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Manchester Q - Spag Bol?

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Manchester Q - Spag Bol?

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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 10:38 AM
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Manchester Q - Spag Bol?

Folks on Coronation Street are always talking about Spag Bol - Spaghetti Bolognese i guess - so where would i find good Spag Bol in Manchster, Manchester, England?
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 10:41 AM
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Hahaha interesting question. It definitely stands for spaghetti bolognese, but in my experience here in London it is almost always a comfort food made at home!
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:02 AM
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Preferable to Mac and Cheese any day.
Definitely a home made comfort food, which no-one from Bologna would ever recognise.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:08 AM
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Absolutely, it's a comfort food made at home, most likely with a jar of Dolmio sauce and Tesco steak mince!
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:18 AM
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The dish - practically unheard of in Emilia-Romagna (but so's spag & meatballs)- is still quite common in British "Italian" restaurants of a certain age.

But in restaurants it's just about always mean and acidy (and STILL sometimes served with that disgusting bought-in grated Kraft Parmesan that smells like vomit). At home - or at chums' homes - it rarely tastes very Italian, but it's almost always got that ebullient, affectionately-made, feel that really is the binding element of all proper Italian food.

In fact, when cooked by Britons of my generation, it's almost as impossible to find bad Spag Bol as it is to find bad pasta al forno in an Italian home.

By definition, of course, you can't find good Spag Bol in a restaurant. A modern big-city Italian might well serve dynamite tagiatelle al ragu - but, while infinitely more authentic, it wouldn't taste remotely like a decent Spag Bol.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:25 AM
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"most likely with a jar of Dolmio sauce and Tesco steak mince!"

Not in the flannerhome it bloody well isn't.

Brown decent mince (nothing wrong with Tesco's, of course), and a spot of chicken liver, add a battuta till it starts melting, burn off the alcohol in a good slurp of red plonk, add a pint of home-made fresh tomato sauce (and some veg stock) and let it simmer for an hour or so.

If poss, leave it overnight. Add to a pan of pasta the following day in a ratio at least three times saucier than any Bolognese restaurant would dream of.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:26 AM
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More importantly, what is a Coronation Street.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:31 AM
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Oh Roger! For Shame!! http://www.itv.com/soaps/coronationstreet/

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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:33 AM
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I agree with you flanner, every step of the way (though I've not added the chicken liver, I will bear it in mind for the future).

However, you only have to walk down the pasta/sauces aisle of any supermarket to see it lined with jars and jars of ready-made pasta sauces, Dolmio being a leading brand.

Given the time constraints of day-to-day life, a jar of good pasta sauce (good being the operative word here) can be most useful when there just isn't the time to make your own tomato sauce.

Of course you still use onions and garlic, and add a good splash of red wine to rinse out the jar!

Yes, nothing beats a good spag bol when made from scratch, but an adequate substitute can be made when required.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:34 AM
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For years my mother would chuckle over a sweetly inexperienced young waitress they met in Scotland (in the days when mince and tatties were more commonly available in lots of places), who would always refer to spaghetti bolomayonnaise.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:41 AM
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Well on The Street it was Tyrone, not the brightest knife in the Coronation Street drawer for sure, who was bragging about the spag bol he would make for Molly, his wife. I thought it may be a staple in local restaurants but guess not. It does sound hearty and good in a filling way.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:42 AM
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PalenQ - you have had Spag Bol havent you??
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:51 AM
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Spaghetti Bolognaise, outside of Italy, consists of a meat sauce served on a bed of spaghetti with a good sprinkling of grated Parmigiano cheese. Although Spaghetti alla Bolognese is very popular outside of Italy, it never existed in Bologna, where ragù is served always with the local egg pastas tagliatelle or lasagne.

jamikins - i have had lots of Spahetti Bolognaise out of a can - very common here.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 11:54 AM
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Phew...thought maybe it was a new concept I think its one of my favorite comfort foods...my hubby makes a mean spag bol!
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 12:01 PM
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It has to be made with good quality mince though.

I can't stand those chewy crunchy bits you get with cheap mince, and all the fat that runs off... eeeeewww!

I buy the best steak mince I can, and still run it through the food processor to grind it further so it doesn't cook in lumps.

And ALWAYS freshly grated parmesan.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 12:28 PM
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Spag Bol is perhaps the standard, basic, first thing a young man might be able to cook without poisoning everyone (for an older generation, it would have been shepherd's pie). It's a signifier that Tyrone isn't as sophisticated as he thinks he is.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 01:38 PM
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flanner - we use the chicken livers too; have you tried adding some chopped black olives to it? they don't so much make it olivy as enrich and deepen the flavours.
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 01:42 PM
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Interesting tips about olives and chicken livers!
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Old Aug 11th, 2010 | 01:56 PM
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Where do you find good Spag Bol in Manchester?

Sainsburys in Wilmslow buy a bottle of Brunello Di Montalcino and an "own label" basics Spag Bol. Instructions....

1. Open bottle
2. Drink all contents of bottle
3. Open packet of Spag Bol
4. Put in microwave for anywhere between 4 and 20 minutes doesn't matter
5. Put contents of packet on plate
6. Eat the best Spag Bol in Manchester

That's what why Fodor's exists - you will find Spag Bol on Corrie but not Brunello.

Inside information wins everytime.
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Old Aug 12th, 2010 | 02:16 AM
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(in the days when mince and tatties were more commonly available in lots of places),>>>

My mum still feeds me this.

*feels old*
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