Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: John MacKenzie Date: 15 Jan 10 - 09:07 AM No Lizzie, I'm fussy about what, or whom I eat. |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: manitas_at_work Date: 15 Jan 10 - 09:04 AM come to that, what is the difference between tomato sauce and tomato ketchup? |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: manitas_at_work Date: 15 Jan 10 - 09:03 AM It probably needs a certain amount of tomatoes to be called tomato sauce... |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Lizzie Cornish 1 Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:51 AM Chip butties! Trouble is, if you eat to many of them, you end up with a buttie the same size. :0) Sorry, but when did Tomato Sauce turn into 'Red' sauce? (puzzled dollopy smiley)....and....where did those tomato shaped squeezy thingys go? Cripes, now I'm 17 and back in the Wimpy Bar in Northwood Hills with my chums..squeezing that tomato till it finally released a few dollopygollops, although I think they watered it down with vinegar a bit... All the sauce used to be dried and encrusted around the stem of the container too, but it never put us off... HOW did we all survive without Health & Safety and NVQs in Food Preparation, eh? Perfectly... :0) So, John, are you eating a Deep Fried Mars Bar oop there in Scotland? |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Dave the Gnome Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:49 AM Holland pies and puds are now online, Ruth. Not quite the same as getting them from a chippy but should give you an idea. Mutton pies are indeed good, John, but only when deep fried - Heart attack on a plate:-) The scraps, near us, were called 'scratchins' - I remeber asking for 'an 'aypurth of scratchins when I were a lad. I am a brown sauce person as well but did get into the habbit of having mayo on chips when I was in Belgium - Different kettle of fries altogether though. I daren't say what we used to call black puddings! DeG |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: John MacKenzie Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:37 AM Surprise Peas, incontinental delight? |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Leadfingers Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:26 AM Salad Cream ? NO Way ! PROPER Mayonaise is a different matter though - Chips with Mayonaise is a very Continental delight ! |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Ruth Archer Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:25 AM I've made steak and kidney pudding in the past, Backwoodsman - I love it. They also used to do it in the pub in my old village, and very nice it was, too (they did a really gorgeous lamb suet pudding as well). But I've never seen it in a chippie! Do they make it themselves, or is it bought in, do you think? And I wonder if it's properly steamed these days or popped in the microwave... |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Will Fly Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:18 AM Nobody ever ask for "scraps" - bits of batter scrapings to go wi't rest? |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Backwoodsman Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:16 AM Or as we know them, 'Yuck-a Pies'. Babbies 'Eads are truly wonderful, with chips and thick gravy (mash will do if there are no chips). Never see them in Lincs., but I had a fair few in me seagoing days. My mum used to make them too, back in the days before anyone had dreamed up the concept of 'Fast Food' (apart from the aforementioned fish & chips) and everyone cooked from scratch at home. |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Ruth Archer Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:09 AM "Oh well, good job we don't all like the same things! :-)" Indeed! Babbies heads sound amazing! Where do you get them? In the chippies in the Midlands it's all Pukka Pies... |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: John MacKenzie Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:08 AM Boiled babbies yeds |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Backwoodsman Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:08 AM Pie? PIE?? I meant Steak and kidney PUDDING of course! D'oh! |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Backwoodsman Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:07 AM It's an individual steak and kidney pie with suet crust, Ruth. Picture one upside-down! I like salad cream on chips (proper chips, big fat ones double-fried in beef dripping). Oh well, good job we don't all like the same things! :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: AllisonA(Animaterra) Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:05 AM The best chips I ever had were at a chippie in Snaeth, somewhere in Yorkshire, on the way to a ceilidh, in a van driven by Sam Pirt, with Bill Sables and friends. Great memory! |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Ruth Archer Date: 15 Jan 10 - 08:01 AM It's funny, Backwoodsman - I can't eat red sauce any more. I grew up eating it, but after I came to England and had eaten brown sauce for years, one day I got a terrible craving for chips with Heinz ketchup. Well, I nearly gagged, it was so vile. It's really funny how your tastes change over time. Salad cream is a bigger abomination than red sauce. I always keep a bottle of red sauce in the house in case posh company comes (I find that middle class people generally don't eat brown sauce - philistines), but I wouldn't have salad cream under my roof. What is a babbies head? Is it like a faggot? |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Backwoodsman Date: 15 Jan 10 - 07:53 AM Yep, Daddies is great in its place, but its place is on big fat juicy Lincolnshire sausages! :-) Only the red stuff