Stone????WHAT!?
Replies
-
VintageFeline wrote: »White Lightning in the UK is cider and teenage regrets.
And getting the tallest one of your mates to go and buy a pack of 10 Embassy Regal.
1 -
VintageFeline wrote: »White Lightning in the UK is cider and teenage regrets.
It's so true. My brand was White Star (I assume it was a knock off), plus Richmond Menthol Superkings. Yuck!
Someone earlier said they need to find a way to make mac and cheese sound fancy... In the UK it's called macaroni cheese
Scone is of course pronounced to rhyme with cone, the meal order is breakfast, lunch and dinner, but more importantly, what's the correct term for a bread roll? Roll, barm, barmcake, cob, scuffler? (Obvs roll)0 -
2 single No6 and three single matches could be bought from Nellys sweetshop. And a bottle of Thunderbird from the offy next door.
I always was a classy bird :-/1 -
Mmm clotted cream, I would say it's as dense as butter. Really thick cream.0
-
azulvioleta6 wrote: »It is VERY strange that someone from the US would not know what a scone is.
Have you never been to Starbucks? What about any of the hundreds of other coffee and tea houses that you can find in a city of any size? They all have scones...sometimes a bit sweeter than an English scone, but essentially the same thing.
Starbucks scones arw NOTHING like a real English scone. NOTHING.0 -
Starbucks scone: sweet and full of sugar.
English scone: not sweet at all until you add the cream and jam. More like what we in the US call a biscuit.
0 -
-
I don't actually EAT commercially made scones, but I see them just about everywhere. I was thinking about it, and in the last few days I have seen scones at:
-Costco
-college cafeteria
-tiny college coffee stand
-Fred Meyer (Kroger)
-hospital cafeteria
-local coffee house (Stumptown)
-gas station
In the Pacific Northwest, you would have to be willfully trying to avoid them to not have any idea what they are.
I ate one yesterday, only because my mother made it and she insisted. Slightly sweet, but not very. My mother is most definitely NOT English.0 -
-
Clotted cream is baked to give it that gooey constancy.0
-
lynn_glenmont wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »So y'all just throw some heavy cream on your biscuits and jelly and call it a scone? Then call it different kinds of scones based on whether you go cream or jelly first.
Got it.
Y'all need to start deep frying stuff.
Jelly? JELLY!!!???? I'll have you know that in the land of our Queen, such a substance is known as jam, sir!
In the UK:
Jam = Jelly
Jelly = Jello
Fanny means a different body part over here, too! (Lowering the tone just a tad!!!!!)
Jam = thicker but smoother and easier to spread than jelly
Jelly = slightly more "watery" and chunky, harder to spread than jam
Jello = flavored gelatin served in hospitals
Jam (in the U.S.) has fruit solids in it. Jelly (in the U.S.) is made from fruit juice, no solids.
Not the Welch's Grape Jam that I buy...0 -
Whats corn bread and corn mash?
Dunno about corn mash, what we call creamed corn, maybe?
Cornbread is a thick crumbly delicious bread made of corn meal, milk, eggs (I think), and probably a couple other things used to hold it together.
It may or may not be made with added sugar to have either cornbread or "sweet cornbread."0 -
I live in England but go to Texas regularly (and am very excited about going there for 3 months in early 2017, yay!)
Biscuits and gravy was one of my favourite discoveries, probably only paralleled by kolaches! Ironically, linked back to the title of the thread, I tend to put on around a stone whenever I visit...and I normally go for a fortnight (2 weeks!)
So many confusions around terminology on my first visit - as soon as I arrived I asked for a glass of squash and everybody started laughing as they thought I meant the vegetable (it's like a liquid version of crystal lite, very popular/common here). I did take a tin of spotted dick one year which I understand is regularly shown to guests as they find it tres amusant!
I need to remember to make them scones with jam on my next trip - I hadn't realised they weren't really a thing over there
Interesting tidbit, kolaches actually hail from Czech land.
My wife grew up in Prague, OK (pronounced "prayg") which is named after the real Prague ("prog") and they shut the entire town down for a whole weekend every spring to hold a kolache festival.0 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »I just want to go to that hotel rabbitjb posted a picture of (afternoon tea picture).
