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blackadder
07-08-2005, 09:48
In Preston we have the parched pea, a lovely dish that is great with vinigar. I have yet to find parched peas outside of Preston.

When I lived in Newcastle I became aware of a dish called Peas pudding, butty shops slapped this dish on your ham stotties (stottie is a regional term for bun, cob, barm cake etc) wether you liked it or not. I have yet to find a butty shop outside of the Tyne n wear area that serves this very tasty dish.

Is there any other places that has it's own food that is unique to its self?

dessiato
07-08-2005, 10:10
You can get pease pudding in cans down here in Surrey. My father-in-law eats the stuff for breakfast, but he lives in Scotland. Never tried it myself.

When I was in Grimsby they used to put gravy on chips.

In Portugal they eat boiled pigs testicles, and crispy pigs ears.

melmoth
07-08-2005, 11:52
Hot steamed black pudding with mustard! Fresh in Bury market! Delicious!

Flavour
07-08-2005, 18:50
Eccles cake:)

bristle-krs
07-08-2005, 18:58
i've never really thought of pease pudding as a 'northern' thing - grew up with it in kent, pease pudding and boiled bacon, pea & ham soup etc.

tangerinedream
07-08-2005, 19:54
Chorley Cake.

Manchester Tart.

Blackpool Milk Roll

Wigan kebab.

stereotypical
07-08-2005, 21:23
Scouse

_angel_
07-08-2005, 21:28
Cheese pies do not exist outside the northwest. I really miss them ! :(

Fez909
07-08-2005, 22:42
Parmesan, or "parmo".

Not the cheese; a north east dish. It consists of a fillet of pork (chicken can also be used), fried in breadcrumbs and then covered in white sauce, cheese sauce and then grate some cheese over the top and wack it back under the grill to melt it.

Serious artery clogger. It's well popular in Middlesbrough. More so than kebabs etc I reckon. I'm not too fussed on it, but there's a few places that sell "hot shot" parmos, which are nice. It's basically just the same but with peppers and peperoni on the top, and chilli powerder in the cheese.

Tastes better than it sounds, honest. :D

bfg
07-08-2005, 22:43
When I was in Grimsby they used to put gravy on chips.



I think it'd be remarkable to find a chippie thatdidnt offer gravy . I have seen the odd one, aroundLondon, that doesnt do it. Surely these are chippies you dont risk eatin in??

Donna Ferentes
07-08-2005, 22:50
I think it'd be remarkable to find a chippie thatdidnt offer gravy . I have seen the odd one, aroundLondon, that doesnt do it. Surely these are chippies you dont risk eatin in??"Odd one"? Chippies in the South don't do gravy. Even good ones. (I assume there's the occasional exception, but it's the rule.)

Strumpet
07-08-2005, 23:18
Laverbread MMMmMMMMmmmmm
Cawl

Donna Ferentes
07-08-2005, 23:21
Isn't laverbread Welsh?

Maidmarian
08-08-2005, 00:06
In Preston we have the parched pea, a lovely dish that is great with vinigar. I have yet to find parched peas outside of Preston.



Are they also called carlins ?
(Some sort of black/brown peas ? Traditionally eaten on the last Sunday in Lent before Palm Sunday ?)

blackadder
08-08-2005, 08:05
Not sure about Carlins or about the religious turn to the dish, but I'd like to find out all the same.

There is two stalls in Preston town centre that sell parched peas, most excellent little stall in these pics

Parched Peas and hot spuds (http://www.prestonlancs.com/gallery/photos/2/med_1115676491-1.jpg)

Caledonian (http://www.prestonlancs.com/gallery/photos/2/med_1115676607-1.jpg)

The stall in the pics is themed around an old steam train, the owner said that anyone interested in trains should know about the name & number of the train Caledonian..

tangerinedream
08-08-2005, 13:44
There is two stalls in Preston town centre that sell parched peas, most excellent little stall in these pics


Yes, I'd second that. I sometimes change trains at preston just so I can go to this stall. If you're ever in Preston, don't think of lunching anywhere else than on the square with peas or pototoes. :cool:

shoddysolutions
08-08-2005, 13:57
Middletons battered chips. The only thing I miss about the West Midlands.

