If you’ve ever found yourself licking yellow dust off your fingers or explaining why a certain crustacean is basically a religious icon, you’re officially a Marylander.
1. The “Old Bay” Mandate
In other states, Old Bay is a spice. In Maryland, it is a primary food group.
We don’t just put it on crabs. We put it on popcorn, fries, corn on the cob, ice cream (yes, really), and rim our Bloody Marys with it until they look like a construction site. If a restaurant in Maryland doesn’t have a yellow tin of “The Spice” within arm’s reach, locals will look at the waiter like they just asked for a glass of tap water from Virginia.
2. The “Mallet and Paper” Ritual
To an outsider, a Maryland crab feast looks like a messy crime scene. To a local, it’s a high-stakes surgical operation.
We cover the table in brown butcher paper, arm ourselves with wooden mallets and paring knives, and spend three hours meticulously extracting every gram of meat from a Blue Crab. There is a specific rhythm to it—the crack-whack-scrape—and if you try to use a fork, you might be asked to leave the premises. It’s not just a meal; it’s an endurance sport.
3. The Flag That Conquered Everything
Maryland has the most distinctive flag in the Union (the Calvert and Crossland arms, for those keeping score). While most states barely know what their flag looks like, Marylanders put theirs on everything…