[quote="Larry Greenly] Actually, I'm on your side of the coin; I enjoy eating and talking about all kinds of foods--"low class" or "high class" (I'm a broader omnivore than some, I guess). I'm against snobs who put down ordinary mortals who may enjoy a frozen pizza or TV dinner and are possibly hesitant to post such admissions in this forum. [/quote]
Larry, I really doubt if anyone's hesitant to post admissions here. Many of us do frequently. Anyone who pays attention has heard me confess my love for ramen soups and Campbells Cream of Mushroom Soup. Bob Ross loves the latter too, and Mike Filigenzi loves Kraft Mac n Cheese.
Karen uses Knorr bearnaise sauce as a shortcut, and Mike Kotch and I bonded over a love for Jack in the Box tacos. Few if any of us are in any position to look down at anyone else's choices.
But what makes a snob? Ian made a good point in another recent and regrettable thread about snobbishness being more about labels--buying a brand only because you think it's impressive, or refusing to eat anything that doesn't come from X store. And I agree with him. That's real snobbery. Being particular about the freshness, healthiness, authenticity, taste and texture of your food isn't.
This thread took a rather unfortunate little turn at the beginning when there seemed to be an inference that one either buys frozen pizza or they're a food snob. And you object to the reverse snob suggestion when you're against snobs and concerned about the ordinary mortal. Well, I think what John meant by that, or at least what I meant when I agreed with him, is that it sounds kind of hostile to me when you (or anyone) take it upon yourself to determine where the line is and who's guilty--and I don't think I said that quite right but it's 2 a.m. and I'm unable to get the exact ride words. As to the ordinary mortal--well, as Joe Perry pointed out this forum is a foodie forum. We don't get many casual passersby, and the regulars are all here because we just love talking about food and like all hobbyists, within our area of interest not only our skills but our standards are generally higher than most. It's been like that since day one--why is it suddenly a problem?
Look, we all lead different lives, right? And we all have different thresholds and schedules, and we all choose different ways to make our lives better. You worry that some are afraid to admit they like a convenience product or take a certain shortcut, well it's also true, and accusations of snobbery only reinforces it as a wise move, that some people deliberately avoid admitting to various expensive food affections or splurges for fear they'll be accused of, at the least bragging and at the worst, living too well. That knife cuts both ways. Perhaps, online, nobody's really free to be themselves.
Well, except for Robin.
So how about a truce: I won't pick on your pizza (wouldn't have anyway, but I have to offer something in trade) if you don't pick on my salts.
Okay?