Pontefract cakes. Huge round slabs of liquorice. Made in Pontefract, natch.

killer b
08-08-2005, 13:58
blackadder! what about butter pies!

ask for a butter pie anywhere other than preston and they look at you like you're mad.

rubbershoes
08-08-2005, 14:03
Cheese pies do not exist outside the northwest. I really miss them ! :(

mr shoes remembers those from her liverpool schooldays. she says they're really nice. anyone got a recipe?

ulster fry is one thing i've never seen outside liverpool and for good reason. it's horrible

Roadkill
08-08-2005, 14:10
It's not unique to the area of course, but if you ask for 'fish and chips' in a chippy in Hull they give you haddock. Haddock is the standard and cod the one you have to ask for specially, rather than t'other way round.

belboid
08-08-2005, 14:26
Barmcakes?

Lancashire hotpot.

Cumberland sausage.

Everton mints???

tangerinedream
08-08-2005, 14:38
blackadder! what about butter pies!

ask for a butter pie anywhere other than preston and they look at you like you're mad.

Not strictly true - You can get butter pies in Wigan and Skelmersdale - Chorley is somekind of butter pie mecca and even here in the sunny Fylde you can get them. (Though the ones we have at work are always stale :mad: )

I must get a butter pie based tagline one of these days...

I agree in the wider sense of the Central Lancs area - I've had so many odd looks about butter pies.

"A pie, full of butter? :confused: "

killer b
08-08-2005, 14:55
Barmcakes?
thats just regional variation in names rather than it actually being unique to the area though.

is it my imagination, or has barmcake only come into popular usage in west lancashire in the past 15 years or so? i'm sure they were universally refered to as 'teacakes' when i was a nipper (in preston anyway).

Idaho
08-08-2005, 14:57
Homity pies seem common round here, and are not something I had previously come across.

Sheffield is great for the pork, stuffing and apple sauce breadcakes that the butchers sell.

belboid
08-08-2005, 14:58
naah, 30 years at the very least!

It is argued that barmcakes are slightly different to other bread rolls because of their exact method of manufacture. Summat to do with using froth off yeasty liquid before baking.

Herbert Read
08-08-2005, 15:07
hendersons relish sheffield

belboid
08-08-2005, 15:08
hendersons relish sheffield
how could i have failed.....

(hangs head in shame...)

Roadkill
08-08-2005, 15:09
hendersons relish sheffield

Mmm, Henderson's Relish. :cool:

Miles better than Worcestershire Sauce ... but impossible to obtain outside Sheffield. :confused: :(

tangerinedream
08-08-2005, 15:13
i'm sure they were universally refered to as 'teacakes' when i was a nipper (in preston anyway).

They called them that in Huddersfield when I lived there.

belboid
08-08-2005, 15:13
oh but it is!

Across Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Glasgow, even Lancashire!

tho not in that many places. I could go on, but it preobably deserves a thread of its own - a vegan worcester sauce!

Hendersons Online (http://www.hendersonsrelish.com/)

Herbert Read
08-08-2005, 15:13
Mmm, Henderson's Relish. :cool:

Miles better than Worcestershire Sauce ... but impossible to obtain outside Sheffield.

my missus is from sheff and keeps promising me this sauce :)

buts all lies :(

She wont let some one from outside have it :mad:

excuses like i forgot to get some :mad:

Roadkill
08-08-2005, 15:22
oh but it is!

Across Yorkshire, Derbyshire, Glasgow, even Lancashire!


I'll have to look out for that. I've never seen it round here though.

dormouse
08-08-2005, 15:26
Yes, I'd second that. I sometimes change trains at preston just so I can go to this stall. If you're ever in Preston, don't think of lunching anywhere else than on the square with peas or pototoes. :cool:
My boyfriend was thrilled to find a parched pea stall - he's from Middlesbrough and had been thinking that Prestonians were uncivilised. NB to Maidmarian - he calls them 'carlins' though.

belboid
08-08-2005, 15:31
I'll have to look out for that. I've never seen it round here though.
Where to buy Hendersons (http://www.hendersonsrelish.com/content/relish.htm)

Good stuff!

