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amateur51
Originally posted by Anna View PostAnd, there used to be a very strange delicacy, particularly at Maiden Aunts' funerals, which were strangrely called Bridge Rolls ... either egg & cress or ham & tomato. I suppose now it's more likely to be a selection of Tapas?
Not that my Nain & her cadre every played bridge - canasta possibly, before arthritis made holding a large hand of cards very difficult and certainly Happy Families ( But NOT Old Maid )
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Originally posted by Anna View PostMaiden Aunts ... Bridge Rolls
And the café instantané à la mode du nord of ammy's youth!
All good stuff and it fills me with nostalgia to think of it.
"The Girls" left me their parents' 1911 Bechstein grand which is 6 feet away from me as I type"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostOh good heavens, Anna that's a madeleine moment if ever there was one - Bridge Rolls!"...the isle is full of noises,
Sounds and sweet airs, that give delight and hurt not.
Sometimes a thousand twangling instruments
Will hum about mine ears, and sometime voices..."
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amateur51
Originally posted by Caliban View PostOh yes! And not only at funerals. My Huddersfield granny's best friends were two spinster sisters (aka 'aunties' aka "The Girls" ) who lived together in Bradford - whenever we went round there: bridge rolls with egg'n'cress, ham'n'tomato... also tinned salmon'n'cucumber! (I think it's 'Bridge' rolls because they could provide sustenance on a side plate on the corner of the card-table during endless games of Bridge, no?)
And the café instantané à la mode du nord of ammy's youth!
All good stuff and it fills me with nostalgia to think of it.
"The Girls" left me their parents' 1911 Bechstein grand which is 6 feet away from me as I type
I bet your movers were pleased when they saw the Bechstein
"And so if the Van Dykes have to go
And we've pawned the Bechstein Grand
We'll stand by the stately homes of England!"
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Anna
One of the best funerals I went to was ancient Aunt in her 90s. Remarkable woman, adopted three siblings from Barnardos and then her husband died and she had to cope on her own. Anyway, she left money and instructions for the Wake to be held at her cottage with "plenty of sherry and ham" so we repaired there after Church service and burial and landed up playing cricket in the garden. Her mongrel mutt was called Joe-Joe and that is who my teddy bear is named for. I do remember her and the cricket match with great fondness. (I asssume a Madeleine moment is terribly Proustian and not erotic?)
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amateur51
Originally posted by Brassbandmaestro View PostSounds as though I havnt lived! Never had 'bridgerolls'!!Gawd!
Rather cold and fresh today.None of that white stuff yet!
Bridge rolls for your delectation, BBM!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostNo snow here yet but the sky is going very light grey
Bridge rolls for your delectation, BBM!
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Anna
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... the one does not, necessarily, exclude the other.
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Originally posted by Anna View PostI confess, I have never read Proust nor do I like cake. That is probably inexcusable and needs to be rectified.
But most people have a healthier outlook on life.
I, on the other hand... what was it that Logan Pearsall Smith said?
- "People say that life is the thing, but I prefer reading... "
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