Not because I think I would like afternoon tea. I just want to sit around and soak up all the posh.
That one is in Soho and also has a private cinema .. we went to see Elf before Christmas there .. cos Christmas traditions must be upheld and Elf is one of ours
I love afternoon tea in proper hotels - sandwiches in small strips with no crusts, bone china (know what it is now?), efficient, polite and reserved service .. get on with you and your 'have a nice days'
also your gravy looks horrible .. sorry .. wouldn't!
But if you ever tried it...:)
I described our breakfast gravy to someone from Canada once on another forum (because I'm multifaceted) and she said that they have it but call it "white sauce."
It really is some amazing deliciousness. A thousand times more tasty than its bland appearance suggests.0 -
VintageFeline wrote: »White Lightning in the UK is cider and teenage regrets.
It's so true. My brand was White Star (I assume it was a knock off), plus Richmond Menthol Superkings. Yuck!
Someone earlier said they need to find a way to make mac and cheese sound fancy... In the UK it's called macaroni cheese
Scone is of course pronounced to rhyme with cone, the meal order is breakfast, lunch and dinner, but more importantly, what's the correct term for a bread roll? Roll, barm, barmcake, cob, scuffler? (Obvs roll)
That's better than what the Canadians call it: Kraft Lunch (what if I eat it for breakfast???) and they put ketchup on it!! What???
ETA: and if it's a small round loaf of bread, it's a roll and they serve them at steak houses.
Steakhouse: Rolls with/before your meal
BBQ joint: Sweet Cornbread muffins with/before your meal
Granny's Country Kitchen: Biscuits with/before your meal0 -
azulvioleta6 wrote: »I don't actually EAT commercially made scones, but I see them just about everywhere. I was thinking about it, and in the last few days I have seen scones at:
-Costco
-college cafeteria
-tiny college coffee stand
-Fred Meyer (Kroger)
-hospital cafeteria
-local coffee house (Stumptown)
-gas station
In the Pacific Northwest, you would have to be willfully trying to avoid them to not have any idea what they are.
I ate one yesterday, only because my mother made it and she insisted. Slightly sweet, but not very. My mother is most definitely NOT English.
I live over 2,000 miles away from the Pacific Northwest. I'm sure there are several things you see or eat on a regular basis that I'm not exposed to and vice versa.0 -
Google is pretty awesome.0
-
-
Carlos_421 wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »I just want to go to that hotel rabbitjb posted a picture of (afternoon tea picture).
Not because I think I would like afternoon tea. I just want to sit around and soak up all the posh.
That one is in Soho and also has a private cinema .. we went to see Elf before Christmas there .. cos Christmas traditions must be upheld and Elf is one of ours
I love afternoon tea in proper hotels - sandwiches in small strips with no crusts, bone china (know what it is now?), efficient, polite and reserved service .. get on with you and your 'have a nice days'
also your gravy looks horrible .. sorry .. wouldn't!
But if you ever tried it...:)
I described our breakfast gravy to someone from Canada once on another forum (because I'm multifaceted) and she said that they have it but call it "white sauce."
It really is some amazing deliciousness. A thousand times more tasty than its bland appearance suggests.
Don't implicate Canada in that sludge! I'm Canadian and we do not have that where I'm from (well, we have it without the sausage, but I've never seen it not called béchamel as it should be), which is good because it's disgusting. I will never understand. I tried it in the States and was just like "seriously guys? This is what you go on about?"0 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »I just want to go to that hotel rabbitjb posted a picture of (afternoon tea picture).
Not because I think I would like afternoon tea. I just want to sit around and soak up all the posh.
That one is in Soho and also has a private cinema .. we went to see Elf before Christmas there .. cos Christmas traditions must be upheld and Elf is one of ours
I love afternoon tea in proper hotels - sandwiches in small strips with no crusts, bone china (know what it is now?), efficient, polite and reserved service .. get on with you and your 'have a nice days'
also your gravy looks horrible .. sorry .. wouldn't!
But if you ever tried it...:)
I described our breakfast gravy to someone from Canada once on another forum (because I'm multifaceted) and she said that they have it but call it "white sauce."