Error Gorilla
08-08-2005, 16:02
Henderson's is fantastic; a kind of vegetarian Worcester Sauce, only better. Slap it on your pasties, pour it on your tomato soup...lovely!

killer b
08-08-2005, 16:09
naah, 30 years at the very least!

It is argued that barmcakes are slightly different to other bread rolls because of their exact method of manufacture. Summat to do with using froth off yeasty liquid before baking.
but i'm 27, and when i was small it was teacakes in all the bakeries round here - i only remember them starting being barm cakes when i was about 10.

now if you ask for a teacake they assume you want a fruit teacake...

Maidmarian
08-08-2005, 18:40
Not sure about Carlins or about the religious turn to the dish, but I'd like to find out all the same.

There is two stalls in Preston town centre that sell parched peas, most excellent little stall in these pics

[URL=http://www
Yep, same thing ! See : http://www.carlinpeas.co.uk :)

soulman
08-08-2005, 21:47
"Odd one"? Chippies in the South don't do gravy. Even good ones. (I assume there's the occasional exception, but it's the rule.)

What!

No chips and onion gravy :mad:

lizardqueen
09-08-2005, 12:24
Wigan has Chips and Pea Wet (have never tried it coz I don't fancy pea juice on my chips ta :D )

And I've never been anywhere outside Bolton/Wigan where you can get a pie or a pastie on a barmcake :D Weird, but it works you know.....

Herbert Read
09-08-2005, 15:19
Maccaroni pie in scotland is well wrong is this local to heart clogged celts?

killer b
09-08-2005, 16:44
And I've never been anywhere outside Bolton/Wigan where you can get a pie or a pastie on a barmcake :D Weird, but it works you know.....
nope, you can get a pie barmcake anywhere that sells pies, and barmcakes.

to my relief...

lizardqueen
09-08-2005, 17:10
nope, you can get a pie barmcake anywhere that sells pies, and barmcakes.

to my relief...

But you'll get looked at a bit funny when you ask for it :D

Wookey
09-08-2005, 19:33
I live in Eccles, as in cakes. So another vote for them. :)

(Yes, we do eat Eccles Cakes.....aaaaallllll the fucking time)

montevideo
09-08-2005, 23:59
there's the chorley cake - a bigger flatter version of the eccles cake, different kind of pastry. Remembering eating it as a kid, never seen it since,

and naturally enough vimto!

Calum McD
10-08-2005, 07:49
Yep, same thing ! See : http://www.carlinpeas.co.uk :)

I've seen the dried version sold as "Marple" peas, which cook up identical to the parched peas sold on the aforementioned Preston stall. But I haven't been able to get hold of any lately :( (although the local supermarket does stock Henderson's Relish :cool: )

And why, oh why, has the world (bar a 5-10 mile radius around Preston) refused to recognise the genius of the Butter pie? Once asked for one where I used to work near Haslingden, and the guy looked at me as though I was from another planet :D

And while I'm on the subject of pastries - was in Leeds the other day - the city is chock full of Gregg's shops - but not one sold veggie pasties. Is this a N.West thing?

Wookey
10-08-2005, 08:30
Maybe, actually. You can only get cheese and onion and cornish round our way....yer actual veggie pasty is a bit Southern. :(

Funky_monks
10-08-2005, 13:37
Meat pie.

Unkown really in the south, however, similar pies are available as 'Scotch Pie'.

And, of course, Vimto.

killer b
10-08-2005, 14:00
is vimto a northern thing? i never knew...

montevideo
10-08-2005, 14:56
is vimto a northern thing? i never knew...

it's a manchester thing. There's a wooden statue (of a vimto bottle) dedicated to mr vimto outside umist (where i used to work). Like all soft drinks of its day it was advertised as a tonic/pick-me-up, for medicinal purposes only - & none of that fizzy stuff you get in cans now.

