I had an Episcopalian friend in college, who used to refer to it as "phoney Catholicism." After that, I went to work of PECUSA (Protestant Episcopal Church in the United States of America, as it was known way back when) and learned that, since it was descended from Roman Catholicism, it was superficially like it. However, the priests can be married (unless their contract with an individual parish states that they can't). {NOTE: I'm not Episcopalian
I had lunch once in an Episcopalian monestary. Lunch was very monkish - it was silent, while someone read to the diners. The food was pretty good. On the other hand, when working with the brothers as they counted ballots during a Diocesan election, it came time for services. One of them said, "We do that all the time. Can we do something else?" So they went out to eat.
One other odd, historical tidbit. Back in the 19th Century, before the Unitarian and Universalist churches merged, Universalist ministers were addressed as Father. They were not, however, called priests.