what are people most likely to say in rap songs

Girls, cars and jewelry are well-documented tropes of hip-hop, just anyone who listens to enough rap knows that eating is i of the genre's near pervasive obsessions. From the Sugarhill Gang to Drake, MCs have demonstrated a abiding urge to document what'south on their plate. Sometimes, food is used as a cultural signifier to describe the rags-to-riches journey, which might first with Hamburger Helper but end with filet mignon. At other times it plays into metaphors of consumption, with artists such as Lil Wayne (who calls himself "the rapper eater") describing the ravenous manner in which they gobble up the competition. And that'southward not to mention all of the nutrient-related slang in rap: cheese for money, beef for grudges and and so on.

To survey the full breadth of culinary references in hip-hop, nosotros've rounded upward l of the lines that never fail to hit us in the gut. Did we miss any of your favorites? Leave a comment here, or holler at us on Twitter (@thefeednyc) using the hashtag #foodrap.

50. Ghostface Killah, "Apollo Kids" (Supreme Clientele, 2000)

The lyric: "Ayo, this rap is similar ziti, facin' me real Television receiver / Crash at high speeds, strawberry kiwi."

Ghost explained this enigmatic couplet in an interview with Entertainment Weekly: "The rap's adept because it's like ziti, which was my best food back then. I threw 'strawberry kiwi' on because I'm into experimenting. I was thinking of a mode to write without nobody knowing what I was proverb except for me."



49. Big Daddy Kane, "Platinum Plus" (Big Fifty'southward The Big Picture show, 2000)

The lyric: "Come in the hood flippin' the chicken-and-broccoli Timbs."

Those would be brown-and-dark-green Timberland boots, a must-have fashion accessory on the streets of late-'90s New York.



48. 50 Cent, "21 Questions" (Get Rich or Die Tryin', 2003)

The lyric: "I honey you like a fat kid love cake."

Though purists aghast at this corny line, Fiddyâ€"ever the shrewd marketerâ€"knew exactly what he was doing: turning a nation of teen girls into gangster-rap fans. Information technology's rubber to say that the line dominated the demographic'south AIM away messages for much of 2003.



47. Kanye Westward, "Niggas in Paris" (Watch the Throne, 2011)

The lyric: "That shit cray, own't it Jay? / What she order? Fish filet?"

We're non sure if this insta-meme boosted McDonald's Filet-O-Fish sales or sent them into a slump. Fertile ground for an infographic, it would seem.



46. Young Jeezy, "Put On" (The Recession, 2008)

The lyric: "Big wheels, big straps, you know I similar it supersized / Passenger's a redbone, her weave await like some curly chips / Inside fish sticks, outside tartar sauce / Pocket total of celery, imagine what she telling me / Blowing on asparagus, the realest shit I ever smoked."

...and so on and so forth. Jeezy is a food-rap legendâ€"this snippet is merely a taster.



45. Eastward-40, "Gouda" (My Ghetto Study Card, 2006)

The lyric: "Aye, I purchase the weed man / Hella turkey bags just to put my weed in / Oh, we gettin' chalupa / Wrapped cheese in a rubber band and phone call information technology gouda."

It's safe to say that no rapper in history has known the name of more than cheeses than E-twoscore. If just he worked at Murray's.



44. The Notorious B.I.G., "Hypnotize" (Life After Death, 1997)

The lyric: "I can make full y'all with real millionaire shit: escargot."

If Biggie had written this song today, he might have replaced escargot with "omakase dinners at Masa."



43. LL Cool J, "Milky Cereal" (Mama Said Knock You lot Out, 1990)

The lyric: "Then there was Pebbles, times was crude / She was turning Trix, to go a Cocoa Puff."

LL sort of betrays the limits of his lyrical agility on this conceptual track, which is full of clunky puns on proper noun-brand cereals. But there are a few choice lines, and nosotros love the bizarre way in which he says "Cocoa Puff."



42. Childish Gambino, "That Power" (Camp, 2011)

The lyric: "MM..Nutrient? like Rapp Snitch Knishes / Cuz it'south Oreos, Twinkies, coconuts, succulent."

