted from other cultures.

    I’d try to find the local ‘hole in the wall’ restaurants, emphasizing Mexican or Indian food…

    I’ve come to understand that the shadier the restaurant is, the better the food - idk if that’s good advice to shoot for lol, but if you feel like you might get stabbed waiting for your dinner, it’s gonna be fucking amazing.

  • burntbacon@discuss.tchncs.de
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    16 hours ago

    You said you’re going to los angeles, so one place you might try is the famous hot dog joint, because depending on your timing it will coincide with the ride to eat. I don’t see anything posted for this year, so I’m hoping it doesn’t get canceled due to slowly dwindling lack of interest.

    If you are there the saturday before thanksgiving, you’ll meet a ton of interesting characters with good stories, AND get the famous hot dogs!

    Everyone else is mentioning food styles, but if snacks are what you’re interested in, there are two places to hit up for sure. 1. There are two, but they’re far, cracker barrel stores in the los angeles area. Go inside, marvel at the tchotchkes inside, and grab yourself a handful of whatever old-fashioned candies they have. I don’t know of any other place that dedicates itself to old-fashioned candy like cracker barrel’s little store, but maybe you could find cheaper and better within los angeles. Might be something to ask a local.

    1. Find a super gas station. From my time in texas, it was bucees, and when I was in utah/colorado it was maverik… but they will be bigger than your average gas station store, and have tons of weird, branded, delicious snacks for road trips. I’m sure california has some, considering the amount of tourism they get. There’s got to be something like those places on the road to the nearby scenic areas. You could also just take note of things you think are interesting and then order them from a grocery store at (probably) half price or less.

    Talking about nearby scenic areas, if you’ve never been to america before from britain, I would totally recommend a trip to death valley if you can swing it. It’s a (very) long day trip, but if you hit it in november the drive there AND the valley itself are jaw-dropping. OOOH! AND! Go find the graffiti park! When I went to los angeles to see a relative, they took me there. It was a little climb around a broken fence (because it technically isn’t a real park, or open to the public >.> ), and then the coolest little broken up area of coastline just covered in cool artwork and graffiti tags.

    • LadyButterfly she/her@piefed.blahaj.zoneOP
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      5 hours ago

      Loads of people have mentioned gas stations so I’ll take a look thanks. I’ve got mobility issues (limited walking) is death valley doable? Even just part of it?

      • burntbacon@discuss.tchncs.de
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        46 minutes ago

        Death valley doesn’t involve much walking if you don’t want to. There are scenic overlooks as you drive into the valley, and a few places where you can get out of the car. When I went, it wasn’t summer yet, but it was still too hot to walk around safely for any extended period. We went to the lowest point, where the salt barrens stretch away. It was eerie looking out at a landscape so alien with stark cliffs towering behind. We also got lucky because it was late spring and the valley had gotten rain, which made everything bloom in the parts where we drove into the park. I just remember the stark beauty of it all.

    • Devjavu@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      1 day ago

      Seriously, I’d be thinking thrice before going.
      Not trying to be scaremongering here, but the chance they won’t be returning is higher than I’d like.

  • Deceptichum@quokk.au
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    1 day ago

    I guess see what ICE is offering at the time? TF anyone going to America for.

      • calliope@retrolemmy.com
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        20 hours ago

        This you?

        Vegas is actually super cheap and fun as long as you don’t like gambling or strippers or popular shows. All of which I hate going to. I liked Vegas a lot last time I went.

        Pick a lane.

        I pity anyone who loves Vegas and still generalizes all Americans as fat and hateful. That’s pathetic.

        You love the worst type of place that wastes resources but you still think everyone there is beneath you. That’s not a flex.

        You are the type of person who goes to Dubai and says shit about the poor people there too. Gross!!

        • BeBopALouie@lemmy.ca
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          23 hours ago

          I heard it is no longer cheap in Vegas. Might want to take a look at prices before you go.

          • calliope@retrolemmy.com
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            23 hours ago

            Oh don’t worry, I’ve been to Vegas many times and it’s not good.

            There’s something wrong with anyone who loves Vegas but generalizes literally 100% of Americans as fat and hateful.

        • Cruxifux@feddit.nl
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          24 hours ago

          You can think Vegas is fun and also think Americans are fat and hateful. These beliefs are not mutually exclusive.

          • calliope@retrolemmy.com
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            20 hours ago

            Yuck. Glad I don’t run into you

            It’s funny getting downvoted for arguing against boring generalizations.

            I thought that was a Reddit thing, but here you are.

            Is feddit.nl 100% douchebags? We’ll see!

  • JPSound@lemmy.world
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    23 hours ago

    It depends on what part of the country you’ll be in. If it happens to be in the south, i highly recommend trying some authentic buttermilk biscuits with white gravy or chicken and waffles with a big ol’ glass of sweet ice tea. Thats my favorite, for sure.

    I’ve lived in the north, south, west and Midwest US so I may be able to give an honest recommendation.

  • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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    1 day ago

    Diners are an overlooked US staple, especially the one-offs, not the chains.

    They aren’t really about snacks, but they often have a baked goods case of deliciousness.

  • IndescribablySad@threads.net@sh.itjust.works
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    1 day ago

    Depends on the state and city you’re going to, but you should absolutely try light Hispanic foods from a restaurant. Cubano sandwich (butter-carmelized onions and simple meats), fried plantains, churros, and nachos. If the restaurant looks too clean, none of these will be any good. And before someone says that a Cuban isn’t a snack, I don’t have a massive appetite and I can easily eat 2. They’re rarely filling

  • vatlark@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    It may depend where you are traveling from.

    Packaged food:

    • Toasty cheese-its.
    • Annie’s boxed mac & cheese.
    • Trader Joe’s peanut butter cups
    • a million variations on potato chips and hard pretzels, some of them quite regional.
    • birch beer

    Other food: On the west coast and other places: Taco trucks and Asian food.

    In the north east: subs or hoagies (buffalo chicken cheesesteak), good cheep pizza, Amish farm stands (homemade baked goods, cheese, rootbeer)

    On the east coast and the south: arguably there is somewhat of a gas station food culture (Wawa, Buc-ees, Sheetz, etc). Its not that interesting, but more novel than a McDonald’s.

  • Cris@lemmy.world
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    1 day ago

    Stay safe, things aren’t exactly great here

    I’d say maybe icecream? There are some really good classic creameries here, but I don’t really know whether locally made freshly churned icecream is also a thing in lots of other places 🤷‍♂️ NC state near me (a university) makes amazing icecream with their agriculture department

    Most things that come to mind are food, and will depend on where you are. Here in NC pulled pork bbq would be a must (with regional variations in the style of sauce), just gotta find one of the good places that do it well. I’d try and learn a little about the food culture of where you’re headed and see what sounds interesting if food stuff beyond snacks interests you

    • Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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      23 hours ago

      I just drove 1600 miles 3200 miles and was perfectly safe everywhere I went. Saw zero violence anywhere.

      Including Baltimore and DC, 2 shit holes I refuse to live in or near.