Subject: BS: Marmite From: Purple Foxx Date: 13 Mar 06 - 04:01 AM Papers report that Marmite is to be marketed in plastic squeezable bottles & that the recipe is to be modified to give the thinner consistency this requires. So,Marmite - love it? hate it? whipped up into a frenzy of indifference by it? discuss. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: GUEST, Topsie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 04:13 AM I think the recipe has already been altered. I opened a jar recently and thought it was 'off'. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Purple Foxx Date: 13 Mar 06 - 04:15 AM How could you tell? ;) |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 04:58 AM I quite like the idea, anyone who has tried to dig the right amount out of a jar which has been kept in the fridge will know this. If it is on cooled toast it drags the butter/margarine off the bread and onto the knife with it, and you have to try and force the resulting khaki slurry off the knife, back onto the toast without the toast disintegrating. If it on hot toast the melted butter provides a skid pan for the Marmite on the knife, and you end up squeegeeing the butter off the toast, while the marmite remains impervious to the toast. In short marmite is like a child that doesn't want to go to school, and hangs on to the parent with more arms and legs than they had when you left home that morning. It's a bit like trying to get rid of a chewy bogey, using a toothpick. Giok |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: ossonflags Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:05 AM Give Muppett a gig !! his fee is marmite sandwitches !!! |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: autolycus Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:17 AM There are few foods I haven't liked. Marmite is one of them. There's a squeezable honey pot on the market too, tho' honey's now off my menu as part of a cholest..... Sorry, thread drift. Ivor |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: RolyH Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:23 AM I used to have a serious marmite problem but now seem to have it under control ( 1 small jar a week ) |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Alba Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:47 AM Ah the blessed Marmite..! I am about to provide a link to all things Marmite on the Mudcat, Brace yourself oh lovers of the thick smelly Goo:) Marmite Frenzy:) I want to like it but alas no...lol Best of Wishes to all as always Jude |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Purple Foxx Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:56 AM uhmmm...Could we combine these 2 Threads? BTW More bad news I'm afraid RolyH,the small jar is being discontinued. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: David C. Carter Date: 13 Mar 06 - 06:03 AM I know someone who confessed to useing it in curry,we don't eat there too often! |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: GUEST,catsPHiddle@work Date: 13 Mar 06 - 06:05 AM I love it!! spread thickly on hot toast!!! Mmmmmmmm |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Stu Date: 13 Mar 06 - 06:25 AM Cheese and marmite butties (toasted). Yum. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: David C. Carter Date: 13 Mar 06 - 06:48 AM Well,I used to like the stuff when I lived in London,but now I seem to have lost my appetite for it.Maybe it does't travel well. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: MBSLynne Date: 13 Mar 06 - 07:30 AM Vegemite is better. Giok...why on earth would you keep marmite in the fridge?? Love Lynne |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 13 Mar 06 - 07:31 AM Vegemite has been in large squeezeable platice tubes for years in Australia. My Secret Santees have been thus blessed... |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Peter K (Fionn) Date: 13 Mar 06 - 08:28 AM Yes, I'm with MBSLynne. A fridge is no place to keep Marmite. But even if you persist with that perversion, Giok, there's still no call for easy-squeeze packaging. Just offer the Marmite direct to the toast before applying the butter/margarine of your choice. I understood that Marmite was not available in the States. Has it now penetrated that market? When I visited a pal in Alaska, the only commodity he asked me to bring from the old country was Marmite. I took him eight large jars, only to find at journey's end that all eight had exploded in my suitcase. Eventually all aromatic evidence of the catastrophe was purged from my clothes, but the suitcase never recovered. