Cabinetman
Sequoia
- Joined
- Oct 11, 2020
- Messages
- 5,528
- Reaction score
- 1,231
- Location
- Lincolnshire Wolds + Massachusetts
- Name
- Ian
I used to pickle finger chillies and have cheese and chillie cobs for lunch I made a weeks worth and froze them, one I would put lots of chillies in, it was like Russian roulette with chills.Egg & jalapeño pepper![]()
Costco has it here, not sure if they do your way.Hi Scott, the best cheddar I’ve found over in the us is this one, very strong and it’s got nice crunchy bits of Calcium in it. But I haven’t come across your Welsh cheese yet.
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Pff! What do the French know about making cheese.If you want a real blue cheese that will put hairs on your chest than it has to be Roquefort. Wouldn’t dream of putting it in a sandwich though.
It’s basically cooked chicken breast mixed with mayonnaise and a light curry spice, although some people like to add apple or dried apricots. I’ve heard that chopped pistachio nuts go well with it too, although I’ve never tried them.Is this a canned chicken like spam?
I will give it a go.A fresh chunky Ciabatta roll, cut through middle about 80%, 20% is the ‘hinge’ for lid.
Smear a good layer of butter (saltless) on both halves.
Grate on some cheddar and mozzarella.
Sprinkle some sliced olives (no pips).
Some thinly sliced tomato (must be firm).
Some black pepper ground over the top.
Close lid.
Pop into microwave for 20 seconds.
Eat – just be wary of hot tomato and cheese!
Accompanied by a very large mug of coffee.
Note bacon also goes very well as a topping!
Without looking it up what is a floury bap?Love a lightly toasted floury bap with a goodly amount of salted butter and a few strips of streaky bacon, grilled just right so that the fat has just turned crispy, then a little bit of tinned tomato smeared on and a tiny flavouring of brown sauce. Delicious.
Has to be streaky, that’s where all the taste is.
Not going there.Egg & jalapeño pepper![]()
Type of bun, round not sweet like American bread, with a little flour on the top.Without looking it up what is a floury bap?
Most of the supermarcardo's in the UK do a decent range of cheddars (unlike those in the New World, so Stephen Fry would have) but this stuff:Hi Scott, the best cheddar I’ve found over in the us is this one, very strong and it’s got nice crunchy bits of Calcium in it. But I haven’t come across your Welsh cheese yet.
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Actually, you are quite right. Yes, there are a lot of different cheeses in France, but few of them come close to what is produced in the UK.Pff! What do the French know about making cheese.
?Sadly MrsP wont have cheese of any sort in the house.
And renown locally for the pollution of the nearby river.Just an aside, according to quiz on TV last night, Davidstow Creamery in Cornwall is the largest cheese factory in the UK.
It’s what you buy from a High Street chain in the UK called Greggs. Basically it is ultra-processed sludge designed to stick to the roof of your mouth. They are disgusting.Without looking it up what is a floury bap?
Well you’ve obviously been buying big bakery garbage Roger, properly done they are superb!It’s what you buy from a High Street chain in the UK called Greggs. Basically it is ultra-processed sludge designed to stick to the roof of your mouth. They are disgusting.
I love a good ploughman’s and a good pint but you can’t always rarely find this in pubs these days,I love a good ploughman's sandwich, high quality mature cheddar and it's got to be sarsons silverskin onions, with a bit of salt and pepper![]()
The fact is the UK doesn’t produce enough milk to satisfy the demand Jim, when you look into the food supply chain the numbers are phenomenal.But certainly our farmers need protection from such practices.
I think it's easy to over-estimate transport costs, especially when that transport is of large volumes of stuff. I don't know anything about liquid milk transport but I read an article a few years ago about container shipment and it was quite astonishing. There are apparently companies selling "Scottish fish" (with the implication being that it has relatively few "food miles") who farm the fish in Scotland, then stick them in a container ship to China, where they're cleaned up and filleted before being stuck back on a container ship to come back to the UK. Shipping them around the world twice presumably costs less than the difference in labour cost between Scottish people filleting fish and Chinese people doing the same.I had no idea that the U.K. imported liquid milk, given the extra transport costs the economics are difficult to understand.
Industrially produced it may be, but the stuff I referred to is a decent, every day cheese and, if you look at the packet again, produced from 100% British milk. If their milk, or even part of it came from the Continent, there's no way (Trade Descriptions Act) that Davidstow could label it as they do - RobInteresting thread. Since getting to know an artisinal cheese (and butter) maker, wsho supplies our restaurant, I've become deeply cynical about the cheese industry. Most of it, Davidstow is an example, is industrially produced in massive bulk. It is hard to believe some of the claims: Park Farms for instance (who make the bulk Costco product and slightly different US export version) about their cheese being largely hand made. They will tell you that it is "matured in England". Strangely they don't put anything on the packet about where the milk comes from. The website suggests local free range dairy farms. There are not enough dairy farms nearby to produce the volumes they shift and free range is nonsense as the dairy herds are barn kept in winter by the vast majority of farmers who don't want their land poached up.
In the real world, ignoring the ludicrous marketing fluff suggesting artisinal roots, pasteurised blended milk arrives in bulk tankers and a good bit comes to the UK from Poland.
BlasphemyAnd the locals around here speak very highly of British cheeses of course.
. Sadly MrsP wont have cheese of any sort in the house.
Once the Polish, Dutch or German tanker has pumped into the UK bulk tank, it is mixed, some of it is filtered, it may well be re-pasteurised and then it is "milk from the UK". There is a lot of marketing garbage surrounding industrial food production.The same with Tesco Organic milk, which is what I imbibe. It do sayeth on the back label, made "using from milk from the UK"
Sadly MrsP wont have cheese of any sort in the house.
No comment though on the 100% British milk in the Davidstow cheese?Once the Polish, Dutch or German tanker has pumped into the UK bulk tank, it is mixed, some of it is filtered, it may well be re-pasteurised and then it is "milk from the UK". There is a lot of marketing garbage surrounding industrial food production.
It is much the same as "made in Germany" which is another misleading phrase used a lot.....
Of course, we can all believe whatever we wish. UK dairy farmers are undercut by European bulk milk supplies. Industrail producers are quite focussed on price. No one is more focussed on price than the likes of Tesco. In some cases they will not even agree a price payable to farmers until after delivery so farmers have literally no idea what they will get on their supply contract - but they get penalised if they don't deliver. Apples are a prime example. There is a reason why Kent orchards are being grubbed up left right and centre.
Right now Fenland celery is in season and superb. But the stuff in Sainsbury, Waityrosy, Tescosy, and Lidllaldi is all from Spain. Soon it will be Morocco as the land is so cheap. We are so used to cheap junk that we don't care about our farming industry and our children will regret what we have slipped into being dependent on imports as we build housing estates on productive land. You can probably tell I feel strongly about this. I made a conscious decision not to buy into the destructive practices in food production.