Crimes against Food and Drink

Wherenext
Wherenext Club Member Posts: 10,586 ✭✭✭
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edited February 2018 in Food & Drink #1

Rosti

Any Subway sandwich. Must admit I've never had one but just the thought of trying to eat a Meatball and tomato sauce sandwich turns my stomach.

I'm sure others will have their own pet hate. 

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  • JVB66
    JVB66 Forum Participant Posts: 22,892
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    edited February 2018 #2

    Lageryell

  • JollyKernow
    JollyKernow Forum Participant Posts: 2,629
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    edited February 2018 #3

    Hi

    To be fair a homemade meatball sandwich with horseradish and grated fennel is rather lush.

    A crime to me is throwing any food away on its best before date, and putting a fizzy mixer in a decent brandy.wink

  • ValDa
    ValDa Forum Participant Posts: 3,004
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    edited February 2018 #4

    Rosti is lovely - try it at Betty's in Yorkshire.  It's absolutely delicious, as is that made by my son!  Crispy, and lovely and very moreish!

    And some subway sandwiches are almost addictive.  You can choose exactly what you want!  And it definitely doesn't have to be meatballs!  We ate them first in Bristol when my son was at Uni twenty years ago, but still occasionally 'treat' ourselves.

    My pet hate is 'plastic cheese' of the sort you used to buy in boulder size blocks which squeaks when cut, and tastes like very mild Dairylea cheese spread.  Woolworths used to sell it, as did a lot of supermarkets in the 1960's (and some still do).

  • mickysf
    mickysf Forum Participant Posts: 6,474 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #5

    Often it's not so much the food itself that's a crime, it's how it's made and attitude of the user, the maker who is the criminal. Offal for instance can be absolutely discussing or devine. The humble cabbage can be boiled to a grey green mess, the calamari rubberised, liver reduced to something like old boots. But in the hands of a skilled and knowledgable person even the most humble, ordinary ingredient can be crafted into a sensuous delight. Then there are the creative folk who can turn the bizarre, the seemingly incompatible ingredients into a new gastronomic experience. How many of us have said 'I don't like that' when we have never even tried it or at best, tried it once when presented to us in a form fit only for the bin which has the formed that never again lasting belief. I for one detested shellfish for some unknown reason but having holidayed in northern Spain I can say that the dishes I sampled there 'converted' me. I also unwittingly ordered tripe by mistake as part of a tapas meal, chicken livers likewise and how scrumptious were they. It's often the hands, the skills and the knowhow of the cook or chief that determines the outcome. 

    Similarly, poor produce which has long passed its prime presented on the plate or mass produced food items can, not always mind, be most disagreeable. Having said all this, let's not forget that 'beauty is in the eye of the beholder'. I love old rhubarb stewed to distruction in a soggy pastry pie with custard which has a congealed skin on the top, beautiful, just like my granny made it, yummy, yummy! smile

  • heddlo
    heddlo Forum Participant Posts: 872 ✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #6

    Ok I know these aren't U.K. dishes (thankfully!!), but in a high class restaurant in Asia being wined and dined I was treated to chickens' feet and jellyfish!!  Oh, and a baby crocodile with its head peering artistically over the side of the dish.  Certainly nothing ever to be repeated, disgusting!!!

  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,299 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #7

    I also unwittingly ordered tripe by mistake

     

    Although I really enjoy most sorts of offal, I just don't like tripe. As a child it was poached in milk and totally disgusting. In later years I have ordered it a few times, once in a French restaurant, where the chef had awards for his tripe in frames on the wall, and folk came from miles around to sample it. The sauce was to die for but the tripe as disgusting a ever.

    Perhaps one day I will have a go myself. Although unlike, hearts, liver, kidneys, sweetbreads etc it does not seem that easy to come by.

  • Whittakerr
    Whittakerr Club Member Posts: 3,472 ✭✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #8

    Well done steak. What a waste.

     

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited February 2018 #9

    I used to cook tripe a lot between late 70's and early 90's and it was hard to get then, Some places sold the bleached honeycomb but nowhere sold unbleached tripe. In the end I spoke with a well reputed butcher on Chester market. It took him a few days to source. The reason was that it was being exported to France. My German Shepherd and Lab used to love it when I hand fed (count fingers afterwards). I used to get full stomachs in a bin bag complete with partly digested grass, I would clean and portion, the honeycombed tripe being saved for the family. I was in correspondence with a chef in a top London hotel and he provided many recipes. We also swapped sample dishes in insulated containers with ice pack. The best section of the 4 stomachs is the honeycomb which is gelatinous and carries flavours well. 

    I bet that it is near impossible to source now.

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #10

    White sliced bread, the cheap kind. Total pap.

  • EasyT
    EasyT Forum Participant Posts: 16,194
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    edited February 2018 #11

    White sliced bread, the cheap kind. Total pap.
     
     Excellent stuff. It stays on the hook well as bait.

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #12

    Says it all ET......indigestible!laughing

    OH worked at Mothers Pride one Summer when a student. His only comment was that the dough was brilliant at cleaning up his hands after tinkering with cars!surprised Someone lost a bit of finger every week as well in slicer!surprisedsurprised Those were the days!