Here'due south some meta food rap for yous: Gambino (also known equally comedian Donald Glover) references the MF Doom album MM..Food? and its rail "Rapp Snitch Knishes," then meditates on biracial identity via some gastronomic allusions of his own (Oreo, Twinkie and coconut are slurs for people who are said to be "white" inside despite the color of their skin).



41. Ludacris, "Southern Hospitality" (Back for the First Time, 2000)

The lyric: "Muddy South heed-bravado Dirty Due south bread / Catfish fried upward, Muddy South fed."

Luda would afterwards release an album chosen Chicken-n-Beer, but it was here that he established his honey for Southern-fried delicacies.

forty. Edan, "Beautiful Food" (Sprain Your Tapedeck, 2001)

The lyric: "I'chiliad talking about Chicken la King / Mango and garbanzo / Tabouli / Grilled potatoes and vegetables / With roasted garlic and basil / Zucchini ziti / Granola fruit bar..."

This grocery-list--style joint from the Boston-based emcee is comprised solely of the names of dissimilar foods. To our noesis, it is also the only rap vocal to ever characteristic a shout-out to tabouli.



39. Das Racist, "Rainbow in the Night" (Shut Upward, Dude; 2010)

The lyric: "I'k at White Castle, tiny-ass hamburgers, tiny-donkey cheeseburgers, tiny-donkey chicken sandwichesâ€"information technology's outlandish kid."

The duo backside the oddball hit "Combination Pizza Hut and Taco Bell" celebrate their fast-food fetish once once more on this rails. Simply don't pigeonhole them as lowbrow eatersâ€"later in the vocal, they hint at their refined tastes with the line, "We could swallow the flyest cavern-aged cheese for sheez, ma."



38. Rick Ross, "I Love My Bitches" (God Forgives, I Don't; 2012)

The lyric: "Am I actually just a narcissist / 'Crusade I wake up to a basin of lobster bisque?"

Narcissist? Maybe. Fatso? Most definitely.



37. Cee Lo Light-green, "Soul Food" (Goodie Mob'southward Soul Food, 1995)

The lyric: "A heapin' helpin' of fried chicken, macaroni and cheese and collard greens / Too big for my jeans."

Before he became a global megastar with hits like "Crazy" and "Fuck You lot," Cee Lo rapped about getting fat on delicious food in Atlanta.



36. Kelis, "Milkshake" (Tasty, 2003)

The lyric: "My shake brings all the boys to the yard / And they're similar, 'It's better than yours.'"

Love information technology or hate it, Kelis'south euphemistic chorus has successfully cemented its spot in the popular lexicon.



35. Young Dro, "G Hustle Mafia" (Thou Hustle Presents: In da Streetz Volume 4; 2006)

The lyric: "What you know 'tour shark meat, perch and tilapia?"

That sounds similar some big-boss pescatarian eatin' right at that place, Dro. But we're concerned about the rest of your diet: "Alligator, dog meat, caviarâ€"we mafia."



34. Lil' Bow Wow, "Take Ya Home" (Doggy Bag, 2001)

The lyric: "I got 'em scattered, covered, smothered like hash browns / See I'm the best merely ask around."

Back when Bow Wow was even so li'l, he paid homage to the famous hash browns at Waffle House, which you can get "scattered" (spread on the grill), "smothered" (with onions) and "covered" (with cheese).



33. The Streets, "Don't Mug Yourself" (Original Pirate Material, 2002)

The lyric: "Chatting shit, sitting at the wall table, telling jokes, playing with the table salt, lookin' out the window / Girl brings ii plates of full English over, with enough of scrambled eggs and plenty of fried tomato plant."

Mike Skinner, the original don of geezer rap, refers here to a full English breakfast, which traditionally includes some combination of eggs, tomato, toast, sausage, mushrooms, bacon and baked beans.



32. Action Bronson, "Tapas" (Peter Rosenberg's What'due south Poppin Book ane Mixtape, 2011)

The lyric: "I'm on the fine art and the nutrient scene / Fuck rap, laying back eatin' poutine."

After giving upward cooking for music, Queens rapper Action Bronson has quickly become one of the most fecund practitioners of nutrient rap, lacing songs similar "Brunch" and "Jerk Chicken" with culinary references. He even dropped a mixtape called Bon Appetit...Bowwow!!!!!