Here's a tip: vodka & vimto (neat from the bottles) it'll blow your socks off. Pisses all over vodka & red bull.

Or hot vimto. Magical.

sovietpop
10-08-2005, 15:08
it's a manchester thing. There's a wooden statue (of a vimto bottle) dedicated to mr vimto outside umist (where i used to work). Like all soft drinks of its day it was advertised as a tonic/pick-me-up, for medicinal purposes only - & none of that fizzy stuff you get in cans now.

Here's a tip: vodka & vimto (neat from the bottles) it'll blow your socks off. Pisses all over vodka & red bull.

Or hot vimto. Magical.

I've never heard of vimto before. What does it taste like? Is it like Iron Bru?

montevideo
10-08-2005, 15:16
I've never heard of vimto before. What does it taste like? Is it like Iron Bru?

Nooooo! It's thick & sickly sweet, like medicine but sicklier & sweeter (rots your teeth just looking at it). Deep red/purple colour. They do fizzy pop cans of it now but it doesn't compare.

This is what you need to look for in the shops

http://rep-eye.cocolog-nifty.com/iraq02/Vimto.JPG

sovietpop
10-08-2005, 15:30
Nooooo! It's thick & sickly sweet, like medicine but sicklier & sweeter (rots your teeth just looking at it). Deep red/purple colour. They do fizzy pop cans of it now but it doesn't compare.

This is what you need to look for in the shops

kinda like buckfast for children?

killer b
10-08-2005, 15:34
it's a mixed fruit cordial. like ribena, but nicer.

montevideo
10-08-2005, 15:36
kinda like buckfast for children?

BINGO!

vimto
10-08-2005, 16:43
BINGO!Oi!

vimto (http://www.vimto.co.uk/)

:)

Herbert Read
15-08-2005, 08:13
colts foot rock is pretty unique to yorkshire, it an aniseed rock that looks like a limp of clay :o

oneflewover
15-08-2005, 09:16
Hi all,

Patties, battered fishcake without the fish. Just potato and parsley. Only in Hull?
Fish with the skin on, only between Hull and Scarborough?

Not quite the same - spice meaning sweets in Bradford / Huddersfield area?

Up The Tigers

articul8
17-08-2005, 12:32
Just seen on the news that they a firm in Burnley has starting making Veggie Black Puddings - apparently they taste just like the 'real' ones (only minus the blood and offal). Sounds good to me.

tangerinedream
18-08-2005, 00:35
I had a veggie haggis once. It was minging.

montevideo
18-08-2005, 08:58
Hi all,

Patties, battered fishcake without the fish. Just potato and parsley.

Er, wouldn't that just be a potato cake?

articul8
19-08-2005, 17:29
I had a veggie haggis once. It was minging.

but any less minging than 'real' haggis (ie. made out of sheep's bladder, mutton etc...)?

tangerinedream
19-08-2005, 18:17
but any less minging than 'real' haggis (ie. made out of sheep's bladder, mutton etc...)?

I'm sorry, I preferred real haggis!

chio
19-08-2005, 22:42
Hi all,

Patties, battered fishcake without the fish. Just potato and parsley. Only in Hull?

They have something similar as "scallops" in West Yorks, only without the parsley.

Reg Perrin
19-08-2005, 22:50
colts foot rock is pretty unique to yorkshire, it an aniseed rock that looks like a limp of clay :o

We had colts foot rock in Rochdale when I was a kid along with Kaylie, those really hard licquorice sticks (as opposed to Spanishes) and Black peas (carling peas) and Parkin on Bommie night. When I came to newcastle in 1976 I remember queuing up for a Ham salad at our college refectory thinking why the fuck are they serving bits of caramel with the ham? It was of course pease pudding. Are saveloy dips common outside Tyne and wear? I found that quite a strange dish for the NE.

firky
19-08-2005, 22:53
stotties - only in the toon, cant be arsed to explain cos rockets prolly already posted it :)

BennehBoi
19-08-2005, 23:39
The obvious - Yorkshire pudding. (although it's universally eaten)

Non brewed condiment - used to be a Sheffield thing IIRC.