When I was living with my parents it was a case of what ever I told my mother I liked I had for 3 months!
Chicken and sweet corn sarnies today

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You know what? I'm gonna bluddy well give it a godirtydirtydiesel wrote:Steve, make your own pickle it's not hard we've been doing it for years
steve_earwig wrote: You know what? I'm gonna bluddy well give it a go
Me too, I can get lettuce, I can get tomatoes, however there's not one single rasher of bacon in the whole country, and I'm not about to start a pig farm...dirtydirtydiesel wrote:Then again I am partial to B.L.T
Horseradish grows as a weed here, I pulled out loads of it earlier in the year while I was tilling but I can still see it coming up everywhere. I was always told that home-made horseradish is lethal, that's because I was used to the watered-down stuff commercially available in GB. I soon discovered the commercial stuff here isn't watered down at all, it's just like the home-made stuff so anything more than a smear and your tongue is on fire.dirtydirtydiesel wrote:But a very close second is left over roast beef with lashings of hot horseradish
Sod that! us Brits get very tetchy if we don't get a regular Bacon-fix.steve_earwig wrote:there's not one single rasher of bacon in the whole country
Indeed, and it's not something I can persuade the wife to accept because, as far as she's concerned, the local equivalent is far superior as you don't have to cook it first (as it's smoked ham really). In fact she's very down on English/British cooking, (she's fond of saying other countries have quinine, England just has cooking) and says that the only good stuff is what we've pinched off other countries, like curry. I don't really want to start an argument about it but the curries we get in GB aren't what they're tucking into in Bombay (no rice for a start), it's our interpretation of it and has far more variety. I want to mention that the good stuff here, like sarma, is cooked and eaten in various forms across Central Europe up into Russia, and very probably didn't start off here. As far as I can make out food of local origin is stuff like čevapi, which is more-or-less small rolled lumps of mince, fried in fat until it's almost incinerated, served up with sliced fresh onions and a roll that looks like cardboard yet tastes like glue, closely followed by a couple of indigestion tablets.Welly wrote:us Brits get very tetchy if we don't get a regular Bacon-fix.
Seeing as all I can do just now is watch the rain falling through the window... No, make that stand inside and , though a window, watch the rain, which is outside, falling, also outside...steve_earwig wrote:Have a recipe http://www.pickyourown.org/branstonpickle.htm
What constitutes a "medium" carrot then? Not a baby one but not a foot long?1 medium carrot, chopped into 1/8 inch cubes
No Swedes here, no turnips either1 cup rutabaga (called a Swede in the UK and Australia), chopped into 1/8 inch cubes. You can use turnips, if you can find rutabagas.
What bit constitutes a "floret" then? I originally decided on just the last bunch on the end of a "branch" but when I was cooking it I considered that this would be an insignificant amount, so I took 3 branches instead.3 cauliflower florets, finely chopped
Again with the mediums1 medium yellow onion, finely chopped
1 medium apple, finely chopped
1 medium zucchini, finely chopped
What, not medium? How big is "sweet" then? IS that cocktail or wally? Well, bugger you, all I have is these sliced ones anyway.5 sweet gherkins, finely chopped
Here I had some luck and found brown sugar with molasses1/2 pound dark brown sugar
Something else that surprised me by being almost completely unavailable here. After much consideration we decided the Croatian for this would be "kukuruzni škrob" which we managed to find in Zagreb.1 tablespoon corn starch (aka corn flour)
Will you settle for "enamelled"? It's all I have...1 large pot; teflon lined, glass or ceramic.
Paste? It's runny as f*ck! So, aware that it'd get more runny with this added, I let it dry out some more. I'm sure the black will come out of the saucepan eventually... Stir it up, return to the boil and kill.In a small bowl mix the cornstarch with 1/4 malt vinegar and mix to a paste, then add it to the pot
Not yours, sadly, I've got that bookmarked for later in the year when I've got so many plumbs, apples etc. I don't know what to do with them...dirtydirtydiesel wrote:That sounds strange steve, I told you to follow my receipe to the letter