“Too many” kinda sounds right to my ear because beans is plural, but the second logically seems right because its served by volume and is not ‘countable’ as ordinary (non-destroyed) beans might be.

  • @robolemmy
    link
    English
    784 months ago

    When it comes to refried beans, “too many” or “too much” are both incorrect. The correct construction is “may I have some more please?”

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        13
        edit-2
        4 months ago

        Señor*

        Also, I’d love to see a version of Oliver Twist where the orphanage exclusively serves tex-mex for some reason.

        19th century london orphan taste buds who are used to the blandest of the blandest slop only get to eat really spicy food at the orphanage for the added cruelty.

      • Dem Bosain
        link
        fedilink
        English
        34 months ago

        You can’t have any pudding until you eat your meat.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    32
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    Since the word “beans” is plural, and countable, it’s “many”.

    “Many” is for things that are countable, “much” is for things that aren’t. e.g. Water - you’d say “too much water” but you wouldn’t say “too much cups of water” but “too many cups of water”.

    Though “refried beans” is a thing on its own, I could go either way. Like if you were spooning beans onto my plate, I may say “too much!”.

    How’s that for a confident, clear answer? 😆

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        94 months ago

        The plural on the word takes precedence over the actual countability of the thing. Unless you want to start calling it a can of “refried bean”

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        24 months ago

        Lol, I know, right?

        On my plate it’s a volumetric thing, so a single unit.

        But it is “beans” (plural) in a can.

    • palordrolap
      link
      fedilink
      64 months ago

      A technically correct alternative would be to drop that plural “s” but forego any uncountable noun that describes the form the beans take: “I had too much refried bean today.”

      In the wrong context it might evoke the idea of one enormous bean that the speaker was unable to finish, but like I say, technically correct.

    • gordon
      link
      English
      44 months ago

      So you’d normally say “that’s too much!” in which case the subject “that” is plural and countable so therefore “much” would be correct.

      Otherwise you should say “you have given me too many refried beans!” since the beans are volumetric and not countable entities.

    • edric
      link
      fedilink
      24 months ago

      I wouldn’t consider beans countable, and would put it in the same category as rice or noodles. So I’d say “too much” is the correct term.

      • @SLVRDRGN
        link
        24 months ago

        One noodle/ a bowl of noodles. Or one bean, a bowl of beans.

        But you wouldn’t say: one rice. You’d say one grain of rice. So it’s like rice is automatically a mass of many individual bits/grains of rice. Beans are not that way, they’re countable.

        • @SpaceNoodle
          link
          44 months ago

          Not after they’ve been refried.

          Consider a potato and mashed potatoes.

    • @SpaghettiYeti
      link
      14 months ago

      Yes. There are countable and non-countable nouns and thems the rules.

  • finley
    link
    fedilink
    English
    18
    edit-2
    4 months ago

    “Too many” if you’re referring to the beans themselves. “Too much” if you’re referring to refried beans as a dish you have been served.

    Edit: just remember: “too many” as reference to a quantity of things, “too much” as reference to a volume or a quantity/amount of a thing. In this case, the “thing” was the dish being served (refried beans). Since it was the dish, itself, being considered (not each individual bean) the phrase was being dealt with, grammatically, as one whole unit— a dish that was served to you, of which you had too much.

  • @SkaraBrae
    link
    English
    184 months ago

    It depends on whether you’re referring to individual refried beans or the dish ‘refried beans’ as a whole.

    If it’s the former, it would be ‘too many’ (individual) refried beans.

    If it is the latter, it would be ‘too much’ (of) refried beans… Unless you had multiple servings, in which case it would be ‘too many’ (servings of) refried beans.

    That is my opinion: as such it is subject to change should further information come to light.

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      English
      1
      edit-2
      4 months ago

      you just discovered why we say ‘traffic’ and not ‘there were many trafficks on my way in this morning’.

      (It’s also why ‘experiences’ and ‘emails’ is very often wrong if we followed established rules like in the former instead of gleefully making up the very exceptions we then curse, like in the latter case.)

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    164 months ago

    Because refried beans are as you mention no longer countable, I think “refried beans” should be taken all together as a singular compound noun rather than the word “beans” modified by an adjective. So then “too much refried beans” is the correct way to say it because it isn’t plural.

  • AFK BRB Chocolate
    link
    English
    114 months ago

    It seems like the problem goes away if you add a “the.” I had too much of the refried beans.

    • @toynbee
      link
      34 months ago

      Your point is fair, but I respectfully disagree. “Beans” being plural makes me want to use “many.” “I had too many of the refried beans” parses fine for me.

        • @toynbee
          link
          14 months ago

          I don’t think I’ve ever been asked to quantify mashed potatoes in such a way, but after reflecting for a moment, yes. Thank you for an interesting question.

  • @ccunning
    link
    94 months ago

    I think you’re just going to have to call it “too much refried bean paste”

  • geogle
    link
    74 months ago

    I’ve eaten too many corn.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    54 months ago

    Obviously this is very context dependant, but here’s my take:

    “I ate too many refried beans” = in one meal, I consumed more refried beans than I should have

    “I ate too much refried beans” = over the course of an extended period of time, I ate meals consisting of refried beans more frequently than I should have

    • @[email protected]
      link
      fedilink
      74 months ago

      I would think that would be “too much” because all the potatoes don’t matter at that point, it’s one entity. There are no more individual potatoes, we are Borg mashed potatoes!

      • Skua
        link
        fedilink
        24 months ago

        I would instinctively go for “too much mashed potato” rather than potatoes plural, even if I would describe it as mashed potatoes in other contexts

  • @folekaule
    link
    54 months ago

    Since refried beans is not countable, I vote for “too much”.

    Example:

    • I’m gassy because I had too much refried beans
    • I am gassy because I had too many burritos

    Or like someone else suggested, make the noun singular and call them “refried bean paste”. This will probably raise more eyebrows than much/many confusion, though.

  • @fan0m
    link
    54 months ago

    I think it depends on if you view beans as individual beans or not.

  • @Tylerdurdon
    link
    54 months ago

    No such thing. You can never have enough.

    Mmmmmmm… Beans

  • tiredofsametab
    link
    fedilink
    44 months ago

    I would say ‘too much’; I never talk about a single refried bean (throwing out the whole thing that refritos aren’t necessarily even fried twice…)