Okay. I’ll give you two relevent Chicago examples. I don’t think that you would ever try eating a deep-dish Chicago style pizza with strawberry jam instead of tomato sauce or dipping those delicious White Castle burgers into syrup.
My dad is a native of Chicago. I know about White Castle.

He got mad at me for not crossing the Mississippi into Illinois just so I could taste the real things instead of eathing them frozen.

But, I would not try them with syrup.
Be careful about using food as an example. The big hit this year at the Wisconsin State Fair was chocolate-covered bacon.
A few years back, the trendy thing was sweet pizza with fruit.
I put sugar on tomatoes all the time to cut the acid.
I like bacon with syrup. When I mentioned this on a skating forum years ago, I was told by many Canadians that this is the only way to eat bacon–smothered with maple syrup!
A lot of people prefer sweet with meat. Orange chicken is an example. Teriyaki beef. Ham with cherry sauce. And I have a particularly delicious recipe for meatballs using pineapple tidbits.
If you can imagine it, somewhere, someone is probably eating it. It’s all a matter of personal opinion. My mother used to eat lard. Extremely wealthy and cultured people eat snails and steak tartar (raw burger) or raw fish–yech. I like Peeps, something that many people consider non-food.
benedictgal, you are stating an
opinion when you say that certain music isn’t reverent or dignified. Many of us who were raised in the evangelical tradition find certain pieces of contemporary music extremely reverent and solemn.
The magnificent grandeur of many of the contemporary gospel or praise pieces (e.g., Sandy Patti, Steve Green, etc,–and actually, these are really oldies–they’ve been around since the 1970s and 1980s) is, in my opinion, very fitting to honor the Lord God Almighty and the Sacrifice of His Only Begotten Son, Jesus Christ. I realize that as Catholics, we have to be careful not to offer pieces of music that contradicts Catholic theology. But pieces like “Let There Be Praise” are not problematic.
Again, it doesn’t matter what I think or what you think. It matters what the bishop thinks, or, in many cases, what the person who is designated as his Liturgical Director thinks. We will all have different opinions about music. The bishop and his staff are the ones with the authority to approve or disapprove of Mass music. If we don’t agree with his interpretation of the various musical documents, well, I hate to say it, but it’s too bad for us.
I really don’t see the value of continuing to oppose or fume over his choices. HE has the authority from the Lord, we don’t. HE has the charisms to be the authority, we don’t. We can certainly make an attempt to change his mind. That’s fine. But if he doesn’t change his mind, I think that it’s undermining of his authority to continue to disagree with him. I think that someone who disagrees (and makes that disagreement public) over a bishop’s approach to music is very likely to sow seeds of disagreement with the bishop over matters of Faith and Morals. You and other strong Catholics may be able to separate the two (music vs. Faith/Morals), but many weaker Christians cannot. In their minds, if the bishop is wrong about music, then he might be wrong about other things. Doubt springs up, grows, and eventually, the Christian is no longer in submission to the Church.
What I’m saying is that it’s a darn serious thing to maintain a continuous disagreement with a bishop and to make it public.