Bill
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TheMightyQuinn said:de niro said:I don't eat chippy food but if I did I'd just have a tub of mushy peas.
A normal sized tub or a tub much bigger to compensate for the lack of other foods?
Ok ok I admit I once ate a chip.
TheMightyQuinn said:de niro said:I don't eat chippy food but if I did I'd just have a tub of mushy peas.
A normal sized tub or a tub much bigger to compensate for the lack of other foods?
Lancet Fluke said:Glyn said:Lancet Fluke said:A fucking tea cake? A tea cake is biscuit, marshmallow and chocolate.
You must be from Darn Sowth my son as I think you will find that in the real world
"In East Lancashire, the former West Riding of Yorkshire and elsewhere in the North, a teacake is a round bread roll which is cut in half to make sandwiches. They do not usually contain any sort of dried fruit. They can be made with either white, brown, wholemeal, or Granary flour (a brand of flour produced by Hovis, made by malting wheat, crushing the grains, roasting them, and then mixing them with brown flour).[2] A favourite way to eat them is to slice them into fingers, toast and then spread with butter and Bovril or Marmite."
I am from Manchester and a tea cake is one of these
[bigimg]http://meandmybigmouth.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341d299153ef01116858bc92970c-800wi[/bigimg]
de niro said:TheMightyQuinn said:de niro said:I don't eat chippy food but if I did I'd just have a tub of mushy peas.
A normal sized tub or a tub much bigger to compensate for the lack of other foods?
Ok ok I admit I once ate a chip.
nw42 said:Lancet Fluke said:Glyn said:You must be from Darn Sowth my son as I think you will find that in the real world
"In East Lancashire, the former West Riding of Yorkshire and elsewhere in the North, a teacake is a round bread roll which is cut in half to make sandwiches. They do not usually contain any sort of dried fruit. They can be made with either white, brown, wholemeal, or Granary flour (a brand of flour produced by Hovis, made by malting wheat, crushing the grains, roasting them, and then mixing them with brown flour).[2] A favourite way to eat them is to slice them into fingers, toast and then spread with butter and Bovril or Marmite."
I am from Manchester and a tea cake is one of these
[bigimg]http://meandmybigmouth.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341d299153ef01116858bc92970c-800wi[/bigimg]
So am I but that's a marshmallow in our house.
This is what I'd call a teacake
[bigimg]http://www.thegreatbritishdiet.co.uk/Images/TeacakeToasted.JPG[/bigimg]
Bit like a hot cross bun, toasted and buttered.
Lancet Fluke said:nw42 said:Lancet Fluke said:I am from Manchester and a tea cake is one of these
[bigimg]http://meandmybigmouth.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341d299153ef01116858bc92970c-800wi[/bigimg]
So am I but that's a marshmallow in our house.
This is what I'd call a teacake
[bigimg]http://www.thegreatbritishdiet.co.uk/Images/TeacakeToasted.JPG[/bigimg]
Bit like a hot cross bun, toasted and buttered.
Ah, that's because you have no space between tea and cake. A tea cake is the marshmallow one, a teacake is the fruity barm cake. Neither would be ideal with fish and chips imo.
Incidentally, if you call those marshmallows, what do you call these?
[bigimg]http://www.easyecigarette.com/images/marshmallow_flavour.jpg[/bigimg]
Curry sauce.Kun Aguero said:What goes better with battered fish and chips?
nw42 said:Lancet Fluke said:nw42 said:So am I but that's a marshmallow in our house.
This is what I'd call a teacake
[bigimg]http://www.thegreatbritishdiet.co.uk/Images/TeacakeToasted.JPG[/bigimg]
Bit like a hot cross bun, toasted and buttered.
Ah, that's because you have no space between tea and cake. A tea cake is the marshmallow one, a teacake is the fruity barm cake. Neither would be ideal with fish and chips imo.
Incidentally, if you call those marshmallows, what do you call these?
[bigimg]http://www.easyecigarette.com/images/marshmallow_flavour.jpg[/bigimg]
I'd call them marshmallows.
Ah righto, it's good that you know the score, wish I could say the same for this crowd http://www.tunnock.co.uk/products/teacakes.aspx
You'd best have a word.
Friday night is chippy tea night, every week, forever. It even was when I was seriously into my training.TheMightyQuinn said:de niro said:TheMightyQuinn said:A normal sized tub or a tub much bigger to compensate for the lack of other foods?
Ok ok I admit I once ate a chip.
I've had chippy at least once a week for as long as I can remember.
I see it as my birthright.
Lancet Fluke said:nw42 said:Lancet Fluke said:I am from Manchester and a tea cake is one of these
No, you are wrong.In Lancashire a roll made of bread is called a tea cake, whereas one containing fruit is termed a fruit tea cake or currant tea cake.
I know it must be devastating to many Blue Mooners to realise that the whole "Muffin or
Barm" thread has been based on the wrong premise, but if you'd care to start a Muffin, Barm or Tea cake thread, I think you will find it has legs!
[bigimg]http://meandmybigmouth.typepad.com/.a/6a00d8341d299153ef01116858bc92970c-800wi[/bigimg]
So am I but that's a marshmallow in our house.
This is what I'd call a teacake
[bigimg]http://www.thegreatbritishdiet.co.uk/Images/TeacakeToasted.JPG[/bigimg]
Bit like a hot cross bun, toasted and buttered.
Ah, that's because you have no space between tea and cake. A tea cake is the marshmallow one, a teacake is the fruity barm cake. Neither would be ideal with fish and chips imo.
Incidentally, if you call those marshmallows, what do you call these?
[bigimg]http://www.easyecigarette.com/images/marshmallow_flavour.jpg[/bigimg]