Championing Proper British Food and Drink

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  • Tinwheeler
    Tinwheeler Forum Participant Posts: 23,134 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #62

    And Rattler. Wey-hey, we have a party 🥳🍻🎉

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #63

    I'll have to give a mention to another pastry favourite of mine, Banbury Cakes which you can also buy on line. We used to buy them in Banbury itself but the bakery has moved to Chipping Norton. smile

  • Fisherman
    Fisherman Forum Participant Posts: 2,367
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    edited December 2020 #64

    Saw in the papers that imported beef mince would have a tariff of 40%. Why on earth do we need to import mince when we have ample supplies here in the UK. Better quality and welfare standards. Lets get back to seasonality.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #65

    Seven supermarkets use British beef only, worth a check if you want to buy a uk product.

  • Wherenext
    Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,586 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #66

    I feel the same way about root vegetables. Bought a Cabbage the other day. Only ones in stock were from Spain! For goodness sake what happened to our vegetable growing? I know we have problems from time to time with weather but Europe has similar problems.

    Why fly NZ lamb all the way across the globe? Last time I looked out of the window here in Wales there was a sheep gazing back at me. She has lots of friends.😁

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited December 2020 #67

    I prefer New Zealand lamb.

  • SeasideBill
    SeasideBill Forum Participant Posts: 2,112
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    edited December 2020 #68

    Most of the people who pick fruit & veg have gone home leaving stuff to rot in the fields......just another consequence of the thing we dare not mention on here. Expect crops that are largely harvested by mechanical means in the future.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #69

    11000 or more miles by ship is a fair old food distance. wink

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #70

    I step out of my back door and pick my own veg...complete with eco friendly residents who live in the leaves. 🐛

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #71

    That's an interesting one, 'traditional' but it does contains ingredients from far flung comers of the World like Tamarind. Also, similar umami sauces/relishes exist abroad which do not contain anchovies and taste very similar.

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #72

    WN, we watched a documentary on veg/salad growing in Spain. Workers live in unbelievably shocking conditions, and the area is an ecological disaster from all the plastic waste.

     

     

  • Wherenext
    Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,586 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #73

    I know, I've spent a month once in Almeria. The plastic polytunnels that are ripped apart by the wind are everywhere. Makes the UK look tidy.

     

     

     

  • Fisherman
    Fisherman Forum Participant Posts: 2,367
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    edited December 2020 #74

    Just consider what the tomatoes re grown in there. Not soil as we remember but a slush of waste (both animal and human) in an aquaculture. No wonder they have no taste.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #75

    Hydroponics...smile good if it's well maintained.

  • Fisherman
    Fisherman Forum Participant Posts: 2,367
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    edited December 2020 #76

    But not on the uncontrolled commercial scales in Europe. producing watery, tasteless food but of a conformity size which seem to be the only mantra. As previous why do we need to import cabbages at this time of year for goodness sake. Madness

  • Unknown
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    edited December 2020 #77
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  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #78

    ‘Taint my recollection of the food of my childhood thankfully. My Mum was a cook and a half, always experimenting, and lots of decent cook books in the house to trawl through. She had a good friend who was Polish, they originally had a mobile fruit and veg business (gorgeous old single decker bus) and then they opened a lovely Deli in our town, so we sampled some quite exotic fare pre Europe days. All the family had a big allotment each, even keeping chickens, turkeys, the occasional pig. So we were quite happy food wise. Nothing like as much choice of course, and veg/fruit much more seasonal, but I think overall we were healthier, with less salt, less saturated fats and sugar. 

  • Unknown
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    edited December 2020 #79
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  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #80

    Thankfully the pig keeping had ended by the time I came along, so it wasn’t something I ever (thankfully) witnessed. But Saturday afternoon saw the occasional surplus chicken breathe it’s last. Drawn and dressed for a Sunday roast. Those days I never batted an eyelid, it was just something I grew up with, and they had lived a very nice life before becoming dinner. Veggie now though, (all bar fish). 

    I think most Mum’s, and the odd Dad were far better cooks back then. They had to be. No microwaves or takeaways in my childhood, beyond the odd fish and chip shop. There were no overweight children either as I recall at school. Conversely, I don’t recall many on free school dinners either. We have become a nation of extremes.☹️

  • Unknown
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    edited December 2020 #81
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  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #82

    Well I'm descended from a pig farmer on one side and a gamekeeper on the other but we had very simple food in our home and my mother was not a good cook. When she retired she started to enjoy cooking. I had a french boyfriend at one stage and he will probably remember all the egg and chips presented to him...I still cringe at the thought. laughing (It probably confirmed his worst ideas about British food.)

    I can remember seeing avocados on trips to London, they were a totally alien species but I love them now unfortunately they're not on the uk growing list. wink

  • Unknown
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    edited December 2020 #83
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  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #84

    Anyone a fan of Gingerbread, I always make a trip to Grasmere for my gingerbread fix. LINK

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #85

    😱 Before we were married, I often had Sunday lunch with OH’s family. One of his brother’s worked for a pig farmer, and the family bought half a pig. For some reason they decided to roast the half head one particular day. Apparently it was too much for me and I had to leave the table rather shaky. I think that’s when I realised meat was no longer for me...... That and another Butcher BIL chasing me around with a severed pig’s ear! 

     

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,425 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #86

    A big +1 there. The queues there during the October half term were the longest I've ever seen, and not just because of the 2m rule either

  • Rocky 2 buckets
    Rocky 2 buckets Forum Participant Posts: 7,101
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    edited December 2020 #87

    Fish, with due respect I know of quite a few farmers who use treated human waste on the land because it is both natural & very cheap give me that rather than man made chemicals any day, it’s marketed as ultimate recycling at its best. If the scientists, Govt & the farmers say it’s good then I’m happy. I’ve been eating the veg & fruit it produces since it has been available👍🏻

  • Freddy55
    Freddy55 Club Member Posts: 1,809 ✭✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #88

    We popped in there a good few years ago. I asked “do you have any gingerbread?”. I just got a blank look. They obviously hadn’t seen the ‘cheese shop sketch’ (Monty Python) 😀

  • Cornersteady
    Cornersteady Club Member Posts: 14,425 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #89

    When my daughter got a Christmas job in Poundland a few years back we would go in and ask her while she was self stacking - how much is this? and that? that one? what about this? you mean everything's a pound wow that is good value.

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited December 2020 #90

    I think it goes back to pre history actually😉 Never stayed on a farm yet where the effluent wasn’t recycled. We used to sell bags of it back when we had a horse😂

    Mind, you can definitely tell when it’s human rather than animal that is being spread🤢

  • Cornersteady
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    edited December 2020 #91

    I remember being  young when the lad from the local stables used to come round selling horse-poo for the garden. They used to say it was all hand picked