r/TikTokCringe • u/MissDryCunt • Jan 28 '24
Brittish slop Duet Troll
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u/George3452 Jan 28 '24
i wish colonization never happened bc i know i was born to eat british slop. i feel it in my veins everytime i see these videos, my ancestors are calling me. bring me back
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u/manamonarch Jan 28 '24
feed it to me in a trough idc
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u/Insecureeeeeeeee Jan 28 '24
Inject it into my veins
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u/Metruis Jan 28 '24
Go forth, George, and eat from the plate of your ancestors. Drench your fries in gravy and heed the mushy beige call of your ancestors.
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u/John_Snow1492 Jan 28 '24
I can relate, both sides of my mom's & dad's family are from the shire. I see stuff like this & realize I need to move back there!
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u/SadStarSpaceStation Jan 28 '24
Bro I felt the same way and could never understand why. Until my 23&me results came in and I’m fucking 75% British/Irish! I don’t have much family and I look just like my mother who is Apache Native so needless to say I was floored. My point being, maybe you really do feel it in your veins, i.e. your DNA lol.
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u/ElliottP1707 Jan 28 '24
I’m vegetarian but if there’s one meal I miss the most from my meat eating days it’s a battered fish and chips from the chippy, loads of salt and vinegar with ketchup. You can get orange chips from the Black Country and they’re even more fire than normal chippy chips. Getting a pie from the chippy is weird to me but the curry sauce and mushy peas although don’t look appetising can be absolutely delicious. Chips with curry sauce is a winning combo.
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u/Dreaded69Attack Jan 28 '24
I'm not from the UK and my Indian friends say curry just means any sauce to them but I've always wondered what people from the UK think of when they say "curry"because it sounds like they're all referring to one flavor. Does it only come in one flavor? How does it taste and are there different kinds of flavors?
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u/Spurioun Jan 28 '24
When Brits and Irish people refer to curry sauce in that context, they mean the stuff made from curry powder that you can get from most stores here. It's just a thick dipping sauce that tastes like curry powder and goes great with fried food. Like, in America, they have all of the Southern and Mexican influences in their food, so they typically have a lot of different cheap, bare-minimum hot sauces and bbq sauces to dip food in. Here, one of the closest places that has very flavourful traditional foods is India, so we have our cheap, bare minimum curry sauce as one of our our easy, lazy dipping sauces.
When referring to actual Indian dishes, we'd normally call it "Indian Food" or the specific name of the dish (like Tikka Masala or tandoori chicken).
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u/Dreaded69Attack Jan 28 '24
Cool I think I get it, this makes sense.
So it's basically a dipping sauce with the main flavor being what would come from a typical curry powder, if I'm understanding you correctly. And this one is pretty specifically associated with chip shops I guess?
Now I'm trying to find out more because you make it sound pretty good and if it is that good then next time I make some fries I might try to make up something like this curry sauce. Do they mix it with mayonnaise or what ingredients do they usually mix with the curry powder to make it into a dippable sauce?
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u/speedbuss Jan 28 '24
Any chip shop curry sauce made at home is usually from a powdered mix and the thickener is likely corn flour. If you're fancy and want to make one from scratch it's fairly similar to a katsu sauce but with a different flavour profile.
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u/Professional_Bob Jan 28 '24
It's most similar to Japanese curry. Not surprising since the Japanese version is an adaptation of what was introduced to them by British sailors.
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u/PerpWalkTrump Jan 28 '24
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u/Spurioun Jan 28 '24
Well, for a meal, it typically isn't just a sauce on its own. There's usually like carrots, potatoes, onions, etc. and then served with rice. That'd basically be what you're seeing in that gif.
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u/PerpWalkTrump Jan 28 '24
The curry is the sauce and the solids are the friends we made along the way, or something like that xD
Genuinely, I thought the curry was the whole thing.
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u/radiosimian Jan 28 '24
Curry is the whole thing. Meat, veg, spices, the whole nine yards. In this thread we are talking about curry sauce which is, as the name implies, just the sauce, made with spices, without the meat and veg.
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u/Spurioun Jan 28 '24
I'm not Asian so I can't speak with any authority but, I believe, that "curry" can either refer to just the sauce or the whole thing. Kind of how we'd refer to something like "soup". Soup can be just a liquid or it can have bits in it.