31. Fat Boys, "All You lot Tin Eat" (Krush Groove Original Soundtrack, 1985)

The lyric: "$three.99 for all you can consume / Well, I'm a stuff my confront to a funky vanquish."

If this video is any indication, Sbarro used to be the greatest eating place in New York.

xxx. Fabolous, "You Ain't Got Nothin' " (Lil Wayne's Tha Carter III, 2008)

The lyric: "My lil' man is on ya, Marlon and Shawn ya / Lay the beef on his noodle / Make some luger lasagna / forty-cal fettuccine, trey-pound pasta / You achieve for this medallion, you must similar Italian."

Guns made out of pasta sound like a gangster Giuseppe Arcimboldo painting. Side note: On the same track, Juelz Santana reminds us to never invite him to a cocktail party with the line, "Oasis't you all heard? / Y'all all herbs (yep) / I stick toothpicks (where?) / In y'all hors d'oeuvres." Cheeky bounder!



29. MF Doom, "Beef Rapp" (Mm.. Food, 2004)

The lyric: "Beef rap could lead to getting teeth capped / Or even a wreath for ma dukes on some grief crap / I suggest you change your nutrition / It can pb to high claret pressure if yous fry it."

The masked indie rapper crafted this unabridged indie albumâ€"an anagram of the name MF Doomâ€"around food-inspired samples (including "Would You Like a Snack?" by Frank Zappa) and lyrical references. Other tracks include "Hoe Cakes," "Fillet-O-Rapper" and "Kon Queso."



28. Puff Daddy, "It's All Almost the Benjamins" (No Way Out, 1997)

The lyric: "Yeah, living the raw deal, 3-course meal / Spaghetti, fettuccini and veal."

Half-dozen years later, Diddy would put all that carbo-loading to good use by running the New York City Marathon.



27. Jay-Z, "Go Crazy" (Young Jeezy's Let'south Get Information technology: Thug Motivation 101, 2005)

The lyric: "More a hustler, I'thousand the definition of it / Master chef, lord of the kitchen closet."

Sure, Jigga'south talking about cooking crevice, not duck confit. Notwithstanding, we capeesh his Gordon Ramsay-like vigor backside the burner. If only he would lay down a poesy over some "buttery biscuit base."



26. Method Man, "Water ice Cream" (Raekwon's Just Built iv Cuban Linx, 1995)

The lyric: "Lookout man these rap niggas get all up in your guts / French vanilla, butter-pecan, chocolate deluxe / Even caramel sundaes is getting touched / And scooped in my ice cream truckâ€"Wu tears it upwards."

Fun fact: That guy in the background yelling, "The ice cream man is coming!" is Eddie Potato.



25. Talib Kweli, "Support Offa Me" (The Cute Struggle, 2004)

The lyric: "Tried to tell you lot non to fuck with these debutantes / That's more Kobe beefiness than Japanese restaurants."

In the wake of Kobe Bryant's 2003 sexual assault case, Talib reiterates some oldie-simply-goodie communication.



24. Water ice Cube, "It Was a Farewell" (The Predator, 1992)

The lyric: "No barkin' from the dog, no smogâ€"and momma cooked up breakfast with no hog / I got my chow on merely didn't squealer out, finally got a call from this girl I desire to dig out."

Best. Twenty-four hours. Ever.



23. Lil Wayne, "6 Foot seven Foot" (Tha Carter IV, 2011)

The lyric: "Paper chasin', tell that paper, 'Wait I'1000 right behind ya' / Bitch, real Gs movement in silence like lasagna."

Is Lil Wayne employing metonymy here, using lasagnaâ€"a dish associated with Italian gangstersâ€"to represent the mob equally a whole? Or does he but not realize that the m in lasagna isn't actually silent? (Or maybe it is silent?) These are the questions that continue us awake at night.



22. Big Pun, "Banned from TV" (Endangered Species, 2001)

The lyric: "Champagne on the rocks, rockin' a Fort Knox Lazarus / Shark salad with carrots, pork chops and absurdity."

Further evidence that Large Pun would eat absolutely anything.



21. Roots Manuva, "Witness (1 Promise)" (Run Come Relieve Me, 2011)

The lyric: "Right now, I run across clearer than about / I sit down here contented with this cheese on toast."