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #13

    Let me give you a tip. If you're going to eat cotton wool bread use W*rburtons, it's the one fishermen use as it has the least chemical content.....wink

  • Takethedogalong
    Takethedogalong Forum Participant Posts: 17,030 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #14

    Yorkshire Bakery, Jacksons does an acceptable seeded loaf. smile

  • cyberyacht
    cyberyacht Forum Participant Posts: 10,218
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    edited February 2018 #15

    White bread as fish bait! That's all it's fit for.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #16

    Csurprisedca Csurprisedla is it really a drink?! wink

    7 things you can do with it (from the web)

    1. Clean the toilet bowl
    2. Remove grease stains from clothing
    3. Remove baked on grease from pots and pans
    4. Remove corrosion from car battery terminals
    5. Restore shine to coins and jewellery
    6. Strip rust from, nuts, bolts and tools
    7. Remove bugs from windscreen
  • Goldie146
    Goldie146 Club Member Posts: 2,448 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #17

    Excessive number of ice cubes in a G&T in a large Bowles glass. It may  be fashionable just now, but I prefer to taste the gin

  • cariadon
    cariadon Forum Participant Posts: 861
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    edited February 2018 #18

    for diarrhoea, leave the cola go flat, then drink. Bet it strips all the bugs out. 

  • cariadon
    cariadon Forum Participant Posts: 861
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    edited February 2018 #19

    skimmed milk, far to watery to be called milk.

  • Metheven
    Metheven Club Member Posts: 3,987 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #20

    The only reason for bread is to keep the filling in, so tasteless white for me so I can enjoy that filling.

    The drain cleaning qualities of Coke really does clean up the body's pipework.

    Steak, well well done, I like something crunchy and chewy. Rare is a crime and cannibalistic to have the plate running in blood when cut.

    Boiled potatoes a waste of space, I only mash them.

  • neveramsure
    neveramsure Forum Participant Posts: 712
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    edited February 2018 #21

    I will own up to using Subway on occasion, when when out shopping in town. I discovered that the grand kids love them but then children tend to like unhealthy food.laughing

    Never tried the meatballs though.undecided 

    Oh and steak well dine for me, I like my meat dead.wink

  • Tammygirl
    Tammygirl Club Member Posts: 7,958 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #22

    I like white bread if its a sandwich as I like to taste what is in the filling. White for toast too. Spicy Meatballs from Subway I will admit to enjoying it when I tried one. 

    Steak has to be medium rare don't like shoe leather. Tripe ugh! never ever would I eat it, bad enough watching and smelling neighbour cooking it for the gun dogs.

    Oysters is another thing I can't stomach or whelks, love prawns, lobster, crab, winkles and most fish.

    I don't like food 'messed about with' just nice good tasting food.

  • DSB
    DSB Club Member Posts: 5,666 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #23

    I like the Subway Meatballs.....  embarassedembarassed  With cheese, lettuce, red onion and sweet onion dressing on an Italian sub.   smilesmile

    David 

  • DSB
    DSB Club Member Posts: 5,666 ✭✭✭
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    edited February 2018 #24

    I've gone off sausage and burger, unless really good quality and cooked by me on the Cadac. wink

    David 

  • Jo J
    Jo J Forum Participant Posts: 228
    edited April 2018 #25

    Over cooked soggy  cabbage - yech! 

  • Merve
    Merve Forum Participant Posts: 2,333
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    edited August 2018 #26

    I realise this is an old opost but this is important! Can't stand Subway- where do they get their bread from? had some sandwiches from there once and the rolls were like a puff of air- not filling at all. Wont make that mistake again.

  • Navigateur
    Navigateur Forum Participant Posts: 3,880
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    edited August 2018 #27

    I wonder if the market in Barnsley still has the seperate building for the tripe sellers.  It wasn't small with about 20 stalls, and always busy.

  • SteveL
    SteveL Club Member Posts: 12,299 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2018 #28

    I quite like subways. They do a multi seeded bread which is very nice. Nothing unhealthy about them either, if you pick the right fillings. Char grilled chicken breast with salad is my favourite. Although you do have to repeat at least 3 times NO CHEESE and no I don't want it toasted and none of those red hot peppers either.😂

    I am fairly sure the cheese is biodegradable plastic anyway. I have never had it, but it looks most unappetising.

  • brue
    brue Forum Participant Posts: 21,176 ✭✭✭✭✭
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    edited August 2018 #29

    I see that Subway are "eliminating" azodicarbonamide from their bread. As it's also used in Yoga mats I think that's a sensible idea....(it's a bleaching agent and dough conditioner.)

    No Subways for me. wink

  • Bakers2
    Bakers2 Forum Participant Posts: 8,191 ✭✭✭
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    edited August 2018 #30

    The cheese is definitely a kiwi thing. They add it to most things, including a steak pie 😲😲😲.  Sometimes hard to find an NZ dish when you're out that doesn't contain it!  I like cheese but not with everything 😉. Cheese is quite boring out there too mild or tasty, I can't think of a native one.

    Personally I dislike subway, can't abide the smell as I pass - a bit like Lush.

    Interesting about removing azodicarbonamide I had to look that up! I can't digest lots of bread these days 😲 maybe this is why?? Mind you I usually chosen brown/wholemeal so perhaps not.

  • robsail
    robsail Forum Participant Posts: 1,441
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    edited August 2018 #31

    What I don't like is when a family orders adult portions of food , the meal arrives and the children( under 7 year olds) leave 95% on the plate! What a waste.