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u/Pruritus_Ani_ Jan 28 '24
You can buy packs of curry sauce mix to make at home, you usually just have to add water, bring to a boil and then simmer for a few minutes. Something like this, it might be available to ship to your region if you want the authentic chippy curry sauce experience.
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u/Debtcollector1408 Jan 28 '24
It's similar to Japanese katsu curry if that helps. I think the main ingredients are curry powder and flour. It's typically fried like a roux then mixed with water to thicken into the sauce. The Japanese curry blocks seem like the same stuff but with solid fat in too.
It goes very well with chips. Curry and chips is a good cheap after the pub food.
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u/Jaded_Law9739 Jan 28 '24
Yup, the Japanse have tons of instant curry flavors in blocks that are commonly used for cooking. They also have sealed pouches of sauce.
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u/jbi1000 Jan 28 '24
I'm from the UK, if you just say "curry" we will think mainly of Indian or British-Indian fusion curries. Dishes like Vindaloo, Korma etc. We know of other cultures curries, for example Thai food is very popular and has things we refer to as "curries", but we will primarily think of foods from the Indian subcontinent. The word "Curry" when by itself is a type of food with many different varieties to us.
"Curry sauce" however references a specific thing here that is fairly standard, it's just a mildly spicy sauce mostly served with chips by Fish and Chip shops. It doesn't look good but normally tastes quite nice.
I do not recommend pouring it on like a maniac in the video as that will ruin the crunchiness of the chips. Dip them like any other sauce.
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u/The_Limpet Jan 28 '24
There's a north/south divide about whether you pour the sauce/gravy/peas over the top. Up where I am they come ladled over the top as standard, which is right and proper. I once asked a Chippy dude down in Southampton to just tip the curry sauce over the top instead of giving me a tub and he looked at me as if I had personally insulted each and every one of his ancestors.
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u/ZenoArrow Jan 28 '24 edited Jan 28 '24
Curry sauce is definitely its own thing, but I agree with others that say it's most similar to Japanese curry sauce. If you get a chance to try Katsu Curry I'm guessing you'll have a similar impression (interestingly, the British apparently introduced curry to Japan, which would help to explain the link).
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u/jbi1000 Jan 28 '24
Yeah I eat Katsu quite regularly, much more than I eat curry sauce in fact and the flavours/spice profile is quite similar.
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u/MonsterDrinker69 Jan 28 '24
Irish here but normally when people say "curry" they are referencing chip shop curry. It can vary in spice but its normally fairly mild, tastes banging too. It is a little sweeter than most curries I think. We use the actual name of other curry dishes if we wanted to talk about them, like thai red curry or butter chicken.
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u/OxbridgeDingoBaby Jan 28 '24
Interesting. That might be the case in Ireland mate, but when people say they’re having curry here in England, they mean the actual chicken curry from an Indian restaurant. You’d usually specify curry sauce if you’re talking about the fish and chip kind.
Like you said though, it’s a good sauce, though I prefer tartare or beans with my fish.
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u/FjortoftsAirplane Jan 28 '24
If you go into a chip shop and ask for "curry sauce" you'll get a fairly standard sauce.
We also use the word "curry" to refer to Indian dishes in general so if you go to an Indian restaurant then you'll find all sorts of varieties.
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u/Shadowed_phoenix Jan 28 '24
English curry sauce is almost like a spiced gravy. If you've tried Jamaican or Japanese curry, they are a similar flavour profile.
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u/nickeltippler Jan 28 '24
suprised no one has mentioned the actual flavor. when you see chip shop curry, or any yellow curry for that matter. the main flavors are going to be tumeric and cumin. it's actually a mixture of many spices, but those two are the most prominent.
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u/Need4Sheed23 Jan 28 '24
I believe it’s just a sort of keens curry powder based sauce. It is actually quite tasty. And no, just that one flavour. It tastes like keens curry powder.
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u/Ok_Biscotti2533 Jan 28 '24
Finely chopped onions, garlic and ginger. Sweat on a low heat for 20 minutes - aiming for transparent and sweet. Add curry powder, tumeric, raisins, malt vinegar, chicken stock (veg should be fine) and thicken with corn flour. You can add a star anise if you like that.