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 09:17 AM All jars of food, be it Marmite [food of the Gods] Jam [comfit food] or Pickles [food of the Wilfreds] should be kept in the fridge once opened. The top shelf of our larder fridge at this moment contains at least 20 various jams jellies and condiments in the process of being consumed. We do not suffer from blue mould on the top of our opened jars of food in this house. We also almost always are able to ignore use by dates because this extends their keeping properties. Incidentally it does say on the label of a Marmite jar "Store in a cool dark place" Giok |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: frogprince Date: 13 Mar 06 - 09:30 AM Some places they get mildew And others get too hot. Some places are so damp that Everything you got just rots All kinds of condensation Directories of the rain There's not much compensation When everything's been stained Some have sentimental value that Cannot be erased Go store it in a cool dry place ---The Traveling Wilburys |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 09:46 AM I love that track Froggie. G. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: GUEST, Topsie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 09:47 AM Purple Foxx "How could you tell?" A newly opened jar of marmite should have a pristine firm smooth level surface (except for maybe a tiny ring left by a burst bubble near the edge), and when you take some out the knife leaves a clear impression. The surface on the latest jar wasn't firm, it was more like discarded engine oil, and the impression left by the knife sank back to a vague but unsatisfying levelness so that you couldn't tell whether you were the first to use it or not. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: manitas_at_work Date: 13 Mar 06 - 09:52 AM I wonder what sort of mould would be strong enough to grow in a jar of yeast extract! I don't think they had a fridge in mind when they said cool and dark, besides, it would make the Marmite too stiff to spread properly which was your problem wasn't it? |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 10:00 AM Well it is made from the remains of the brewing process, so stiffness or lack of it may come into the equation! {See Brewer's Droop} G. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Windsinger Date: 13 Mar 06 - 10:28 AM I always thought it was the greasy black gunk one finds beneath one's fridge. ;) Slán, ~Fionn www.geocities.com/children_of_lir |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Scoville Date: 13 Mar 06 - 10:52 AM I'm American and we don't seem to have developed a taste for it yet (but it can be bought here in some grocery stores). I learned about it from one of those airline magazines, on my way home from Amsterdam in 1992. Years later, we were watching "The Vicar of Dibley", where Letty offers Geraldine some dark-colored cake. Geraldine asks, "Chocolate?", and Letty replies, "Marmite!". I howled. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Trevor Date: 13 Mar 06 - 11:23 AM And don't forget, when you're bored, if you smash Marmite, with a knife or the back of a spoon, for long enough, it turns white! |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Hand-Pulled Boy Date: 13 Mar 06 - 11:30 AM I have never ever been let down by a jar of marmite. It will always remain a true friend to me. A tip:- Spread it on your lips and kiss someone in the dark. What a laugh................. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: number 6 Date: 13 Mar 06 - 11:37 AM What the HELL is Marmite??? sIx |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 11:41 AM No Marmite is heaven not hell! G. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: number 6 Date: 13 Mar 06 - 11:43 AM Whew ... that is good to know. Now where can one here in the Canadian Maritimes procure a jar of this heavenly delight? sIx |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Windsinger Date: 13 Mar 06 - 12:09 PM Six, It's a salty black grease made from yeast extract. In the UK it's popular to spread it on toast at breakfast. If you can't get a hold of any, and want an approximation of the taste, drink some straight soy-sauce (or "Maggi" brand cooking sauce) perhaps with a few drops of aromatic bitters thrown in. Needless to say, you either love the stuff or you despise it. Slán, ~Fionn www.geocities.com/children_of_lir |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Purple Foxx Date: 13 Mar 06 - 12:17 PM Number 6, Bedesee import Canada's supply of this Yeast-based Manna. Apparently Safeway are one of several stockists in your beautiful country. Do not let anybody palm you off with Vegemite. Vegemite is vile. Maritimes is very nearly an anagram of Marmite. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 12:47 PM Maritimes is Marmite! G |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: open mike Date: 13 Mar 06 - 01:32 PM we have discussed this several times before so there might be a thread or two. one thing i would love to find is an actual recipe. I would like to try to make some..we have several breweries here and also quite a few folks who are home brewers. there is another food product that can be found in health food stores called brewers yeast. Some tastes awful, and some (red star brand, large flake yeast( is sweet and nutty and can be sprinkled lliberally on many foods) all have vitamin B and are good for vegetarians who other wise get few B vit in their diet. i picture in Britain a brewery and a marmite factory being across the street from one another and the by products from the Brewery being trucked across the street to the marmite factory. the spent hops