People who stop in doorways. People who stop in the middle of the hallway or sidewalk where everyone else is walking, instead of stepping aside. I'll often run into them on purpose and say "Oh, you stopped right in the middle!" TAKE THE HINT!
Drivers who don't check their blind spots, don't use blinkers, just bad driving in general.
For some reason people have a huge ego about driving, like going fast takes a lot of skill or something, and anyone who passes would show them up.
I live in a town of 9,000. On the two lane road when you leave town, the right lane has to merge pretty quickly after the last stoplight.... I never let anybody in.
Merging's not the same though. People should be aware they have to merge soon, and get in line.
No, you'll have one car pull into the right lane at the light, then try to floor it to get past everyone. Not on this guy. You'll slam on your brakes, or take the ditch.
Ummm, a steak is just a slice of a roast. Rump steaks are literally just a cut up rump roast, for example.I've got a couple more pet peeves and both have to do with Mexican food restaurants.
1- If you're going to call something steak, use friggin steak. Just because it's beef doesn't make it steak. Stew meat or pot roast are NOT steak. Here's your choices for "steak"; sirloin, top loin, top butt, rump, ribeye, Delmonico, strip, T-bone, porterhouse, loin, tenderloin, fillet, flat iron, skirt, flank, tri-tip, hanger steak, and possibly some chuck steaks. It needs to be tender and flavorful. If it's from the round, shank, brisket or neck, it's not steak, it's just beef.
2- Could ya'll get on the same page with Carne Asada? I've had so many completely different things called Carne Asada. Usually it's okay but I want to know what the hell I'm being served and I would like for there to be some semblance of consistency from one place to the other. Carne means flesh/meat/beef, this is usually the case but Asada means roast/broiled/grilled....this is where the problem begins. There's a pretty big difference between roasted and grilled and some places seem to think Asada means marinated. Marinating it is fine but IMO it should be a cut of meat worth eating and then prepared accordingly. Don't marinate some stew meat and then roast it and call it Carne Asada, call it what it is, a warmed up sh#tty cut of soaked beef.
:rant There I feel better now.
I understand that. I was trying to be as all inclusive as I could be in listing steak options. Part of the problem is in the preparation though. You roast a rump roast but if you slice off a slab of it and call it steak then you better grill the damn thing. I've had some pretty damn good rump steak but I'd never consider roasting, boiling or stewing it and then calling it steak.Ummm, a steak is just a slice of a roast. Rump steaks are literally just a cut up rump roast, for example.
I was mostly just messing with you, but "pot roast" as NOT steak followed by "top butt, rump" and "chuck" steaks made me chuckle.I understand that. I was trying to be as all inclusive as I could be in listing steak options. Part of the problem is in the preparation though. You roast a rump roast but if you slice off a slab of it and call it steak then you better grill the damn thing. I've had some pretty damn good rump steak but I'd never consider roasting, boiling or stewing it and then calling it steak.
To be specific, there's this place in town that has pretty good Mexican food and breakfast burritos. On Fridays one of their BB choices is steak & potato. I really like them BUT they don't use steak, they use what I would call pot roast meat. Probably just some cheap meat scraped off the foreshank or something like that. I just want truth in advertising, call it beef & potato and I'm good. But, if they made the dang thing with actual steak, they would be nirvana, they wouldn't be able to keep up with demand.