My significant other ate cucumbers and onion with some ranch. I called it a cucumber onion salad. She says there aren’t enough ingredients to call it a salad, because “it takes multiple ingredients”. I pointed out she had three and asked what the minimum is. She refuses to answer so I ask Lemmy.

  • @NotMyOldRedditName
    link
    3
    edit-2
    1 year ago

    Here’s some example weights for a salad factor

    Lettuce - 10

    Spinach - 9

    Arugula - 7

    Cabbage - 7

    Tomato- 6

    Carrots- 6

    Cucumber - 5

    Onion - 4

    Olives (black) 4

    Anchovies - 1

    • Hydroel
      link
      31 year ago

      There are a few missing points in there IMO, like which of your ingredient is cooked, or how are they sliced? Graped carrots rises the score, but cook them and it’s less likely to be a salad. Diced radish? Not in my salad, especially not cooked, but thinly sliced raw radish definitely belongs. And don’t even get me started on tomatoes.

      • @NotMyOldRedditName
        link
        21 year ago

        Damn, I’m not sure the two are compatible then. The salad factor score is meant to be super easy so people don’t get overwhelmed by all the possibilities and variations.

        • @Badass_panda
          link
          31 year ago

          What we need is a salad categorizing multilayer neural network

          • @NotMyOldRedditName
            link
            1
            edit-2
            1 year ago

            It wouldn’t be hard to train on obvious salads, but what about the non obvious ones? Who do we trust to properly label these as salad or not a salad?

            • @Badass_panda
              link
              11 year ago

              We don’t! That’s the joy of it, just like people do, our algorithm will constantly waffle back and forth and argue with itself over whether these things are salads