It really is some amazing deliciousness. A thousand times more tasty than its bland appearance suggests.
Don't implicate Canada in that sludge! I'm Canadian and we do not have that where I'm from (well, we have it without the sausage, but I've never seen it not called béchamel as it should be), which is good because it's disgusting. I will never understand. I tried it in the States and was just like "seriously guys? This is what you go on about?"
But if you like bechamel (I don't know how to type the accent thing) and you like sausage...why not together?0 -
That picture of soggy bread turned my stomach a little bit those 'biscuits' arnt sweet are they?? If they are savoury guess it's just like us eating beans on toast are they toasted? Am I missing something? I must be0
-
-
That picture of soggy bread turned my stomach a little bit those 'biscuits' arnt sweet are they?? If they are savoury guess it's just like us eating beans on toast are they toasted? Am I missing something? I must be
Not any sweeter than bread. And no, not toasted but preferrably fresh baked.0 -
_Terrapin_ wrote: »Okay, scrolled up thread and found someone saying clotted cream=custard. nvm people I am learning how to read.
it is not custard
it's a very, very, very thick cream .. thicker than whipped
Yes ...
Terrapin, think kind of in between whipped cream and butter but leaning more to the whipped cream side. It never gets hard in the refrigerator, but it's more solid than whipped cream. Clotted cream is never whipped at all. Usually it's less sweet than whipped cream in the U.S., too.
I love clotted cream. I was introduced to it when I was a little kid by a family friend who'd emigrated from Trinidad, if I remember correctly. I remember her spooning it out of a can and it just looked awful to me - yellowish and kind of gloppy. The stuff I see these days is much more visually appealing. Tastes the same, though!0 -
_Terrapin_ wrote: »Okay, scrolled up thread and found someone saying clotted cream=custard. nvm people I am learning how to read.
it is not custard
it's a very, very, very thick cream .. thicker than whipped
Yes ...
Terrapin, think kind of in between whipped cream and butter but leaning more to the whipped cream side. It never gets hard in the refrigerator, but it's more solid than whipped cream. Clotted cream is never whipped at all. Usually it's less sweet than whipped cream in the U.S., too.
I love clotted cream. I was introduced to it when I was a little kid by a family friend who'd emigrated from Trinidad, if I remember correctly. I remember her spooning it out of a can and it just looked awful to me - yellowish and kind of gloppy. The stuff I see these days is much more visually appealing. Tastes the same, though!
I'm thinking I could get behind this.
It almost sounds like a soft cream cheese.0 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »Carlos_421 wrote: »I just want to go to that hotel rabbitjb posted a picture of (afternoon tea picture).
Not because I think I would like afternoon tea. I just want to sit around and soak up all the posh.
That one is in Soho and also has a private cinema .. we went to see Elf before Christmas there .. cos Christmas traditions must be upheld and Elf is one of ours
I love afternoon tea in proper hotels - sandwiches in small strips with no crusts, bone china (know what it is now?), efficient, polite and reserved service .. get on with you and your 'have a nice days'
also your gravy looks horrible .. sorry .. wouldn't!
But if you ever tried it...:)
I described our breakfast gravy to someone from Canada once on another forum (because I'm multifaceted) and she said that they have it but call it "white sauce."
It really is some amazing deliciousness. A thousand times more tasty than its bland appearance suggests.
Don't implicate Canada in that sludge! I'm Canadian and we do not have that where I'm from (well, we have it without the sausage, but I've never seen it not called béchamel as it should be), which is good because it's disgusting. I will never understand. I tried it in the States and was just like "seriously guys? This is what you go on about?"
But if you like bechamel (I don't know how to type the accent thing) and you like sausage...why not together?
Well, first, béchamel isn't normally glopped onto bread products by cupfuls, second, I really only use it as a base to add flavour to (not sausage, because it's plenty rich enough as it is without adding meat to...it's one of the classic French mother sauces though so I'll make it occasionally as a base), third, sausage is not high on my list of meat products worth eating, and fourth, I also like hot sauce and sugar cookies but I don't eat them together.