and other by products from brewing are possibly used for animal feed, soil amendments, etc. Any one know? |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: MBSLynne Date: 13 Mar 06 - 02:55 PM Mould NEVER grows on either marmite or vegemite. You can open it then stick it in a cupboard and go back to it years hence and it will still be just the same. And fridges don't stop mould growing on things...you should see my fridge shelves! Love Lynne |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Raedwulf Date: 13 Mar 06 - 03:06 PM mike - not far off. Basically, it's a by-product of the brewing industry. Perhaps the Marmite factory isn't just acroos the street, but see here for more... |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Scooby Doo Date: 13 Mar 06 - 03:11 PM That was very informative and some of the pictures nostalgic.Thanks Raedwulf. Scooby. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: John MacKenzie Date: 13 Mar 06 - 03:21 PM Well Lynne I'm not coming round your gaff for my tea at least until my Tetanus shots are up to date! Mouldy fridge woman, I mean...................... G |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Raedwulf Date: 13 Mar 06 - 03:48 PM Scoob - Yer welcome! Whereas... Giok, you great kilted fairy! Marmite going off indeed! I buy it only by the big jar. Being both a bachelor & not much of a bread eater, it tends to last... And last... And last... Etcetera... Mold? What mold? Lynne - Recant that foul heresy! Vegemite, pah! Wash your mouth out with the Holy Sustenance (No! Marmite, woman! Sheeeeesh...) Look, if you continue on like that, you'll be... Oh... You already are... |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: lady penelope Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:25 PM Trevor, I hold you responsible. Parker is - as I type - stood in the kitchen hitting a blob of marmite to see if it'll turn white...... So far it has gone coffee colour as air is being beaten into it....... |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: The Fooles Troupe Date: 13 Mar 06 - 05:35 PM I suppose I could be persuaded to set up an exchange program for Vegemite/Real Maple Syrup - but we do get a few brands of alleged 'real' Maple Syrup stuff here. I'm a bit wary about buying 'Camp' though... ;-) |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Herga Kitty Date: 13 Mar 06 - 06:10 PM But will it still be true that Tesco stores keep the Bovril with the gravy and the Marmite with the jam (as per McGrath's song)? Kitty PS IIRC it was announced that Bovril will be vegetarian in future |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Big Al Whittle Date: 13 Mar 06 - 07:34 PM cut out the middle man, buy it and then flush it straight down the bog |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: number 6 Date: 13 Mar 06 - 07:40 PM I mentioned Marmite to my wife ... she had it once when she was a young girl growing up in Scotland ... she said it is disgusting. Well, I don't care, gonna try this stuff anyway. sIx |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Bert Date: 13 Mar 06 - 08:06 PM Bovril will be vegetarian in future.. Bovril always used to make a good hot drink. Marmite doesn't. Why would anyone buy vegetarian beef extract? |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: MBSLynne Date: 14 Mar 06 - 03:09 AM The same reason they buy vegetarian bacon bits I guess...and they are disgusting too! Number 6...take it a little at a time. Break yourself in gently. If you weren't brought up on it it takes some getting used to. Lots of butter on the toast and a thin spreading of marmite (or preferably vegemite) Raed, vegemite and marmite are like Aussie beer and English. When my Dad first went to Australia he didn't like Aussie beer, but persevered and got to like it. Then came over here and had to get used to English again, then back again. I had the same thing with marmite/vegemite. Marmite is still the thing you have when you can't get hold of vegemite though! Love Lynne |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Purple Foxx Date: 14 Mar 06 - 03:13 AM Bovril used to be advertised with a picture of a Bull & the caption "My poor dead Brother." The past really is another country. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Mo the caller Date: 14 Mar 06 - 05:14 AM Lynne, if you keep marmite more than 9 months or so it goes thick and sticky and wont spread properly. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: Hand-Pulled Boy Date: 14 Mar 06 - 05:26 AM But if you store it at the correct temperature then it will, in fact, regenerate itself whereby 1/2 a jar will end up full again after many months. Eventually you will have enough to work into your boots thus reducing the onset of Trenchfoot during the next war. Further details to follow. |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: MBSLynne Date: 14 Mar 06 - 05:59 AM I've obviously never tried marmite nouveau then...it must all have been at least nine months old |
Subject: RE: BS: Marmite From: GUEST,catsPHiddle@work Date: 14 Mar 06 - 06:35 AM A jar of Marmite never lasts as long as 9 months with me...more like 1 month! |