The 5 most British dishes

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Phyton
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by Phyton »

Lamb in minzsauce - what Obelix said?

Die spinnen die Briten!

:mrgreen:
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by Pleng »

This thread reminds me why I don't miss England at all! :)
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dtaai-maai
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by dtaai-maai »

Pleng wrote:This thread reminds me why I don't miss England at all! :)
Rice-loving philistine! :laugh:
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STEVE G
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by STEVE G »

Pleng wrote:This thread reminds me why I don't miss England at all! :)
The crazy thing is, you can now find more of these old traditional dishes on menus in expat resorts in places like Hua Hin than you can in England where everyone is now eating quinoa or whatever the latest fad is.
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by caller »

STEVE G wrote:kippers?
Ah kippers! I don't suppose they're available anywhere in Thailand, are they?
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by hhfarang »

Not exactly a dish, but definitely British...

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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by Bamboo Grove »

I still don't know, where to get the best English mustard in Hua Hin. Sorry, I'll ge me coat now.
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by PeteC »

caller wrote:
STEVE G wrote:kippers?
Ah kippers! I don't suppose they're available anywhere in Thailand, are they?
Yes, in a can and I think smoked, check Villa. Pete :cheers:
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by Dannie Boy »

Bamboo Grove wrote:I still don't know, where to get the best English mustard in Hua Hin. Sorry, I'll ge me coat now.
You can get colemans in Makro, either already made or in powder form. There is also another manufacturer they sell at Makro - can't remember the name but they are next to each other so difficult to miss.
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by caller »

prcscct wrote:
caller wrote:
STEVE G wrote:kippers?
Ah kippers! I don't suppose they're available anywhere in Thailand, are they?
Yes, in a can and I think smoked, check Villa. Pete :cheers:
All kippers are smoked Pete, but out of a can? :shock:
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by PeteC »

^ Yes, here we go. I have a few tins in the frig now. Wife got them at Villa. Pete :cheers:

http://www.princes.co.uk/our-products/f ... lower-oil/

EDIT: I remember some Belgian friends swallowing the things raw and whole at a Herring festival years ago. They were definitely not smoked, at least the Herring weren't. :shock: :laugh:
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by lomuamart »

Kippers are smoked herrings - I think.
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by Terry »

lomuamart wrote:Kippers are smoked herrings - I think.
They are :cheers:
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by STEVE G »

lomuamart wrote:Kippers are smoked herrings - I think.
I only know this because of an old friend from Grimsby who knew a lot about fish but what makes a smoked herring a kipper is that it's the whole fish, split along the back and opened up before smoking.
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Re: The 5 most British dishes

Post by Pleng »

dtaai-maai wrote:
Pleng wrote:This thread reminds me why I don't miss England at all! :)
Rice-loving philistine! :laugh:
Meh... there's plenty of other things I love besides rice... none of them are mentioned in this thread tho ;)
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