will do with F&C for me. Mind you, I used to work with a guy who on Friday used to go with us to the works canteen and have fried battered fish, salad, pasta and gravy, topped off with Heinz Salad Cream. Disgusting. :-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: John MacKenzie Date: 15 Jan 10 - 07:38 AM Ooh boiled babbies yeds, I love them, not had 'em for ages. I shall buy some next shopping trip. Best pies are Scottish Mutton Pies. nam nam |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Ruth Archer Date: 15 Jan 10 - 07:24 AM When I first came to England, I remember seeing scallops on the menu in a chippie. I was delighted - I love a scallop, me. My delight diminished rapidly when it became apparent that I had not ordered deep-fried shellfish, but a deep-fried slice of potato. I think that was the last time I ever had one. PS: red sauce is an abomination. Daddies all the way! |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Backwoodsman Date: 15 Jan 10 - 06:48 AM They used to call the sliced, battered potatoes 'Floaters' here in N. Lincs. You could get Yorkshire Fishcakes (fish between two slices of potato) at a small minority of chippies years ago, but not for a long time round here. A new chippie's just opened and they sell them. Great wi' salt and vinegar and a dollop o' red sauce. Yippee! |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Dave the Gnome Date: 15 Jan 10 - 06:48 AM Ahhhh - Gotcha. The Wiki article was unclear and I cannot listen to the radio at work so thanks for clearing that up. How do we know it was today? The articles, as far as I can see, just say it was either 1860 or 1863, depending on the definition of a fish and chip shop. Purely out of academic (and gastronomic!) interest :D |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Lizzie Cornish 1 Date: 15 Jan 10 - 06:35 AM "So, just what is 150 years old today?" It's 150 years since the first fish and chip shop was opened....listen to Judi's show...and read the Wiki link above.. |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Dave the Gnome Date: 15 Jan 10 - 06:31 AM So, just what is 150 years old today? Fishcakes at our local chippies were always just fishcakes - the same sort you get in supermarkets. Must say the bit of fish between sliced potatos sound a much better option! We used to have sliced battered potatos called 'specials' - known to some as scallops. In the North West we seem to have cornered the market in pies. When travelling elsewhere I am always amazed that I cannot get a meat pie - Do you mean minced meat or steak and kidney? They usualy ask. Neither - You have to have a Hollands meat pie to understand! And how anyone can not enjoy a babbies yed wi' gravy is beyond me... :D (eG) |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Arnie Date: 15 Jan 10 - 06:10 AM When I was at school in the '60's, I got a part-time job working in our local chippie. I loved fish & chips anyway, so it was a heaven-sent job for me. I was allowed to eat as many chips as I wanted from the outset, which was good psychology as I soon got fed up of eating chips! One of my jobs was making 'fish cakes' - these were pieces of fish in between two potato slices, dipped in batter. These were a cheap alternative to fish as many families couldn't afford the real thing. We also got requests for free'fish bits' which were in fact leftover bits of batter.As pointed out above, we used greaseproof paper around the food, then newspaper as an outer layer. I recall the song of that summer, played ad nauseum in the chippie was 'I got you babe' by Sonny & Cher. Unfortunately the owner gave me the sack at the end of the summer as he said I wasn't quick enough serving the customers - this was a lie but I think he couldn't afford to keep me on but didn't want to say so. Still love fish & chips! |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: GUEST Date: 15 Jan 10 - 05:49 AM John MacKenzie,The 'Daily Mail' a newspaper? Come off it! Mike |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: MGM·Lion Date: 15 Jan 10 - 05:40 AM Best use for it, I should have said... |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: John MacKenzie Date: 15 Jan 10 - 05:13 AM Well when you consider the filth in some newspapers. I mean, would you want your chips wrapped in the Daily Mail? |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: MGM·Lion Date: 15 Jan 10 - 05:03 AM Newspaper much the best insulation to keep the heat in — pity not used any more. |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Lizzie Cornish 1 Date: 15 Jan 10 - 05:00 AM Well, yes...er...ok....but they were still *wrapped* in newspaper, albeit the out wrapping... "One portion of Chips and a Pedantic Plaice, to take away, please!" ;0) |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Terry McDonald Date: 15 Jan 10 - 04:54 AM I've never know fish and chips to be 'wrapped in newspaper' - when I were a lad in the 40s and 50s, they were always wrapped first in greaseproof paper, with newspaper being the outer wrapping. |
Subject: RE: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Lizzie Cornish 1 Date: 15 Jan 10 - 04:52 AM Fish and Chips - The History :0) Don't you just *love* the internet! The Fish Fryer's Federation Try saying that after some beer battered fish..LOL |
Subject: BS: Fish & Chips - 150 years old today From: Lizzie Cornish 1 Date: 15 Jan 10 - 04:47 AM Nooooo...not the actual meal! The shops! :0) You can listen to Judi Spiers telling people all about them on BBC Radio Devon here I have to say that Sidmouth's 'White Horse' has to be the best fish and chips I've ever tasted.. Bring back wrapping them in newspaper! And when I was little we used to go to the one in Pinner Green, which had a little restaurant on the side of it. It was always a really special treat to have tea in there. |