Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: GUEST,vega Date: 01 Mar 12 - 06:08 AM Can't get the mixture now, but they were like a small pancake eaten with a fry-up. They were called "Frizzets" DEEElish |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: banjoman Date: 01 Mar 12 - 06:27 AM PanYan Pickle - I was brought up on it but have not seen it for many years and have to make do with Branston - a poor substitute |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: theleveller Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:01 AM "Taylors Yorkshire Tealoaf has semingly disappeared from the shelves in Kent? Is there a reason? We should be told!" Exports were stopped after lorries carrying them south were hijacked at the Yorkshire border by the YRA (Yorkshire Republican Army) intent on ensuring southerners didn't get a taste for this highly-prized Yorkshire delicacy (I mean look what happened to Yorkshire puddings – totally ruined by southerners who cook them with oil instead of dripping, like they do fish and chips!). Sorry! If you care to meet me Woodall services I may be able to smuggle a couple into your car boot if the price is right! |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: maeve Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:06 AM ChanteyLass linked the Vermont Country Store a few posts ago; Bit O' Honey is there in 2 forms: Bit O'Honey This is a good resource for all kinds of useful and nostalgic items. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: maeve Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:28 AM banjoman, you are not alone in your desire for PanYan Pickle; have a look, here- http://cranfieldsfoods.wordpress.com/2010/01/05/pan-yan-pickle-recipe/ And from Premier Foods: "11 March 2008 • premierlife Premier Foods has been inundated with letters and emails from consumers who wanted to see Pan Yan Pickle back on the shelves again after Chris Evans put out a plea on his BBC Radio 2 drivetime show in January for Premier Foods to revive it. Premier Foods acquired the brand when it bought the Nestle ambient portfolio in 2002, but by that time Pan Yan pickle, a spicy, apple-based spread, was no longer made. The recipe was kept at the Bury factory, but was lost in the fire that destroyed the site in 2004. Such was the public reaction that Premier Foods is giving serious consideration to trying to reproduce the recipe. Said Head of Pickles, Jamie Crofts: "We asked people who had got in touch with us, if they still had a jar of pickle, to send it in so we could analyse the contents." Over 1,000 people responded - twelve people still had an original jar, including four who sent in full, unopened jars that were at least six years old. Unfortunately for Pan Yan fans, the timing isn't quite right. "This is an exciting NPD opportunity for us to explore; however, driving sales of Branston has to be our top priority. Getting the Pan Yan recipe just right would have taken up a lot of everyone's time. Who knows; this could be one to watch next year," said Jamie." from 11 March 2008 • premierlife newsletter, found by searching their site for PanYan Pickles. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Big Al Whittle Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:38 AM Away from the weymouth /Portland area of the UK, I've rarely had a good pea fritter in a chip shop. Its not a concept that travels well, and rarely at all. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: maeve Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:43 AM I looked up Jack Campin's "durian". This Asian fruit might be found in London: "The doyenne of London gastronomes is at it again. Ann's West End Foodies walk is good-to-go [with]. Here she is: "Would you eat a fruit that smells of sewage and vomit? The durian is so pungent that you can't carry it on public transport or airlines in the Far East. But its butter smooth golden flesh is addictive and very, very popular. There are many tales about it – death by durian is not unknown – it grows on trees up to 100 ft tall, and can weigh up to 6lbs. So don't take a nap under a tree laden with ripe durian. And its supposedly aphrodisiac qualities are enshrined in an Indonesian saying – when the durians come down, the sarongs go up. At this time of year you can buy durian at some of the stores in London's Chinatown – it's large, green and spiky on the outside, uncompromising. Ask for a chunk, or see if there is some ready prepared in the chiller cabinet."http://www.walks.com/London_Walks_Home/FOOD_WALKS/default.aspx I also see references to See Woo, in London and Glasgow, where durain appears to be available...along with a host of many other interesting foods. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: theleveller Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:50 AM "We used to get spicy meatballs called faggots, years ago, " In Yorkshire they were called savoury ducks, were made with assorted liver and offal, and most butchers sold them. But they are really a Midlands delicacy and were sold by Walkers Pork Butchers (who, of course, diversified into crisps). The (in)famous Brain's Faggots are still available in supermarkets (Tesco has a special offer: a pack of 6 for £1 (save 74p)). Personally, they make me puke! |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Bert Date: 01 Mar 12 - 10:57 AM Thanks for the link kat. Now you will have to remind me to look them up in October. And whatever happened to Tiger Nuts (Shut up Spaw) and does anyone remember the locust beans that we used to buy in the Greengrocers when we were kids. They smelled awful but were very sweet. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Penny S. Date: 01 Mar 12 - 11:10 AM I had a pea fritter in Haywards Heath that was delicious, and made with what were apparently frozen or fresh type peas. In NW Kent, they were made with mushy peas, and not so nice, in my opinion, though OK. I meant to check out Waitrose, which has had Yorkshire Tea loaves in the past, but forgot. Sorry. