So what exactly is "Pie and Chips"?
#5
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,175
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Most fish and chip shops serve a range of pies as well as fish - steak and kidney, meat and potato, cheese and onion, etc. In the north they also sell steak puddings - steamed "pies" with suet crust pastry - best served with mushy peas and gravy.
Staple "pub grub" also includes steak and kidney pie and chips - as well as a few more exotic offerings.
Staple "pub grub" also includes steak and kidney pie and chips - as well as a few more exotic offerings.
#7
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,175
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I can't say I've ever seen mutton or macaroni cheese pies - must be a regional thing. "Up north" we like our Holland's pies:
http://www.hollandspies.co.uk/
http://www.hollandspies.co.uk/
#10
Join Date: Nov 2004
Posts: 1,175
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
You can get pies with just a top crust - pub and restaurant pies are often served in a dish with a lid of pastry. Chip shop and bakery pies are usualy baked in a tin foil dish or plate with pastry top and bottom.
#11
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,657
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
bd, pies over here come in all shapes and sizes. You won't know which sort until they bring it to your table. They can be cooked in little casserole dishes with a puff pastry top, or can be entirely cased in short crust pastry (much preferable). Sometimes, a pub might make one enormous pie and give you a portion of it.
This site has pictures of various pies:
http://www.pbase.com/orac/great_british_food
NB the 'chips' are thick cut, not those pale imitations 'french fries' which to me are the thin sort you get in MacDonalds.
A traditional meal still found in some places in London is 'pie and mash' - a pastry cased meat pie served with mashed potato and 'liquer', which is a weird kind of runny parsley sauce. An acquired taste. You can get traditonal pie and mash in just a few old pie and mash shops around London, but they're a dieing breed. There's a stand in Borough Market that sells them.
This site has pictures of various pies:
http://www.pbase.com/orac/great_british_food
NB the 'chips' are thick cut, not those pale imitations 'french fries' which to me are the thin sort you get in MacDonalds.
A traditional meal still found in some places in London is 'pie and mash' - a pastry cased meat pie served with mashed potato and 'liquer', which is a weird kind of runny parsley sauce. An acquired taste. You can get traditonal pie and mash in just a few old pie and mash shops around London, but they're a dieing breed. There's a stand in Borough Market that sells them.
#13
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,657
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Of course not. That's the sort of daft anti-London propaganda spread about by Mancs and Scousers who've never ventured further south than Brum. My partner ALWAYS has mushy peas from our local chip shop (bluergh)
#15
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 20,919
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
>Is it still frowned on (or greeted with a blank look) to ask for mushy peas and gravy in a chip shop "down south"?<
You have to bear in mind differences in regional dialect. Legend has it that in parts of London, you ask for "some of that delicious-looking guacamole". But you still get mushy peas.
You have to bear in mind differences in regional dialect. Legend has it that in parts of London, you ask for "some of that delicious-looking guacamole". But you still get mushy peas.
#18
Join Date: May 2005
Posts: 146
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Kate,
Thanks for that link to the photos of British cooking. Wonderful stuff.
Although naturalized US citizens, my grandparents kept a house in the midlands and I spent a lot of time there as a child.
I always maintained that proper British cooking owed no apologies to any other nations cuisine.
When done right there is a sturdiness and honesty in it that reflects those same qualities in her people.
Thanks for that link to the photos of British cooking. Wonderful stuff.
Although naturalized US citizens, my grandparents kept a house in the midlands and I spent a lot of time there as a child.
I always maintained that proper British cooking owed no apologies to any other nations cuisine.
When done right there is a sturdiness and honesty in it that reflects those same qualities in her people.
#19
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 181
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
If the gecko is from OZ it will be talking about pie and peas. Which is a meat pie in a lake of watered down mushie peas - ummmmmmmmmmmm.
Im from Leeds living in London and trying to get chips and gravy is a nightmare and as for there being no haddock.......
Im from Leeds living in London and trying to get chips and gravy is a nightmare and as for there being no haddock.......
#20
Join Date: Jan 2003
Posts: 2,657
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Jim, my partner is from Lancashire and has influenced me to such an extent that I too now put gravy on my fish and chips. The answer is to take your fish and chips home and get the Bisto out. This must be a truly northern thing, because we certainly didn't put gravy on our chips in my home town of Birmingham.