Search the archive:
YaBB - Yet another Bulletin Board
 
   
 
Pages: 1 2 3 
Send Topic Print
Wierd British Food.. (Read 927 times)
Reply #30 - Sep 4th, 2003 at 11:41pm

Paz   Offline
Colonel
USA

Gender: male
Posts: 1922
*****
 
Quote:
Faggots, (Brains Faggots,
Paul.
(England).


  Eating faggot brains, who are you Jeffrey Dahmer?

Quote:
Take Fozzers tip and cook your joints


  Words to live by!

Quote:
Haggis is the heart, lungs, and liver of a sheep boiled in it's own stomach and mixed with oatmeal and spices


  Uhhh....Give me the hot dog any day.

Quote:
Made of similar "stuff" as my Faggots


  I'm sorry, but this just cracks me up....it's the stuff that faggots are made of!

  Yes, I'm an immature american.
 

&&Still no linked images allowed around here Paz! Naughty...&&
IP Logged
 
Reply #31 - Sep 5th, 2003 at 6:22am

Dan   Offline
Colonel
Meet Bogart! Thanks CRAIG!
Carmarthenshire, Wales, Uk!

Gender: male
Posts: 2053
*****
 
Haggis sounds sick! never tried it, and i want it tio stay that way!  Embarrassed      Tongue
 
IP Logged
 
Reply #32 - Sep 5th, 2003 at 8:21am

Hagar   Offline
Colonel
My Spitfire Girl
Costa Geriatrica

Posts: 33159
*****
 
Quote:
That can't possibly taste much better than Fozzer's Kidney Pudding.  (Not made with his own kidney's, presumably.)

You guys seem to have some weird ideas. I've never seen a kidney pudding. Steak & Kidney pudding or pie (otherwise known as Snake & Pygmy) yes. Delicious. LOL

Quote:
There's a nice British place near my Grandma. Serves up nice fish n' chips but their salmon is a bit over done.

Fish 'n' chips is traditionally filleted haddock, deep fried in batter served with "french" fries & lashings of salt & vinegar. Other popular fish are cod, plaice & huss or "rock salmon" which is in fact a salt water catfish. I've never seen battered real salmon. Fish 'n' chips tastes best eaten with your fingers straight from the wrapping. This used to be newspaper in m young days.

Quote:
People would come from all over just to find out what a Buttie is.

A buttie or (butty) is a local name (north of England slang) for a sandwich. 2 slices of buttered bread with a filling. A chip butty is filled with chips, what you would call french fries. A jam buttie would be filled with jam.

I tried Tripe & Onions once & almost threw up after one mouthful. Never felt inclined to try it again. As for eating offal, I hate to think what goes into the average hot dog or hamburger. Roll Eyes
 

...

Founder & Sole Member - Grumpy's Over the Hill Club for Veteran Virtual Aviators
Member of the Fox Four Group

Need help? Try Grumpy's Lair

My photo gallery
IP Logged
 
Reply #33 - Sep 5th, 2003 at 10:07am

Wing Nut   Offline
Colonel
Hoy-Hoy!

Gender: male
Posts: 14173
*****
 
Well, Hot Dogs used to be all kinds of filler stuffed into an intestine.  Nowadays though, they're pretty much just processed meat molded into a weiner shape.

Hamburgers are just plain beef...
 

HP p7-1300w
AMD Athlon II X4 650 Quad-core 3.2 Ghz
23" HP Widescreen monitor/19" Dell monitor
Windows 7 Home Premium
16 Gb DDR3 PC10600 Ram
1 Gb GeForce GTX 550Ti video card
1 TB RAID Drives

If you want to see the most beautiful girl in the world, CLICK HERE!
IP Logged
 
Reply #34 - Sep 5th, 2003 at 5:03pm

Iroquois   Offline
Colonel
Happy Halloween
Ontario Canada

Gender: male
Posts: 3244
*****
 
Quote:
Fish 'n' chips is traditionally filleted haddock, deep fried in batter served with "french" fries & lashings of salt & vinegar. Other popular fish are cod, plaice & huss or "rock salmon" which is in fact a salt water catfish. I've never seen battered real salmon. Fish 'n' chips tastes best eaten with your fingers straight from the wrapping. This used to be newspaper in m young days.

A buttie or (butty) is a local name (north of England slang) for a sandwich. 2 slices of buttered bread with a filling. A chip butty is filled with chips, what you would call french fries. A jam buttie would be filled with jam.


In Canada, Fish 'n' Chips is usually made with Halibut. I don't care much for Haddock, I find it's a very bland fish. Very popular in Scotland though.

I don't think a chip buttie would taste too good. Potatos on a sandwich.  Tongue  I usually make them with Canadian Bacon which is really nice, especially with some melted cheese.  Wink
 

I only pretend to know what I'm talking about. Heck, that's what lawyers, car mechanics, and IT professionals do everyday. Wink&&The Rig: &&AMD Athlon XP2000+ Palomino, ECS K7S5A 3.1, 1GB PC2700 DDR, Geforce FX5200 128mb, SB Live Platinum, 16xDVD, 16x10x40x CDRW, 40/60gb 7200rpm HDD, 325w Power, Windows XP Home SP1, Directx 9.0c with 66.81 Beta gfx drivers
IP Logged
 
Reply #35 - Sep 5th, 2003 at 6:08pm

Hagar   Offline
Colonel
My Spitfire Girl
Costa Geriatrica

Posts: 33159
*****
 
Quote:
In Canada, Fish 'n' Chips is usually made with Halibut. I don't care much for Haddock, I find it's a very bland fish. Very popular in Scotland though.

If you ordered Fish 'n' Chips "oop North" you would get haddock, probably as it's caught locally. Cod & plaice are more popular down South. Cod, my favourite, is becoming harder to get these days & much more expensive.

Quote:
I don't think a chip buttie would taste too good. Potatos on a sandwich.    I usually make them with Canadian Bacon which is really nice, especially with some melted cheese.

Chip butties are very tasty. You're most likely thinking of the US-style open sandwich. A traditional British sandwich is 2 slices of liberally buttered bread with the filling in between. In some parts of the UK fish 'n' chips is not complete without slices of buttered bread ready to create your own butties. Delicious. Cheesy
 

...

Founder & Sole Member - Grumpy's Over the Hill Club for Veteran Virtual Aviators
Member of the Fox Four Group

Need help? Try Grumpy's Lair

My photo gallery
IP Logged
 
Reply #36 - Sep 5th, 2003 at 6:20pm

Craig.   Offline
Colonel
Birmingham

Gender: male
Posts: 18590
*****
 
we can thank the spanish for our lack of cod, for some reason they think that they can fish our waters dry and then request we hand them over gibralta to. go figure.
all a mute point as i dont like fish, although cat fish is quite nice little greasy though.
 
IP Logged
 
Reply #37 - Sep 6th, 2003 at 2:42am

packercolinl   Offline
Colonel
Any more laid back I'd
be asleep!

Posts: 1049
*****
 
Well I'm going to have to admit that years ago before the Australian Gov't banned haggis(no doubt for very good reasons)I used to eat it at a friends'(Scottish)place and didn't mind it at all.

Then again I'll eat just about anything Grin
 

White on White fly all night.&&&&Red on White you're alright.&&&&Red on Red you'll soon be dead.
IP Logged
 
Pages: 1 2 3 
Send Topic Print