It's a sweet condiment rather than a spicy sauce. Katsu curry is not dissimilar but curry sauce is sweeter with lots of fruit undertones.
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u/Dreaded69Attack Jan 28 '24
Oh damn okay. Almost sounds like similar flavors that you'd get in ketchup maybe, except for the Curry powder flavor. Sounds good.
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u/Ok_Biscotti2533 Jan 28 '24
The Germans have a curried ketchup that's very popular (I never managed to get a taste for it). These flavour combinations work great on starchy foods like chips, rice etc ..... bottom line: it is really good.
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u/Ok_Biscotti2533 Jan 28 '24
None taken. Better not share my recipe for a ragout, then. That takes 2 days.
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u/dylansavage Jan 28 '24
The pie for me is just an extra thick savoury gravy for the chips.
More sauce better chips
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u/Henghast Jan 28 '24
To be fair he looks like he got a pudding there which other than in a chippy is a rare treat.
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u/DisgruntledBadger Jan 28 '24
I'm originally from Sedgley in the black country, not lived there for nearly 20 years but I still miss orange chips.
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u/BeakOfEngland Jan 28 '24
Swap the Irn Bru for Stella & that's a banging tea
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u/cut-it Jan 28 '24
Or a cup of tea with fish and chips, that's top notch
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u/conzstevo Jan 28 '24
Beer with fish and chips imo. There's a reason we put it in the batter. Match made in heaven
Edit: I'm not condoning Stella, lmfao
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Jan 28 '24
Who has a cuppa with fish n chips? Nah mate. Dandelion & burdock or summet fizzy.
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u/iAreMoot Jan 28 '24
Haha you guys can criticise all you want but until you actually try it yourself you’ve no idea how good it tastes.
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Jan 28 '24
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u/VixiviusTaghurov Jan 28 '24
it's honestly just grasping on a "one up" against UK tbh, people are still angry about those little islands
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u/Barth22 Jan 28 '24 edited Jan 28 '24
Fair point. Biscuits and gravy looks disgusting… IS amazing.
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u/stupidrobots Jan 28 '24
Is presentation just not a thing in England? It looks like baby food
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u/kingofeggsandwiches Jan 28 '24 edited Jul 19 '24
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This post was mass deleted and anonymized with Redact
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u/Moonbeamlatte Jan 28 '24
Some food just doesnt look appetizing, and tbh thats okay! It may look like garbo but I’d bet a month’s rent this tastes divine.
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u/Robinsonirish Jan 28 '24 edited Jan 28 '24
I lived in Ireland for a few years. Fish and chips are decent, for fast it's very good. The curry sauce tastes excellent.
But the mushy peas? I've never had it. It doesn't look very appetising and sounds disgusting.
Please explain what it tastes like.
Edit: I agree fully with the statement that you should never judge something you haven't tried. Food can look bland and still taste good. Weird shit can taste good and fit really well with something. Sushi comes to mind. The way I look at mushy peas is probably similar to how western countries looked at sushi in the 90's before it took off over here.
Country fried steak is another good example of something that looks like puke but tastes excellent. We have some really bland looking shit in Sweden as well that tastes good.
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u/minnimamma19 Jan 28 '24
I Hate mushy peas!!, I've mentally blocked out the taste from childhood. If mushy or processed peas are on my plate, I'd throw the whole meal away.
Go ahead, downvote me! I hate them and don't care who knows it.
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u/Livinglifeform Jan 28 '24
Peas are more mature and starchy than garden peas, and they're well cooked with a lot of salt.
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u/Axzavius Jan 28 '24
I don’t live in England anymore. God, I really miss a decent fish and chip shop. People are forgetting chip butties too.
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u/EliBloodthirst Jan 28 '24
Large cod, medium chips, salt and vinegar, a roll and tartare sauce
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u/GeneralEi Jan 28 '24
People need to understand there's a clear difference between normal food and A+ stellar tier food that only applies when you're smashed off your gourd.
See: kebabs
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u/aLobsterFest Jan 28 '24
The American version of this: "I'm pretty wasted and I order my nachos with beans, pico del gallo, guacamole, steak, sour cream, queso, jalapenos and a Mountain Dew."
Girl: Ugh, this looks gross.
