All these GREAT examples remind me of Bugs Bunny in “Rabbit Hood”:
“Arise, Sir Loin of Beef! (Bonk) Arise, Earle of Cloves! (Bonk) Arise, Duke of Brittingham! (Bonk) Arise, Baron of Münchausen! (Bonk) Arise, Essence of Myrrh… (Bonk) Milk of Magnesia… (Bonk) Quarter of Ten…”
There are many stories about the origin of mayonnaise. One says it was invented by the chef working for the Duke de Richeliu in 1756. Supposedly Richard Hellman was the first to bottle and sell it commercially…
The account I read was that the Earl of Sandwich was quite the gambler and spent hours on end at the games of chance. Story has it that after an extremely long card-playing marathon, he was hungry, but didn’t want to leave the table. He supposedly called for someone to fetch some bread and slip some meat in the middle, and the rest is history.
David Huie Green AmericaIsGreatItHasUs about 5 years ago
The history THEY don’t tell you…
SunflowerGirl100 about 5 years ago
After Count Mayo, he met Colonel Mustard and found the clue to a good sandwich!
kaffekup about 5 years ago
Until Count Bearnaise got saucy with him.
juncarlo about 5 years ago
What about the Marcheese of Roquefort?
Jesy Bertz Premium Member about 5 years ago
And don’t forget the towering culinary genius, Dagwood of Bumstead.
Algolei I about 5 years ago
Is he just gonna smear it on his visor?
artsyguy65 about 5 years ago
All these GREAT examples remind me of Bugs Bunny in “Rabbit Hood”:
“Arise, Sir Loin of Beef! (Bonk) Arise, Earle of Cloves! (Bonk) Arise, Duke of Brittingham! (Bonk) Arise, Baron of Münchausen! (Bonk) Arise, Essence of Myrrh… (Bonk) Milk of Magnesia… (Bonk) Quarter of Ten…”
Argythree about 5 years ago
I thought the Sandwich King was Jeff on the Food Channel…
Argythree about 5 years ago
There are many stories about the origin of mayonnaise. One says it was invented by the chef working for the Duke de Richeliu in 1756. Supposedly Richard Hellman was the first to bottle and sell it commercially…
Say What Now‽ Premium Member about 5 years ago
“Billy don’t be a gyro”
Gent about 5 years ago
You gotta take off that stupid helmet first, to eat that.
MagOctopus about 5 years ago
As a recovering historian, I can vouchsafe that a lot of history books get written this way.
gantech about 5 years ago
The account I read was that the Earl of Sandwich was quite the gambler and spent hours on end at the games of chance. Story has it that after an extremely long card-playing marathon, he was hungry, but didn’t want to leave the table. He supposedly called for someone to fetch some bread and slip some meat in the middle, and the rest is history.
Ermine Notyours about 5 years ago
Did he ever cross the Food Channel and visit Hamburg?
mddshubby2005 about 5 years ago
Don’t forget the Count’s horse – Mayo Neighs!
ChessPirate about 5 years ago
Wait! Just let me ketchup here…
pcolli about 5 years ago
The sandwich was around long before the Earl of Sandwich. He just made them popular amongst the upper classes.
SukieCrandall Premium Member about 5 years ago
This reminds me of the Brewster Rockit series in two ways:
https://www.cbs17.com/news/check-this-out/woman-puts-octopus-on-face-for-photo-op-octopus-bites-her-injects-venom/
WCraft Premium Member about 5 years ago
Didn’t the people of Mexico name a holiday after him on his birthday? Cinco de Mayo?
bakana about 5 years ago
It was really the Prince of Mustard and the Duke of Corned Beef who made sandwiches Popular.
Daeder about 5 years ago
No, I don’t think it was Count Mayo, it was the Count of Monte Cristo!