^^ Thank you, Kalbow - I now have this image of you, pen and paper in hand, pestering your Mum on her death bed, "yeh yeh, I love you too, Ma... but how many eggs??"
dtaai-maai wrote:^^ Thank you, Kalbow - I now have this image of you, pen and paper in hand, pestering your Mum on her death bed, "yeh yeh, I love you too, Ma... but how many eggs??"
There's egg in chutney??
The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.
dtaai-maai wrote:I have a hankering for some old-fashioned English-style country chutney like my Mum used to make. Anybody know if it's available anywhere here?
(Post recipes, by all means, but only if you're planning to make some for me... )
JD was advertising these in his advertorial thread!?
Try asking the Ham and Bacon company. There is also a little shop selling products at the bottom of soi 88 over the railway. It is very easy to make though
dtaai-maai wrote:^^ Thank you, Kalbow - I now have this image of you, pen and paper in hand, pestering your Mum on her death bed, "yeh yeh, I love you too, Ma... but how many eggs??"
There's egg in chutney??
You mean you've never heard of egg chutney? I guess it must be just one of those regional Yorkshire things then - apparently the miners used to take small jars of it down the pits to eat with their 'snap'.
The idea was that, while regular chutney tends to go straight through as it were, a chutney made with eggs was thought to have 'binding' qualities. It was also thought to have a soothing effect against the coal dust which got into miners throats.
They used pickled eggs chopped finely and combined with any regular fruit chutney, although it seems to have been most popular combined with gooseberry or tomato, both of which were widely grown on peoples' allotments so plentiful and cheap.
BTW top tip for JD - Haywards onions are fine - but Garners are the bees knees IMHO!