Good old British chipper tea
bluekarou
Posts: 14 Member
So, I’m planning on weighing out chips and asking for a small fish. I reckon about 800-900 cals, does this sound about right? I’m skipping the old favourite of chips cheese n gravy!
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Seems like it would be ballpark correct. If I am out I usually try to log something as similar as I can, so if there isn't data for your restaurant but it looks pretty similar to what you would get at another restaurant that is listed then use that. It's not a perfect method, but it's something.4
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I'm confused...if you can weigh the chips, then why not weigh the fish too?1
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Have a look in the food database for Harry Ramsden for a ballpark figure.0
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Chips, cheese AND gravy? On the same plate?3
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So, I’m planning on weighing out chips and asking for a small fish. I reckon about 800-900 cals, does this sound about right? I’m skipping the old favourite of chips cheese n gravy!
I'm looking forward to that in a few weeks myself. Haven't done the research yet, but......
As for Harry Ramsden, is it a heavy or light batter? I haven't tried theirs in all my past visits. Need an idea to compare with where I go.0 -
I log normal fish and chips as 1200 cals so you're probably about right3
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Where’s the tea?5
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Where’s the tea?
OP means 'dinner'. Some parts of the UK say tea instead of dinner.
Hmm I think it must be a regional thing in the UK. Have never heard of that combination before! I'm in the south east near London and we tend to have curry sauce on our chips.
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I'm from the UK and have never called it a 'chipper' tea...
And yes, it's breakfast, lunch and tea, unless it's Sunday dinner (at lunch or tea time)... or you're my husband (northern) and then it's breakfast dinner and tea...5 -
TavistockToad wrote: »I'm from the UK and have never called it a 'chipper' tea...
And yes, it's breakfast, lunch and tea, unless it's Sunday dinner (at lunch or tea time)... or you're my husband (northern) and then it's breakfast dinner and tea...
Northerner here, so for me it's definitely breakfast, dinner, tea. Have never heard 'chipper' tea before.
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BruinsGal_91 wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »I'm from the UK and have never called it a 'chipper' tea...
And yes, it's breakfast, lunch and tea, unless it's Sunday dinner (at lunch or tea time)... or you're my husband (northern) and then it's breakfast dinner and tea...
Northerner here, so for me it's definitely breakfast, dinner, tea. Have never heard 'chipper' tea before.
Northern. Heard of chippy tea.6 -
BruinsGal_91 wrote: »TavistockToad wrote: »I'm from the UK and have never called it a 'chipper' tea...
And yes, it's breakfast, lunch and tea, unless it's Sunday dinner (at lunch or tea time)... or you're my husband (northern) and then it's breakfast dinner and tea...
Northerner here, so for me it's definitely breakfast, dinner, tea. Have never heard 'chipper' tea before.
I read that as "having tea at a chipper". For the non-Brits, it would be eating dinner at a fish and chips shop.5 -
Northwest England, we'd call it a chippy, never even heard chipper before.3
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TavistockToad wrote: »I'm from the UK and have never called it a 'chipper' tea...
And yes, it's breakfast, lunch and tea, unless it's Sunday dinner (at lunch or tea time)... or you're my husband (northern) and then it's breakfast dinner and tea...
Where I'm from in the south east we say breakfast, lunch and dinner. Tea is a small meal between 3 and 4pm. Have also never heard of chipper, we say chippy. For such a small island we have so many dialects3 -
TavistockToad wrote: »I'm from the UK and have never called it a 'chipper' tea...
And yes, it's breakfast, lunch and tea, unless it's Sunday dinner (at lunch or tea time)... or you're my husband (northern) and then it's breakfast dinner and tea...
Where I'm from in the south east we say breakfast, lunch and dinner. Tea is a small meal between 3 and 4pm. Have also never heard of chipper, we say chippy. For such a small island we have so many dialects
South East too, for us it's Breakfast, Lunch and then Dinner and Tea are interchangeable. However, if we have dinner at lunch time (eg sunday roast) then it'll be followed by tea in the evening (and that tea is normally a "high tea" type meal)
That's not confusing right?
