16 People On Things They Couldn’t Believe About America Until They Moved Here

I didn’t realize until very recently that most European butter is made from fermented/cultured cream.

While there are savory pies in the US, if you said to someone, “Do you want some pie?,” 99+% of people would automatically assume that you were talking about dessert. I don’t know if that would be true in other countries or not.

No, we don’t. At least not around here. Square footage might be included, but that’s secondary to the number of bedrooms and bathrooms.

With a username like that, how can I beg to differ. :wink:

Wood? Hah! I live in a tropical, um, paradise, and nobody here has carpeting *or *wood floors. Nice cold stone or terazzo tiles - now that’s the way to go. Keeps you cool during the summer.

Summers rarely get much more than 30ºC here.

Libby’s Canned pumpkin (which is very common brand) is all pumpkin. What do you think it is instead?

http://www.peapod.com/itemDetailView.jhtml?productId=3995&NUM=1385334026494

The first thing we did when we moved into this house was tear out the carpeting and put in porcelain tile (ground floor) and bamboo (second floor). We live in Minnesota, which is nobody’s idea of a tropical paradise. Tile and wood floors are much easier to maintain.

I get not understanding the ubiquity of wall-to-wall carpeting (I originally typed that as “crapeting” :D), but the last rationalization on my list would be warm floors.

That’s because they would be mistaken to do so. ‘Pumpkin pie filling in a can’ may contain other ingredients such as spices and milk but none marked pumpkin that I looked at have any squash but pumpkin. I can’t think of a cheaper squash to grow than pumpkin except zucchini and it’d be obvious if the can held that instead.
I’m in the US, which is the topic of this thread. Maybe you’re elsewhere.

Recent article from Yahoo Finance:

32 Quotes Revealing What Foreigners Find Amazing About America

Im visiting los angeles usa just after christmas and will be nearby so will try to visit Moffets. Excited about the trip as I have never been there before. Will post back on my observations as a foreigner.

Hey send me some tacos and some beans from Tito’s Tacos!

this thread raises an interesting point for us UK-ers

I have no idea what a credit score is, I’ve asked around the office I share with 6 other 30 y/o and over professional males. None of them know either.
We don’t know whether we have one, or how it is measured or what it means. What is high and what is low?..does it matter?

And yet the above thread suggests this is a major thing for USA people.

In our grocery it’s in the British food section (well, about 5 shelves). I’ve always wanted to bring it to my wife’s family functions and then tell her brothers that they can eat my Spotted Dick.

It is. I’m a bit surprised Britons don’t know about theirs. Have none of the people you talked to ever had a mortgage?

It is. I’m a bit surprised Britons don’t know about theirs. Have none of the people you talked to ever had a mortgage?

[QUOTE=Crafter_Man]
Recent article from Yahoo Finance:

32 Quotes Revealing What Foreigners Find Amazing About America
[/QUOTE]

Those quotes are all taken from the same piece as the OP’s link referred to. :stuck_out_tongue:

Experian is a UK-owned company. Their corporate headquarters were in Nottingham (they might still have an office there), and are now in Dublin.

I’m quite surprised by that. There’s a company called Experian CreditExpert (who provide credit score advisory services) who have been running ads on national TV in the UK for at least a year.

The previous two posts should be flipped.

4 have (including me) 2 haven’t. I guess if you get accepted for a mortgage then why would your credit rating concern you?

I know personally that I’ve never had any knowledge of a credit score. nor has my wife and we are both homeowners, landlords and credit card users.
It is a totally alien concept to me.

Maybe that’s a good thing, maybe I and the people around me have good enough “scores” that they never need be discussed and are never an issue.

Never heard of them and haven’t seen the adverts, but then I don’t watch adverts anyway.
Mind you, even if I had heard of them I’d be none the wiser as to what a credit score is or why I’d want one.

Just to add, I’ve asked the office and no-one has heard of Experian either and I promise we aren’t a particularly strange and insular bunch.