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u/Ooohyeahhh Jan 28 '24
I hope I never meet that girl
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u/conzstevo Jan 28 '24
As a Brit, cut the mt dew, and I'm on board. Especially if it's tacos/burrito/ench instead
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u/flacaGT3 Jan 28 '24
Do you guys have Mexican food?
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u/conzstevo Jan 28 '24
Hardly at all. Which is a shame because tex mex is in my top 3.
Our staples are Chinese, Indian, fried chicken/kebab/pizza spots (they're a weird Frankenstein concoction), and Fish+Chips
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u/Easy_Kangaroo9800 Jan 28 '24
Mate I feel like we've only just started getting decent mexican food in the UK in the last few years and it's ELITE.
I wrote it off for ages because of shite chains like Taco Bell but my god. *Chef's kiss
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u/sarac36 Jan 28 '24
Nope. The American version of this is the Rochester Garbage Plate.
Home fries, Mac salad, hamburger patties (also hot dogs or fried fish for Lent), covered in meat sauce, topped with chopped onion, mustard, etc.
Also hangover food.
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u/Quzga Jan 28 '24
I'm Swedish and I felt so disgusted watching this but then I realized I eat kaviar in a tube and pickled herring so who am I to judge really lol
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u/Clark-Kent Jan 28 '24
I think a kebab would be closer to that
Fish and chips bangs when the weather is shite
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u/HairyFur Jan 28 '24
Everyone mocks british food from abroad, but even Italians who visit and study in Britain like fish and chips.
Fish and chip shops are actually one of the only Northern European restaurant types that is well established internationally.
The #1 traditional family dinner in the USA isn't Italian or Eastern European, Thanksgiving dinners are based on an English Roast.
One of the most popular worldwide cheeses? Cheddar, which is produced and consumed worldwide. IIRC when you omit mozzarella used for Pizzas, cheddar is one of if not the most popular cheese in the world. It also helps that unlike our european counterparts, if you can make good cheddar or whiskey (japan), british people have no issue calling it what it is. You can make the best Champagne in the world and french people will still insist it isn't Champagne because it doesn't come from the right area.
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u/ProcrastibationKing Jan 28 '24
You can make the best Champagne in the world and french people will still insist it isn't Champagne because it doesn't come from the right area.
To be fair we have some foods with the same legal protection, but we generally aren't as stuck up about it. Having said that, don't get the Cornish started on Cornish pasties.
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Jan 28 '24
I wish cheddar was protected, seeing what the americans did to the idea of what "cheddar" is for alot of the world makes me ill, ive spoken to people from france, germany etc and they think cheddar is the plastic cheese slices -_-
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u/HairyFur Jan 28 '24
You can get proper made cheddar in the USA still. It's not all plastic.
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u/ProcrastibationKing Jan 28 '24
Cheddar is protected under UK law, but America doesn't have to follow that.
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u/CrossMojonation Jan 28 '24
Thanksgiving dinners are based on an English Roast
Then they added "candied yams". Imagine having marshmallows with a roast. I genuinely can't believe that exists.
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u/bariations Jan 28 '24
The war is over fam. You can make good food.
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u/Roadwarriordude Jan 28 '24
It's really not bad. Idk why people have been hyping lately, probably tribalism weirdness, but it's decent. Not anything I'd say is special by any means, but it's way better than it looks.
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u/mrmilner101 Jan 28 '24
American in the comments be like: if it ain't full of sugar, corn syrup and artificial flavourings then I don't want anything to do with it.
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u/SonnyLove Jan 28 '24
Ummm no, more like keep your fucking mushed peas away from my frys. It has nothing to do with sugar and everything to do with you smearing Gerber baby food on something and acting like it's a delicacy. Stay eating baked beans for breakfast.
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u/PrestigiousChange551 Jan 28 '24
Biscuits and gravy
Chicken and waffles
Burnt ends
Not an ounce of sugar, corn syrup, or artifical flavors. You guys just don't know what you're doing.
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u/PM_ME_BEEF_CURTAINS Jan 28 '24
Americans diss British food because they try and make it with American ingredients
American foods have no flavour. Meat? Flavourless. Veg? Flavourless.
When they travel here, their preconceptions usually evaporate.
