Originally posted by vinteuil
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Biscuits anyone?
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Originally posted by cloughie View PostPlain or chocolate?
Rjw - I loved the Breakfast biscuits too. The crunchiness and taste were unique. I wish there were something exactly the same. Accept no substitutes.It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostI always thought of Bath Olivers as biscuits of the upper classes, whereas custard creams...... definitely non-U. I loved them as a kid.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNo longer the season for them, but before Christmas one can eat lussekatter
Saffron buns (with clotted cream) were once reserved for Good Friday, but Cornish bakeries and Methodist ‘Tea-treats’ have long forgotten that tradition.
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Originally posted by HighlandDougie View PostMicky
Thanks for the advice - gratefully received. I've lived in France for almost 10 years, am (alas) over 60 but speak reasonably good French (as no-one hereabouts speaks much English, life would be challenging if I couldn't explain that I wanted the satellite dish lined up with the azimuth for Astra 28.2E etc etc). Given that I am being messed around by the Préfecture des Alpes-Maritimes at the moment (not for any bad reason but I think that they are simply overwhelmed with applications/interviews etc), I will need a stiff drink - or three - before thinking about the naturalisation process. Or some music to strengthen my resolve - Rameau sees like a good idea. Anyway, I drink to your success
As to the use of the newly-fashionable lard in baking, the recent experience of grating 150g of the stuff, even straight from the freezer, to make cheese straws (along with 150g of similarly grated butter) was enough to make me swear that I would never make anything again in which it featured as an ingredient. Madeleines, even with the stress of making the perfect beurre brun, are child's play by comparison.
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Originally posted by Keraulophone View PostYou can still eat them in this country (just!) because Anglicans have extended the Christmas season to last for a full forty days, ending with the Feast of the Presentation on 2 February. (That’s how we get through our extensive Christmas and Epiphany repertoire in the cathedral, e.g. all four Poulenc Christmas motets at last Sunday’s Evensong.)
Saffron buns (with clotted cream) were once reserved for Good Friday, but Cornish bakeries and Methodist ‘Tea-treats’ have long forgotten that tradition.
Somewhat ironic in view of the way the Church of the Retail Giant has extended the celebrations of the Feast of Conspicuous Consumption so far forward of Christmas;let's hope they don't catch up on this extension the other way....
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostI think that you can get other things on a Good Friday too, Dave.
(Sorry: one for Pedants' Paradise perhaps: I'm an 'only' vulture!)
Though perhaps less ambiguous if you consider that most/many shops did close on GF in times gone by, and there were no/hardly any supermarkets.
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Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNice ambiguous sentence, eh!
Though perhaps less ambiguous if you consider that most/many shops did close on GF in times gone by, and there were no/hardly any supermarkets.
I remember being surprised my first year in Canada seeing the bishop's wife in the local 7--11 store buying something on a Good Friday: it was a regular (indeed exam) day at the university, but I was on my way to sing in some service or other.
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When I was a pupil at Winchcombe Junior we collected rose hips each autumn. All the children handed in their harvest in the school hall. I imagine it was a way of getting enough hips to produce the rose hip syrup that provided the nation's children with vitamin C during the war and the decade after it. Anyway we were paid for our hips, I received 2d which I spent on two Royal Scot biscuits. A very nice breaktime biscuit, especially so because my mother would never allow me any money for a breaktime biscuit!
Bring back the Royal Scot.
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