Does Britain have a quitessential national vegetable?
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I think that it would have to be the pea. The delicate little green things that we eat today are mere upstarts. Peas were widely grown in medieval times and probably well before then and dried to provide a staple food for the winter. They were widely grown long before that other upstart, a grey mashy thing called the potato, made it to our shores.
John
John
The Gods do not subtract from the allotted span of men’s lives, the hours spent fishing Assyrian tablet
What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning Werner Heisenberg
I am a man and the world is my urinal
What we observe is not nature itself, but nature exposed to our method of questioning Werner Heisenberg
I am a man and the world is my urinal
- Primrose
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Not sure I know the answer to that one. If it had to be the mainstay vegetable it would be difficult to do without, it would probably be the potato. But if I hate to name one vegetable without which any major form of cooking would be made intolerable, I guess it would have to be the onion - in our house anyway.
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Ian in Cumbria
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I know they were grown in Belgium (hence Brussels), apparently introduced by the Romans, but I have never, ever, seen sprouts served anywhere other than Britain. I'm sure someone will know different......
Regards
Ian
Regards
Ian
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Ian in Cumbria wrote:I know they were grown in Belgium (hence Brussels), apparently introduced by the Romans, but I have never, ever, seen sprouts served anywhere other than Britain. I'm sure someone will know different......
Regards
Ian
Choux de Bruxelles à la moutarde à l'ancienne
http://www.linternaute.com/femmes/cuisi ... enne.shtml
alan refail wrote:Ian in Cumbria wrote:I know they were grown in Belgium (hence Brussels), apparently introduced by the Romans, but I have never, ever, seen sprouts served anywhere other than Britain. I'm sure someone will know different......
Regards
Ian
Choux de Bruxelles à la moutarde à l'ancienne
http://www.linternaute.com/femmes/cuisi ... enne.shtml
That recipe sounds quite nice - if I ever get tired of plain lightly-boiled sprouts, I might give it a go!
Cauliflower is nothing but cabbage with a college education.
Mark Twain
Mark Twain
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...and now from Italy...
Cavolini di bruxelles al gorgonzola
Another 39 sprout recipes here - including one with pork and nettles
http://www.cucinare.meglio.it/cavolini_ ... elles.html
Cavolini di bruxelles al gorgonzola
Another 39 sprout recipes here - including one with pork and nettles
http://www.cucinare.meglio.it/cavolini_ ... elles.html
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Ian in Cumbria
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I know there are lots of international recipes for sprouts but my point remains
Despite travels around Europe, South America, Indian sub-continent and a tiny bit of North America I have never seen sprouts offered either in a restaurant or someone's home. (That's the cue to start internet searches of restaurant menus in Rangoon, Paris, Rio ........). Keep the recipes coming though, I'm always on the lookout for something interesting to do with the things!
Regards
Ian
Regards
Ian