I think biscuits and gravy pretty much tastes and looks like a pile of paste. Some Southern cooking is excellent (although I wish, um, y'all would lay off the lard/shortening and the stuff from cans), but this one just baffles me totally.
0 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »azulvioleta6 wrote: »I don't actually EAT commercially made scones, but I see them just about everywhere. I was thinking about it, and in the last few days I have seen scones at:
-Costco
-college cafeteria
-tiny college coffee stand
-Fred Meyer (Kroger)
-hospital cafeteria
-local coffee house (Stumptown)
-gas station
In the Pacific Northwest, you would have to be willfully trying to avoid them to not have any idea what they are.
I ate one yesterday, only because my mother made it and she insisted. Slightly sweet, but not very. My mother is most definitely NOT English.
I live over 2,000 miles away from the Pacific Northwest. I'm sure there are several things you see or eat on a regular basis that I'm not exposed to and vice versa.
You still have Starbucks, and Dunkin Donuts...aren't there scones at DD?
Even if you live in a part of the US where cafe culture is lacking, there are still scones all around you.0 -
Carlos_421 wrote: »_Terrapin_ wrote: »Okay, scrolled up thread and found someone saying clotted cream=custard. nvm people I am learning how to read.
it is not custard
it's a very, very, very thick cream .. thicker than whipped
Yes ...
Terrapin, think kind of in between whipped cream and butter but leaning more to the whipped cream side. It never gets hard in the refrigerator, but it's more solid than whipped cream. Clotted cream is never whipped at all. Usually it's less sweet than whipped cream in the U.S., too.
I love clotted cream. I was introduced to it when I was a little kid by a family friend who'd emigrated from Trinidad, if I remember correctly. I remember her spooning it out of a can and it just looked awful to me - yellowish and kind of gloppy. The stuff I see these days is much more visually appealing. Tastes the same, though!
I'm thinking I could get behind this.
It almost sounds like a soft cream cheese.
In texture, that's a lot closer to what it's like than whipped cream, although in flavour I'd say it's kind of partway between whipped cream and straight up butter. I like it the once a year or so my mother and I do high tea somewhere but I'd say it's definitely a sometimes food, in the immortal words of Cookie Monster.0 -
I often feel like one of the few Americans that does not like biscuits and gravy. The late night dinner in college has the B&G Special, everyone got that...I got scrambled eggs.0
-
Carlos_421 wrote: »VintageFeline wrote: »White Lightning in the UK is cider and teenage regrets.
It's so true. My brand was White Star (I assume it was a knock off), plus Richmond Menthol Superkings. Yuck!
Someone earlier said they need to find a way to make mac and cheese sound fancy... In the UK it's called macaroni cheese
Scone is of course pronounced to rhyme with cone, the meal order is breakfast, lunch and dinner, but more importantly, what's the correct term for a bread roll? Roll, barm, barmcake, cob, scuffler? (Obvs roll)
That's better than what the Canadians call it: Kraft Lunch (what if I eat it for breakfast???) and they put ketchup on it!! What???
ETA: and if it's a small round loaf of bread, it's a roll and they serve them at steak houses.
Steakhouse: Rolls with/before your meal
BBQ joint: Sweet Cornbread muffins with/before your meal
Granny's Country Kitchen: Biscuits with/before your meal
It is called Kraft DINNER in Canada.
0
This discussion has been closed.
Categories
- All Categories
- 1.4M Health, Wellness and Goals
- 393.6K Introduce Yourself
- 43.8K Getting Started
- 260.3K Health and Weight Loss
- 175.9K Food and Nutrition
- 47.5K Recipes
- 232.5K Fitness and Exercise
- 431 Sleep, Mindfulness and Overall Wellness
- 6.5K Goal: Maintaining Weight
- 8.6K Goal: Gaining Weight and Body Building
- 153K Motivation and Support
- 8K Challenges
- 1.3K Debate Club
- 96.3K Chit-Chat
- 2.5K Fun and Games
- 3.8K MyFitnessPal Information
- 24 News and Announcements
- 1.1K Feature Suggestions and Ideas
- 2.6K MyFitnessPal Tech Support Questions