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: maeve Date: 01 Mar 12 - 12:20 PM Bert, were your locust beans still in the pods when you bought them? I just learned a couple of years ago that they're a traditional wild food treat here, too- as are the fresh flowers. We have a row of Black Locust trees bordering the road, so I hope to try them this year. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: maeve Date: 01 Mar 12 - 12:34 PM Oh, Eliza, look here: a recipe for homemade creme eggs! http://www.instructables.com/id/Homemade-Cadbury-Creme-Eggs/ |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: GUEST,Eliza Date: 01 Mar 12 - 12:40 PM Yummy yum, maeve! They look totally delish! Thank you for that! Eliza xx |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: MarkS Date: 01 Mar 12 - 12:45 PM Just try getting seal flipper pie outside of Newfoundland! |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Gurney Date: 01 Mar 12 - 02:11 PM Eliza, Cadbury are experimenting (here) with Palm Oil in place of their traditional ingredients. Chocolate lovers organised a national boycott. They have seemingly gone back to real chocolate. Maybe they bought a Palm plantation, and you are getting the 'benefit.' |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Bert Date: 01 Mar 12 - 02:45 PM Locust beans were still in their pods 'cos the pod was the only part that you ate. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: GUEST,Manuel Date: 01 Mar 12 - 03:13 PM I recognise that one man's meat is another man's poison. Keeping this in mind, I will hesistantly mention an item I was introduced to, and fell instantly for, as a very young man in the early 1960s. It was an imported product known as Callard & [something like Bowser's or Mowser's] dessert nougats and was marketed in cylindrically-shaped cans (light blue in colour). I seem to recall that this was a British product and, not having seen it in years, am wondering if it is still on the market in other countries. Eliza, if you read this, you might be able to help me with some information. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: GUEST,PeterC Date: 01 Mar 12 - 03:53 PM Going back to pork chops with the kidney in th UK. My butcher told me that these are no longer available as, since the BSE scare, all offal is supposed to be separated from the carcass in the slaughter house. Occasionally the odd one slip through if you are really lucky. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Penny S. Date: 01 Mar 12 - 04:25 PM Manuel, unfortunately Callard and Bowsers was lost in a take over situation, as was the lovely nougat wrapped in rice paper, and their butterscotch. Suchard bought them out. Kraft bought Suchard. 'Nuff said. Except that there's a lot of people wanting it back, and one has made a version themselves. DIY Nougat Haven't tried it myself yet. Penny |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Bee-dubya-ell Date: 01 Mar 12 - 07:01 PM Short of buying it on-line, it's damned near impossible to get 100% cane syrup anymore, even here in the southern US where it's a tradition. You can find cane/corn syrup blends, but not the real, unadulterated thing. I can get 100% maple syrup, and there's not sugar maple tree within 700 miles, but not 100% cane syrup when there's sugar cane grown locally. Even roadside produce stands, the last bastion of locally produced farm goods, only have blended crap canned in factories three states away. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: GUEST,Manuel Date: 01 Mar 12 - 08:24 PM Thanks a lot, Penny. I'm indebted to you. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: VirginiaTam Date: 02 Mar 12 - 04:54 AM Thanks all re the Bit o Honey. Part of the enjoyment of an unobtainable is the waiting and the rationing when you finally get your hands on it. There is a company in the UK called American Sweets. The prices are frightening. I shall wait for my Bit o Honey and if I cannot find it on my visit, will consider the other more expensive options when I return to UK. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: gnomad Date: 02 Mar 12 - 02:41 PM Cybercandy Ltd. is a place I have come across, but never bought from. Exiles in the UK may find they sell something from 'back home' that answers a craving. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Penny S. Date: 02 Mar 12 - 02:47 PM Thanks for that link - its a cheaper source of Cherry Ripes than the Aussie shop in Covent Garden! Penny |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Joe_F Date: 02 Mar 12 - 10:12 PM Possum. Groundhog. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: ChanteyLass Date: 02 Mar 12 - 10:36 PM Joe F., I suspect there are people here who can help you! |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Big Al Whittle Date: 03 Mar 12 - 08:04 AM The best pea fritters(IMHO) have mushy peas with just a touch of spice, and a heavy - but not oily batter. Bit of salt and glass of warm dandelion and burdock - bloody brilliant. but a rare delicacy. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: EBarnacle Date: 03 Mar 12 - 11:22 AM Lady Hillary and I just finished a C & B chocolate bar. The chocolate tasted fresh. They don't seem to be out of business. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: gnu Date: 03 Mar 12 - 02:35 PM Cod tongues and cheeks. Last time I had any was in NFLD about 15 years ago. I was staying in a cabin on the shore on the west coast. I was in the cabin closest to the harbour dock. Two lads of about ten knocked on the door. Their father was just in. I asked how much a pound... $5. I asked how many pounds they had. 7. I said I'd take 7 pounds. They were agape and then off in a cloud of dust. Best I ever ate. Maybe seeing their faces added to my culinary delight. |
Subject: RE: BS: Food items one just can't get hold of From: Penny S. Date: 03 Mar 12 - 04:26 PM C&B were last bought by Wrigleys, but on last reports on the web, were not making any of the old products except strong mints. There are many bewailing the nougat, and some the butterscotch. Penny |