Other rappers obsess over caviar dreams and how many bottles of Ciroc are at the table. Merely Roots Manuva is happy with the simplest of English language condolement foods: some melted cheddar, a piece of toast and a splash of Worcestershire sauce. Lovey jubbly.

20. Snoop Dogg, "Nuthin' just a 'G' Thang" (Dr. Dre's The Chronic, 1992)

The lyric: "Falling back on that ass, with a hellafied gangsta lean / Getting funky on the mike, like a old batch of collard greens."

File adjacent to kombucha, Dr. Dre beats and fermented pork sausage at Zabb Elee on the list of stuff that's funky.



19. Guerilla Blackness, "Compton" (Guerilla City, 2004)

The lyric: "Go along my enemies on Iv, in one case I toast them / Merely similar my bagels / Have 'em like Christians over they head, smoking halo."

Nosotros could never figure out if this was some sort of subversive commentary on Jewish-Christian relations. Unfortunately, Guerilla Black's flash-in-the-pan career didn't provide further opportunity to dig into his religious views.



18. Necro, "Food for Thought" (The Pre-Fix for Decease, 2004)

The lyric: "You're lost in the sauce every bit information technology clogs your vessels / I'll undo the blouse of your spouse and give her my house special / My raps are hot and sour, they choke you / You make no moves like a vegetable, you're fake like tofu."

Horrorcore legend Necro reimagines the local Chinese joint as a hellish torture sleeping accommodation, where fortune cookies read: "Very soon in the future you lot'll vomit greenish."



17. Jay-Z, "Maybach Music 2 (Lost Verse)"

The lyric: "Half-dozen-deuce every fourth dimension, I never had the Heinz / Fifty-seven tin't ketchup [catch upwards] to mines."

This clever double entendre requires some unpacking: The Maybach 57 and 62 are models of Mercedes-Benz's most luxurious line of cars. Jay-Z calls the 57 "the Heinz," referring to the Heinz 57 slogan establish on ketchup bottles. The 62, which he prefers, is referred to here every bit the "half dozen-deuce."



xvi. Dead Prez, "Exist Healthy" (Let'south Become Costless, 2000)

The lyric: "I'thousand from the old school, my household smell similar soul food, bruh / Curried falafel, barbecued tofu."

Ignore the part about smoking ganja, and this ode to salubrious eating provides a corking rebuttal to critics who say rap music is a bad influence.



15. The Sugarhill Gang, "Rappers Delight" (Sugarhill Gang, 1980)

The lyric: "Accept you always went over a friend'south house to eat and the food just ain't no practiced? / I mean the macaroni'due south soggy, the peas are mushed, and the chicken tastes similar wood."

In his poesy from hip-hop's foundational posse cut, Wonder Mike describes that bad-mannered experience of going to someone'southward house and trying to weasel out of eating a crappy meal.



14. Drake, "The Ride" (Take Care, 2011)

The lyric: "And you do dinners at French Laundry in Napa Valley / Scallops and glasses of Dolce, that shit's right up your alley."

While most new-money rappers are still talking near surf and turf and canteen service, Drizzy separates himself from the pack with this knowing nod to Thomas Keller's haute-cuisine temple. Nosotros'd love to know if the French Laundry sommelier really recommended that Dolce for the scallops.



13. Fat Tony, "U Own't Fatty" (RABDARGAB, 2010)

The lyric: "I was once a chubby brat / Chillin' with my mom, buying jeans off the husky rack / Skipping collard greens and beans for a Kit Kat."

If yous've got food issues, here's your theme song. Houston-based rapper Fatty Tony raps frankly nigh his body-paradigm struggles, and in the video finds himself hallucinating well-nigh a waiter with a face up made of pizza and a store clerk with Kit Kats for hands.



12. Kanye Due west, "Last Telephone call" (The College Dropout, 2004)

The lyric: "Mayonnaise-colored Benz, I button Miracle Whips."

While plenty of hip-hop heads take questioned Kanye'south lyrical dexterity, this witty bit of wordplay had everyone pressing rewind on his debut album. Whips refers to cars, while phenomenon may be a reference to the near-fatal crash that 'Ye survived in 2002.



eleven. Inspectah Deck, "Firm of Flying Daggers" (Raekwon'due south Only Built iv Cuban Linx... Part Two, 2009)

The lyric: "I popular off like a mobster boss / Affections hair with the lobster sauce."

