Photo by Retiring Guy
Growing up in Warren Pennsylvania, I occasionally heard adult members of St. Paul's Lutheran use this expression at church socials.
Since then I sometimes share it with friends in other parts of the country. To a person, they look at me like I'm from Mars. (Not Mars PA.)
The origin of the phrase is unknown, but Atlas Obscura offers a hint:
The tradition has silently polarized the nation, with some, like author John T. Edge, confessing, “at lunch or dinner I thought a wedge of pie was naked if it wasn’t crowned with a preternaturally orange slice of cheddar.” The poet Eugene Field (1850-1895) once wrote, “But I, when I undress me / Each night, upon my knees / Will ask the Lord to bless me / With apple pie and cheese.” There is even a saying, popular in many circles: “An apple pie without the cheese is like a kiss without the squeeze.”
I prefer a slice of apple pie with a big scoop of vanilla ice cream and a dollop of caramel sauce.

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