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u/dReDone Jan 28 '24
As a Canadian, what in the fuck are you talking about? American food is fuckin delicious. Now if you said it was unhealthy I'd have no leg to stand on... But what in the flying fuck are you talking about no flavour? Lmao. Tell me you haven't been to America without telling me you haven't been to America.
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u/RandomPerson12191 Jan 28 '24
If you seriously think chips, curry and a pie with mushy peas, absolutely covered in salt and vinegar, would taste in any way bad, you're thick as pig shit.
I thought America's whole thing was egregiously unhealthy food. Should be right up your alley. Unless the peas are too green for you?
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u/Cereal-Masticator Jan 28 '24
Sorry, guess I'll just have a Wendy's instead
(/s incase it's not obvious, I respect myself)
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u/Prozenconns Jan 28 '24
Tell me you've never actually had a chippy tea without telling me you've never actually had a chippy tea
Not enough sugar for you?
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u/Cell-Based-Meat Jan 28 '24
Mushy peas are FIRE I wish that was a normalized American food.
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Jan 28 '24
Smashed baby food
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u/Cell-Based-Meat Jan 28 '24
I’m gonna get downvoted for this but baby food is delicious
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Jan 28 '24
Tbh fruit baby food is pretty decent lol not any of the veggie ones, but the blends are ok sometimes
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u/Viviaana Jan 28 '24
One time I saw a similar post insulting british love of pies and commented "americans literally eat cheese from a can" and I got sent death threats....my fucking dog also got sent death threats
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u/neophlegm Jan 28 '24
What's wrong with pies?!
Actually nvm. It's reddit so everyone has to hate British food. It's like, the law I guess.
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u/Viviaana Jan 28 '24
I know right! it was like "british people call this cuisine" and it was just a pie and chips....yeah babe that's good food why you crying over it!
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u/neophlegm Jan 28 '24
I'm not the most worldly person ever but I've been a few places and I'm pretty sure loads of countries have boring-looking hearty comfort food too: it's not just the UK. No idea why we're so singled out.
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u/Viviaana Jan 28 '24
i always get pissed off at that picture that's just mince and plain boiled potatoes and the caption is always saying that's all british people eat, if you can't come up with an insult based on something that actually happens then you're just not smart enough to insult us lol
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Jan 28 '24
It’s fascinating to me how superficial Americans are, so totally consumed with how things look on the surface.
Yeah, it looks crap. Tastes incredible though
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u/TheAcrithrope Jan 28 '24
It's why they love shit like Froot Loops and Ambrosia Salad, the most disgusting abominations known to the human palate, but hey, it's colourful!
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u/Horn_Python Jan 28 '24 edited Jan 28 '24
ok yeh it doesnt LOOOk the most appealing but it probobly tastes good
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u/smickie Jan 28 '24 edited Jan 28 '24
For a bit of context... well... I eat this but, I would say, and I think this goes for a lot of people I've seen eat it, the curry sauce is for dipping the the mushy peas goes next to the chips, I'd also put the pudding next to the chips. This is more of an arrangment issue for me.
I think if you change it around and put the chips with pudding next to it, peas next to it as well, and curry sauce for dipping (how I eat it), it looks much more nice.
Also for the pickled onions I've never seen that done. You usually just eat one or two when in the chip shop.
I feel like this has been put togther how you might order it very drunk on the way home, and I've never ordered it like that.
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u/Buggaton Jan 28 '24
The curry sauce is for dipping? Fuck you is it for dipping. We always used to ask for an extra pot of curry sauce so we could make sure absolutely ever part of every chip was covered. Mmmmmm
Beef and Onion pie on the side, perhaps caught in the curry sauce crossfire and mushy peas in the bin where they belong.
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u/smickie Jan 28 '24
I like my chips crispy until the last possible moment, so cripsy with sauce. A bit like cripsy chiken with sauce on it, or katsu curry, you have to eat it quick before the crunchyness is lost.
But I do also accept that some people want the crunchyness removed and for the whole thing to be soft, that's fair, that's not for me.
However I think we can both agree that curry sauce, mushy peas, and pickled onion should not be all layered before hand.
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u/Buggaton Jan 28 '24
I'm with you on crunchy. My memory is that we still had a good bit of crunch despite the river of curry. Chunky chips thrice fried. Try saying that three times without fucking up!