We might go with linguine when enjoying a dainty lobster sauce, simply we know better than to mess with the Wu-Tang Clan.

10. Run-D.Thousand.C., "Christmas in Hollis" (A Very Special Christmas, 1987)

The lyric: "It's Christmas time in Hollis, Queens / Mom's cooking craven and collard greens."

Hip-hop'due south finest contribution to the Christmas song canon includes a rundown of Run-D.Thou.C.'south preferred vacation spread.



9. De La Soul, "Bitties in the BK Lounge" (De La Soul Is Dead, 1991)

The lyric: "Well, it was a Midweek, me and Boss Pig was kinda hungry / Similar 2 eggs, and a slop beefiness slice of lettuce / And a drinking glass of milk and some cookies."

This fine instance of storytelling rap recounts the perils of hollering at women in a Burger King.



8. Jay-Z, "Success" (American Gangster, 2007)

The lyric: "How many times can I become to Mr. Grub'southward, Tao's, Nobu? / Hold up, let me move my bowels."

In chronicling the nihilism of fame and wealth, Mr. Carter wonders how much fine dining one man can stomach. #rapperproblems



seven. Cam'ron, "Wet Wipes" (Killa Season, 2006)

The lyric: "Had a drunken mind, club wobbled out / Next cease: Beginning trouble inside the Waffle Firm."

Information technology's tough to cull merely one foodie reference from the man who once referred to himself equally "the sushi rex," but this example remains an all-time favorite. Taken in the context of "Killa Cam," on which he calls himself "the hooligan at Houlihan's," it's articulate that Cam'ron is a restaurant manager'southward worst nightmare.



6. Juelz Santana, "S.AN.T.A.North.A" (The Diplomats'due south Diplomatic Immunity two, 2004)

The lyric: "I ain't here to vino ya / I ain't hither to dine ya / I came hither to pop ya / And I came hither for lobster / The whole damn shebang, and they ain't bring the pasta."

This video e'er makes united states feel a little lamentable for Juelz: Fifty-fifty in the trattoria of his wildest dreams, he can't get expert service. Become this guy to a Danny Meyer eatery, stat.



five. Nas, "Fried Chicken" (Untitled, 2008)

The lyric: "Mmm, fried craven, fly vixen / Give me heart illness but need you in my kitchen."

This love letter to deep-fried fowl is perhaps the best loftier-concept food rap of all time. Nas and Busta Rhymes both evangelize well-crafted verses about how the food they love the almost is killing them.



4. Slick Rick, "Mona Lisa" (The Great Adventures of Slick Rick, 1988)

The lyric: "I went into a store, to buy a slice of pizza / And bumped into a girl, her name was Mona (what?) Mona Lisa."

Eminem gives Slick Rick's one-time-fashioned courting a more sinister spin on "As the World Turns," when he raps, "I met a slut and said, 'What upwards, it'south overnice to meet ya / I'd similar to treat ya to a Faygo and a slice of pizza.'"



3. Beastie Boys, "3 the Hard Fashion" (To the v Boroughs, 2004)

The lyric: "Oops, gotcha, clutch similar Piazza / Sneak betwixt the sheets so hide the matzo / Holler back challah bread...side by side."

Thanks to the Beastie Boys, Jewish foodstuffs like matzo and challah found their style into the rap vocabulary.



2. A Tribe Called Quest, "Ham 'N' Eggs" (People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, 1990)

The lyric: "I don't eat no ham and eggs, 'cause they're loftier in cholesterol / Ayo, Phife practise you eat 'em? No, Tip practice you consume 'em? / Uh-uh, not at all."

If you yearn for the days when a rapper could say, "asparagus tips look yummy, yummy, yummy" and still sound dope, this is the track for you.



ane. Rakim, "Eric B. Is President" (Eric B. and Rakim's Paid in Full, 1987)

The lyric: "Yous scream I'm lazy, you lot must be crazy / Thought I was a donut, you tried to glaze me."

Rakim is likely the most oft-quoted MC in hip-hop history, and this line ranks amidst his almost memorable.

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Source: https://www.timeout.com/music/the-50-top-rap-lyrics-about-food-hip-hop

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