Shiavui
said
:
Sandwich is the formal term. Sarnie is informal and I've never actually heard it used in Britain.
Whereabouts in Britain have you been? I am from the S of England where sandwich and sarnie are used interchangeably.
Have you never been offered a Bacon Sarnie?
Edit
Jellied eels are slimy .......
Yorkshire Puddings are English - we have them with most roasts, not just beef.
One man's
Truth
is another man's
Lie
14-Jan-2017 19:33:51
- Last edited on
14-Jan-2017 19:36:00
by
Bernadette
I'm from the South East here, and I would say toad in the hole is a good English dish. And Shepherd's pie.
Also, I hear that tikka masala was first made in Glasgow (which actually may have links with mulligatawny soup), and we have a long history of tea trade with India and China.
Prepare for hell on RuneScape in
Naval Cataclysm!
Shepherd's Pie is nice so long as the shepherd is under 25. Made from one of those stringy old geezers that live in huts on remote hillsides, then it's a bit pony.
*thinks* I wonder if 'foreign' people think that toad in the hole is made from toads .....