Both of you are amateurs compared to Patrick.I've mentioned before that the two of us should compare notes to see who's a bigger cheapskate (sorry, "spendthrift!").

Both of you are amateurs compared to Patrick.I've mentioned before that the two of us should compare notes to see who's a bigger cheapskate (sorry, "spendthrift!").
youse
A quick off-topic detour -- I should've put youse in quotation marks as it's a bit of an inside joke for people of my generation in the northeastern U.S. to signal that you're connected to the old-school working class from the previous century. Here are a few bullets from dozens of webpages that explain how and where youse is used:Definitely something a lobster roll connoisseur would not say.
Hence my comment about it not being muttered by what I thought were posh people that eat lobster rolls. @MarzNC has kindly informed me they were once working man’s food.
- It's a stalwart and consistently divisive member of the Australian English language, where it can be associated with lower socioeconomic status.
Yes, that's absolutely true and at the same time hard to believe given how expensive it is nowadays.@MarzNC has kindly informed me they were once working man’s food.
You haven't traveled around the South much, have you? In addition to fried seafood, there is plenty of fried chicken.A little bit of fried food is fine, but an entire plate of it?
Much of the south and oddly the UK over the pond is a seemingly endless pile of brown and tan foods with few veggies or exceptions anywhere in sight (at least when eating out at local focused food joints).You haven't traveled around the South much, have you?
My wife's family is from the Newport News/Williamsburg region. Across 25 years, I've witnessed a cavalcade of overcooked vegetables. The worst victims are green beans, which are rendered into brown beans.You haven't traveled around the South much, have you?
The following is a quintessential Cape
lobster roll/fried fish joint
The place had a 1.5 hrs wait. Fortunately, we got there before the big rush.
I know all places you have mentioned above, quite well. The wait at Sesuit Harbor hasn’t been as bad, but it used to be awful.I don't know that place - Captain Cone - but its Lobster Roll price is a good deal. I see it's in Dennis. My Dad likes to go up to Denis and eat at a similar place at the Sesuit Harbor Cafe - where one can wait 30 minutes for a picnic table.
Dinner - Sesuit Harbor Cafe
sesuit-harbor-cafe.com
I don't really like a similar type place in Chatham - Kream N' Kone. https://www.kreamnkonechatham.com There are no really good options besides completely fired seafood.
Forget waits for Lobster Rolls, what about ice cream in the evening at some popular places on Cape Code. There are two places I know can be nearly 30 minutes most nights:
- Sundae School - Harwich Port https://www.sundaeschool.com/
- Polar Cave Ice Cream Parlour - Mashpee https://www.polarcave.com/
I know all places you have mentioned above, quite well. The wait at Sesuit Harbor hasn’t been as bad, but it used to be awful.
The Cape is a culinary wasteland like you mentioned the choices are fried fish, lobster rolls, or mediocre pizza.
I thought coastal California was the only place with this climatology. Boston has a typical July/August temperature peak with June being warmer than September. But once out into the Atlantic in colder water off Cape Cod, the California cold ocean/delayed seasons effect makes some sense.May is awful. Most of June is horrible as well. It sticks out into the Atlantic, surrounded by water temperatures of 50 to 60 degrees early on, which creates fog and marine layers until July. Martha's Vineyard, Chatham, and Provincetown can be similar. Me? So many people want to spend $500-1500+/night to sit in a fog bank, interesting. (There are not really beach hotels in San Francisco for this reason).
However, it is beautiful AC during July and August. The hidden season is September and early October, when there is less fog, relatively warm water, and no crowds.