Viewing 40 posts - 1 through 40 (of 43 total)
  • Local food for local people.
  • zippykona
    Full Member

    My family come from a small village in Surrey and there seems to be 2 meals which are found nowhere else.
    First off is mince on toast.
    Toast and minced meat with gravy on top of it , boiled potatoes and veg.
    Then spotty dog which everyone else calls spotted dick but we have it with butter and sugar on top rather than custard.
    We were out for dinner with friends last night and I requested that my spotty dog came Tandridge style. Our Hampshire friends remarked that their friend had it the same way and it transpires that she was from my village.
    We also call wood louse cheese bugs.
    Anyone else eat those meals?

    loddrik
    Free Member

    sbob
    Free Member

    Cheesey bugs?

    [video]https://youtu.be/TQpasvqJ3Ns[/video]

    andytherocketeer
    Full Member

    Mince on toast sounds bad, never heard of it, even in the brief period I resided in Surrey.
    Pilchards on toast is ace though.

    From Kent, and we also call cheesey bugs “cheesey bugs”.

    Being from Kent, the local delicacy there is Gypsy Tart. The only constituent of school dinners that was nice.

    sbob
    Free Member

    Bolognaise on toast is nice.

    njee20
    Free Member

    Mrs njee20 calls them cheesy bugs too, she is from a village in Surrey, but not one in Tandridge!

    scotroutes
    Full Member

    I’ve had mince on toast many times – East Central Scotland.

    theotherjonv
    Full Member

    not cheesey bugs, but cheeselogs (born and brought up in Reading)

    And not mince on toast but mince with crusty bread dipped in it to scoop it up.

    Kuco
    Full Member

    Mince on toast 😯 thats just doesn’t sound right.

    joshvegas
    Free Member

    Mince on toast is food of the gods. Fife reared but possibly lenzie or liverpudlian derived as my parents did the cooking obviously.

    See also bolognaise or chilli on toast.

    hols2
    Free Member

    Mince on toast sounds bad

    I knew some Australians who were quite fond of it. If you put enough cheese on top and grill it, it’s quite palatable.

    taxi25
    Free Member

    Curry on toast is a favourite in my house. Just a way of using up leftovers.

    surroundedbyhills
    Free Member

    Woodlouse are called “Slaters” and they would never eat mince on toast never mind spotted dick without custard. Central Scotland*

    *A place chock full of excellent food ideas, and bugs.

    hammerite
    Free Member

    Chocolate toothpaste https://www.bbcgoodfood.com/recipes/2087637/chocolate-toothpaste-

    Bedfordshire Clanger.

    gallowayboy
    Full Member

    Mince sandwiches. Yesterdays mince, white bread, bit of mustard. Grand.

    eddiebaby
    Free Member

    2 slices of thick untoasted bread and mince + gravy on top was a favourite apres school tea.

    Yum.

    wiggles
    Free Member

    Chips, cheese and curry sauce (from the chippy obviously)

    scaredypants
    Full Member

    mince on toast

    yeh, Teesside. Also a slice of bread & butter to mop up gravy after, well, anything really

    Spotted dick without custard though – criminal

    greentricky
    Free Member

    Wall fish

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    DP 8)

    vinnyeh
    Full Member

    New Zealander, mince on toast was a staple growing up. Preferably with worcester sauce on top.

    Had loads of stuff (home cooked, not necessarily commercial) that I’ve never seen in the UK.

    miketually
    Free Member

    Bread to mop up the gravy was standard in Darlington too, which is like Teesside but posher.

    We have Pease pudding in ham sandwiches. Pease pudding is made by boiling split peas until they form a mush; often with the water from boiling a ham added.

    Drac
    Full Member

    My gran use to serve mince on toast, she was from the NE coal towns.

    40mpg
    Full Member

    Dunno about the food but woodlice = cheesy bobs round ‘ere (southampton)

    garage-dweller
    Full Member

    Bolognaise on toast is nice.

    This is going to sound odd, but add a fried egg on top.

    Had this in South Africa. Basically a beef ragu on toast topped with a fried egg. Mrs g-d was not convinced when I ordered it. I thought it was very tasty.

    Unlike the roiboos latte she ordered. Yes that’s rooibos tea in place of the coffee with steamed milk. This should not be a thing.

    CountZero
    Full Member

    Woodlice = chuckypigs around my part of North Wilts.
    Dunno about mince on toast, but chili on toast sounds pretty damned good, with a nice strong cheese on top.
    Never thought of it before, going to have to give it a try now!

    wiggles
    Free Member

    Why have all you weirdos got so many names for woodlice? They already have a name…

    zippykona
    Full Member

    Yes , cheese bugs.

    ajantom
    Full Member

    Hmmm, mince on toast. Not had it, but I can see the attraction.

    My wife (north Devon lass) calls woodlice ‘chiggy pigs’. I just call them woodlice.

    oink1
    Free Member

    Chuckie pigs here in Bristol 😀

    slackalice
    Free Member

    For 2.5 million years, humans wandered and hunted and gathered. Only 10k years ago we started to stay put and grow food in quantities and turned wheat into the most successful plant ever.

    My point being, gluten and wheat intolerances…

    Makes you think about mince on toast in a whole new light. Have a lovely day 😀

    mikewsmith
    Free Member


    From South Australia the Pie Floater

    mattbee
    Full Member

    Used to have pie floaters in Oldfield’s cafe in Barnsley indoor market back in the ’80s.

    glasgowdan
    Free Member

    Woodlice are indeed slaters (Ayrshire as a kid).

    joshvegas – Member
    Mince on toast is food of the gods. Fife reared but possibly lenzie or liverpudlian derived as my parents did the cooking obviously.

    I’m in Lenzie now, and I’m sure I heard the helpers mention mince on toast whilst scrubbing the marble staircase.

    onehundredthidiot
    Full Member

    Fried mushroom sandwich.

    Oh slaters.

    allfankledup
    Full Member

    Chuckie pigs here in Bristol

    A chuckie is a term used for a stone (Ayrshire again) – i wonder if there is a link there….

    scud
    Free Member

    I married a Norfolk girl and live in rural North Norfolk, still have no idea what her dad talking about some of the time and i’m sure he does it to wind me up (always reminded i’m an interloper and that i married in to the Peoples Republic of Norfolk)

    Ladybird – bishy-barney-bee
    Woodlouse – sowpigs
    Dodmans – snails

    unovolo
    Free Member

    We also call wood louse cheese bugs

    Known as ‘Pill bugs’ in Trumpland.

    Milkie
    Free Member

    Toast-Peanut Butter-Mayonaise-Marmite-Toast

    Stoner Sandwich.. It was very nice. 😉

    Cosmic Yogurts on the other hand are **** disgusting! 😆

    prawny
    Full Member

    Wood lice in cannock although I do have vague memories of pig based names for them. But I don’t use them.

    No weird food locally for us either AFIAK – Staffs oatcakes aren’t weird, they’re the food of the gods.

    Used to be partial to a Ketchup sandwich as a kid, along with banana and brown sugar sandwich.

    Didn’t/don’t eat a lot of gravy

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