Food should be an entire love language on its own. It's the universal thread that holds us all together and keeps us alive.
We share food with our families, we meet first dates over a meal, we serve canapés and three courses at our weddings, and we eat our pain away after a heartbreak.
Food has the power to dictate our mood, our plans, our finances, and at times, our entire personality. There's comfort eating, celebratory eating, stress eating, boredom eating, eating because we're hungry, and then eating just because food is there.
Food has the ability to humble us. One minute we're confidently following a complicated recipe, the next, we've thrown in the towel and settled for a grilled cheese sandwich instead. Food, glorious food. It can also be the source of comedy gold... in the form of bite-sized hilarious memes.
Many can be found in a corner of the internet called Planet Food. The Facebook page is where more than 1.7 million members gather, hungry for their daily dose of food-related humor. Bored Panda has put together some of their best posts for you to scroll through while you ponder what to cook for dinner tonight. Don't forget to upvote your favorites.
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Looks like a Pizza Petri Dish. "Deep Dish?" "No, Petri Dish!"
Cast your bread upon the waters, and it shall be returned to you a hundredfold.
I bet anxiety just looking at it. When chefs use them in cooking programmes I have to look away. This is true horror movie stuff.
As I am getting older I am finding that cheese is having dramatic consequences on my rear end. I am giving to down my cheese intake by a considerable amount. Either that or pebbledash my toilet an hour later.
I bet that cleared your sinuses. I like English mustard, but it is a bit like having your nostrils napalmed.
I’m in Canada and a dozen free range organic brown eggs will set you back around the $9 mark!
This is more what I'd expect as an Aussie. I think a 6-pack of free range eggs cost me around $7 bucks a few days ago.
Load More Replies...Don’t eggs in America cost the same as a small car? I think this picture is a bit old
Same price at Wal Mart in shelton wa. Wal marts uses eggs as a "loss leader"-- get you in the store to buy the s**t they rally want you to buy. That, and they sell jillions of eggs each day.
Load More Replies...And our local Aldi's carries these, even in the States! Aldi's has become my go-to convenient source of decent European chocolate instead of the Hershey's, Nestle's, or Mars muck.
The ice cream at the sides would taste of cardboard though.
If all you did was wave the tea bag at that cup you would have a stronger cup of tea.
OK, so there's the bed of leftover chunks of wood for the smoker. Where's the steak?
Cadbury chocolate is gone to shìte these days, it is not real chocolate anymore, sadly
He discovered his error when he realized how much better this one tasted.
I used to be a cake decorator in a grocery store, and when people would ask me how much a 1/4 sheet cake (9" x 13", or ~23 x 33 cm) served I always told them, "I'm supposed to say 20-25 people, but realistically it's closer to 12-15."
Because you bunged three pounds of cheese on that 'toastie', my friend....
OK, I never want to hear a Brit trash talk food in the US ever again.
This perfectly captures how deeply food is woven into our emotions and everyday lives. From comfort meals to celebration feasts, food really does speak a language everyone understands. The humor angle makes it even more relatable—sometimes laughing about food is just as satisfying as eating it. Loved reading this, especially the reminder that food connects us all in the most human way.
This recipe sounds incredibly flavorful and well balanced. The combination of sautéed mushrooms, sausage, veggies, spinach, and cheese makes the stuffing rich without feeling heavy. I really like the step-by-step process—it’s clear and easy to follow, especially the tip about draining the mushroom juices. Perfect as an appetizer or party dish. Great recipe!
This perfectly captures how deeply food is woven into our emotions and everyday lives. From comfort meals to celebration feasts, food really does speak a language everyone understands. The humor angle makes it even more relatable—sometimes laughing about food is just as satisfying as eating it. Loved reading this, especially the reminder that food connects us all in the most human way.
This recipe sounds incredibly flavorful and well balanced. The combination of sautéed mushrooms, sausage, veggies, spinach, and cheese makes the stuffing rich without feeling heavy. I really like the step-by-step process—it’s clear and easy to follow, especially the tip about draining the mushroom juices. Perfect as an appetizer or party dish. Great recipe!