OP: From my experience I'd say that's probably in the right ballpark.2 -
I generally have breakfast, second breakfast, lunch, afternoon tea, and then dinner. But I’m half Scottish and half English so obviously confused. Oh, and it’s got to be salt and sauce on a fish supper!3
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South to South East here, and it's breakfast, lunch and dinner. Also chips and gravy is an abomination. My Yorkshire husband and in laws are so disappointed.
Edit: I have also never heard the phrase chipper, it's chippy to me.
2nd edit: Calories sound about right, I'd go for 1200 to be safe. But that's not what this thread is about anymore.2 -
Glasgow here and never heard of a chipper tea. We call it a chippy, we can be having our tea to indicate we’re eating dinner!
Some of the chip shops here you can try such delicacies as a deep fried mars bar, buckfast burgers and irn bru pakora 😆 never tried any of them!
I have also seen someone order chips, cheese and a tub of kebab sauce, taste excellent apparently 🤢
I also estimate most chipper teas at 1000/1200 calories. Would be interesting to know the number if someone weighs their chip shop chips, it’s prob far more than I guess!0 -
I'm from the midlands and it's breakfast - lunch - tea - supper, but now living on the south coast I say breakfast - lunch/dinner - dinner/tea.
Oh and I love chips with gravy, I'll have gravy on most things Chipper to me is someone who is happy, cheerful etc You do realise that chipper also means drug user or a golf club1 -
I'm from the midlands and it's breakfast - lunch - tea - supper, but now living on the south coast I say breakfast - lunch/dinner - dinner/tea.
Oh and I love chips with gravy, I'll have gravy on most things Chipper to me is someone who is happy, cheerful etc You do realise that chipper also means drug user or a golf club
I’m Midlands too and I have Breakfast, lunch, dinner and a small supper/bedtime snack. So no tea here! I think dinner is traditionally the biggest meal of the day.
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OblasMummy wrote: »I'm from the midlands and it's breakfast - lunch - tea - supper, but now living on the south coast I say breakfast - lunch/dinner - dinner/tea.
Oh and I love chips with gravy, I'll have gravy on most things Chipper to me is someone who is happy, cheerful etc You do realise that chipper also means drug user or a golf club
I’m Midlands too and I have Breakfast, lunch, dinner and a small supper/bedtime snack. So no tea here! I think dinner is traditionally the biggest meal of the day.
You're not from the west midlands are you Could be that my mum's side of the family is from Yorkshire, I don't know .0 -
I'm from the midlands and it's breakfast - lunch - tea - supper, but now living on the south coast I say breakfast - lunch/dinner - dinner/tea.
Oh and I love chips with gravy, I'll have gravy on most things Chipper to me is someone who is happy, cheerful etc You do realise that chipper also means drug user or a golf club
Hmm maybe the OP uses cocaine on his chips instead of salt while playing a few holes?2 -
Chippy tea here
I would estimate 1200ish, I normally only have chips with salt and vinegar, I log as 700 and it's a very rare occasion as I'll still be hungry (vegetarian, our chippy doesn't do any options but chips for us)0 -
This whole thread is just making me want fish and chips!!!!4
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TavistockToad wrote: »This whole thread is just making me want fish and chips!!!!
Friday is fish supper day is it not?0 -
Also on a recent trip to NE England I went for my fish supper and I asked for a pickle.
This led to the guy in the shop taking the pee out me just because I don’t call them pickled onions!
He was going on a bit like Peter Kay and garlic bread 🥖2 -
TavistockToad wrote: »This whole thread is just making me want fish and chips!!!!
Friday is fish supper day is it not?
not on 1600 cals when its a non running day, no!!! :laugh:3 -
Also on a recent trip to NE England I went for my fish supper and I asked for a pickle.
This led to the guy in the shop taking the pee out me just because I don’t call them pickled onions!
He was going on a bit like Peter Kay and garlic bread 🥖
But a pickle isn't a pickled onion, it's a gerkin.6 -
I think it actually works out a lot more than that, I made the mistake of weighing my chipper (a word I never used in the UK but have started using in Ireland) and even a "small chips" was 400g which comes in at around 900 calories on it's own, then you're probably looking at 400-600 for the fish particularly if it's a heavy batter.
This average portion they speak of is around 280g of chips (1 large potato) and 170g of Fish (around the same size as a chicken breast), anyone ever had a portion of fish and chips that small ?
from
http://www.federationoffishfriers.co.uk/pages/nutritional-info-605.htm0
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