New Yorkers horrified by Cynthia Nixon's bagels order



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Now it's Retch and the city.

Cynthia Nixon tore Big Apple's stomachs when she ordered a traditional lox and cream cheese with capers – and then asked a Zabar wicket to stack everything on a raisin and cinnamon bagel!

The governor's hope – who will face Andrew Cuomo in the Democratic primary on Thursday – was shopping for lunch at the Mecca of Smoked Fish Sunday when she made the unconventional choice.

"That's what I want – a full load of cream cheese," Nixon told the deli worker when he offered tomatoes, onions and capers with the lox.

"Sweet and salty," Nixon proudly added.

The bagel failure, part of which can be seen in a video posted by Gothamist, firmly establishes Nixon in the annals of the terrible culinary decisions made by aspiring officials of the city and surrounding areas.

New Yorkers reacted with horror at Nixon's faux pas lunch – reminiscent of Blasio Mayor's pizza epic when Hizzoner used a knife and fork to eat a slice of Staten Island in 2014.

"Cynthia Nixon's bagels order just ruined my day," Kendra K. Levine tweeted. "I can not focus on anything other than the quality of the tasting."

But Nixon defended his decision regarding Bagel during a campaign on Monday.

"It's really delicious," said Nixon. "Do not hit him until he's tried it."

And his spokesman said the unconventional choice was only one example of the candidate's support for under-representation and atypical.

"Cynthia Nixon runs to represent the forgotten New Yorkers who need someone to defend their point of view," said Rebecca Katz, an ironic player, on behalf of Nixon. "New Yorkers need someone to defend their opinions, even if those opinions are out of the ordinary or even unpopular."

Still, Nixon should have some heart – maybe nobody had a minute of New York food worse than Ohio Governor John Kasich when he campaigned for the president here in 2016.

John Kasich broke into the meat sweats when he came across a sandwich with salami, provolone, pepperoni and hot peppers in the Italo-American enclave of Arthur Avenue, in the Bronx.

And then, later, he succumbed to the quagmire of the pizza knife and the fork – slicing a slice in the wrong direction at the Pizzeria Gino in Howard Beach, Queens.

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