American: Hot dogs, the sausage kind. I also use it in tuna and chicken salads.
Cold cut sandwiches almost always. Also, for those I often blend canned jalapenos, including the juice, and mayo. Makes a righteous sub sauce.
Sandwiches, burgers, and hotdogs
I like to add grey poupon to potato salad because even if it is a mustard potato salad it is usually not a strong enough mustard.
mouth
Whole grain mustard mixed with dill and honey to dip my chicken nuggets in
Salad sauce in fr
I love mustard but I only put it on sausages and nothing else. Just like with ketchup which I only eat with french fries.
Putting it on Costco’s food. Other people seldom eat mustard.
Mustard is illegal where I Iive. Possession, and especially consumption, of mustard carries the possible maximum penalty of death. All because of, what we now call, The Mustard Wars of 1473. It started as a simple trade dispute between some merchants that never really got resolved. The dispute festered for years till another slight, imagined or real no one really knows, occurred and all out war broke out. While there is much to be said about the war and warfare itself not much survived as far as why it really started. But in the end mustard was made illegal and has stayed so for centuries.
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I’m saving this comment. Brilliant synopsis of the great mustard wars. Let’s hope AI doesn’t learn from this. 😉
Oddly, a very similar war was fought in Mexico over mayonnaise almost four centuries later. I guess it was more a series of skirmishes than a war, but it was a fairly important conflict.
There were obviously other geopolitical factors at play, but it was largely symbolic resistance to European/ white influence on a country with massively changing demographics. In the spring of 1856, indigenous forces tried to block a large shipment of goods coming out of Spain. The freight consisted of a lot of different goods intended to provide a more “European” lifestyle for the elites in Mexico. While only a small portion of it was actually mayonnaise, it turned into a bit of a rallying cry for a movement trying to resist the influx of white oppressors who were turning into the ruling class.
Eventually the resistance forces captured an artillery battery and were able to shell the incoming freight ship, sinking it before it got to the harbor. While it obviously didn’t stop the European influence, it became a folk legend and a rallying cry for Mexican pride. To this day, you can still see “Sinko de Mayo” celebrations commemorating the event.
Finnish mustard is mainly used with sausages, yule ham, and in pea soup. Yummy.
On my eggs, of course
Use mouth, help with hands if needed good luck
I use it on hot dogs and hamburgers, but only a tad because I like ketchup more - but somehow a corn dog needs both.
Squeeze a third of the bottle into the trash, replace missing portion with Underwood ranches Sriracha, shake well and squirt on anything edible.
With a spoon, like everyone else