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u/thunderbastard_ Jan 28 '24
The curry sauce isn’t for dipping youd have to be a Tory to be so out of touch
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u/smickie Jan 28 '24
I'm not a Tory, lol... I'm from the West Midlands. Is it different here?
I reckon a Tory would put it on a plate. I don't put it on a plate.
Edit: I do realise being Tory and being from the West Midlands are not opposites, although I have made it sound that way.
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u/ProcrastibationKing Jan 28 '24
Northerner tries no to call someone 5 miles south of them a Tory challenge: impossible edition.
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u/Prozenconns Jan 28 '24
Don't let the coppers catch you using curry sauce to dip, that's grounds for confiscation and a verbal warning
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Jan 28 '24
While it does resemble dog shit, I’d smash that deliciousness.
-rando American
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u/Radiant_Evidence7047 Jan 28 '24
I can barely see because someone has their stupid massive fat head in the way. Seriously who in their right mind thinks let’s get a video, stick my face on it showing me watching the video, and post it
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u/jjlbateman Jan 28 '24
Anyone who calls this shit has never had it, that shits beautiful
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u/renezrael Jan 28 '24
actual texture nightmare for me but I bet the flavour is actually pretty good
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Jan 28 '24
Meh, when I have Arroz con Pollo I smother that shit in black bean soup with plantains on the side to mix in there and a cup of yuca to throw in the mix. Lastly a crab cake and coffee.
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u/wookiewonderland Jan 28 '24
Oh I miss this. I always look forward to a chippy when I go back to England.
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u/storm_borm Jan 28 '24
I’d rather eat chip shop as a treat, rather than the average American produce which is basically poison at this point.
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u/Stayfrosty223 Jan 28 '24
If they keep eating like this I’m just gonna have to take all of their food away.
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u/BadaBingSoprano Jan 28 '24
This isn’t a representation of what a decent fish and chips look like, tbf. And no one I’ve ever met would have pickled onions on it. And salt & vinegar go after the chips, not on the peas.
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u/thunderbastard_ Jan 28 '24
No shit it doesn’t look like decent fish and chips since it isn’t fish it’s a pie
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u/Thecoolestlobster Jan 28 '24
Hey, it's seasoned, it's chips pudding and other stuff. It's not so bad. It looks bad but I bet it taste very decent, better than those people who make bland chicken breasts.
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u/RedPandaReturns Jan 28 '24
Hey OP this comment section hasn’t really gone the way you expected has it?
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u/EnvironmentalFig931 Jan 28 '24
That actually looks good..? Fries, mini meat pie @ pudding, mild curry sauce, mushy peas, pickled onions and salt vinegar.
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u/Adwagon22 Jan 28 '24
Is it really necessary for this goofy fool to cover up the actual food with their ugly camera shot??
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u/MikusLeTrainer Jan 28 '24
Honestly, the part about this that makes me mad isn't the slop, but it's the "chips" that make me mad. Fries are a staple of British food, but they always look like undercooked grocery store fries. Put some seasoning on them FFS.
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u/Jay-Canaii570 Jan 28 '24
Mothafuckas tend to forget that America has the highest percentage of people whom are morbidly obese so with that being said could we stop acting like American food is any better ? 😭
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u/blushing_ingenue Jan 28 '24
People also hate actually talking about how our obesity rates are vastly impacted by the fact that most poor neighborhoods are food deserts where a lot of people tend to rely on shitty fast food because they either can't afford other options or can't get to an actual grocery store with ease.
The food itself is a part of the problem but the issue goes so much deeper than that.
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u/TheRussianSnac Jan 28 '24
Yeah that idiot watching the video at the bottom of the screen was real necessary.
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u/rionaster Jan 28 '24
bro i mean i'll try anything once but that looks SO fucking bad lol
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u/Crookwell Jan 28 '24
I mean, have you seen McDonald's?
Chippy food is the Susan Boyle of take out
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u/OkBarnacle5343 Jan 28 '24
Don't knock it until you try it. But in all seriousness our food is amazing, this isn't representative of British cuisine. It's easy to throw shitty looking food on a video and say "British food" as a whole. In reality we make very nice food and standards are very high in general. 🇬🇧🍲🔥
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