What are you eating and drinking tonight?
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- Worthy4England
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
^^malcd1 wrote:Fish and gravy? No not ever. Not for me anyway.Abdoulaye's Twin wrote:Take the fish away and it's perfectly fine.Bruce Rioja wrote:The only question that you need consider today is 'Is this acceptable'?
As AT said, take the fish away and you have a perfectly good dinner.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Fish with chippy curry...... The best
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Always been a big fan of chips, mushy peas and curry sauce myself.
Can't be doing with the fried fish. Just never taken to it. Will still eat it of course.
Can't be doing with the fried fish. Just never taken to it. Will still eat it of course.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
I rarely get fish unless I really like the look of place.KeyserSoze wrote:Always been a big fan of chips, mushy peas and curry sauce myself.
Can't be doing with the fried fish. Just never taken to it. Will still eat it of course.
Call me Nigel, but I've never had a decent fish from a foreign owned chippy.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Depends what you mean by foreign-owned. I haven't from anything that isn't purely a chippy (ie. not a kebab shop first etc.) other than from the odd Chinese chippy. But there's a couple of chippies in Chorley owend by a dodgy Turkish guy which are pretty good.
When I lived back home I hardly ever had fish, much rather have pudding and chips. Since moving down here I've had to get to like it. It's belting if it's good but fecking awful if it's not.
When I lived back home I hardly ever had fish, much rather have pudding and chips. Since moving down here I've had to get to like it. It's belting if it's good but fecking awful if it's not.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
There's Steve Supper bar in Walkden, that's owned by a Cypriot. It's a fantastic chippy... Except for the fish. The fish is shit.Prufrock wrote:Depends what you mean by foreign-owned. I haven't from anything that isn't purely a chippy (ie. not a kebab shop first etc.) other than from the odd Chinese chippy. But there's a couple of chippies in Chorley owend by a dodgy Turkish guy which are pretty good.
When I lived back home I hardly ever had fish, much rather have pudding and chips. Since moving down here I've had to get to like it. It's belting if it's good but fecking awful if it's not.
Don't get me started on Chinese chippies.
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- Abdoulaye's Twin
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
I so wish you'd done itboltonboris wrote: I rarely get fish unless I really like the look of plaice.

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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Abdoulaye's Twin wrote:I so wish you'd done itboltonboris wrote: I rarely get fish unless I really like the look of plaice.

Me too, now!!
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
In my favourite Dutch hotel, so tuna steak on the hot rock. This Swinkels ' beer is well worth a run out too, cats!
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- Worthy4England
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
How does that work if it's cod?boltonboris wrote:I rarely get fish unless I really like the look of place.KeyserSoze wrote:Always been a big fan of chips, mushy peas and curry sauce myself.
Can't be doing with the fried fish. Just never taken to it. Will still eat it of course.
- Harry Genshaw
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Spent last weekend in Kirkby Lonsdale in a gourmet pub. The food was phenomenal and even the full English in the morning was the finest I've eaten. My bug bear though is steak. After the fancy menu on Friday I went for something a bit more straightforward on the Saturday and opted for a sirloin. It was good but not half as good as their other stuff. I've eaten juicy tender steaks all over the world so why can't I get one here?
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
You can. Get to a good butchers and buy one then cook it yourself. There are lots of good places for steak too. Only been once but Hawksmoor in Manchester is good for a chain, pricey though.Harry Genshaw wrote:Spent last weekend in Kirkby Lonsdale in a gourmet pub. The food was phenomenal and even the full English in the morning was the finest I've eaten. My bug bear though is steak. After the fancy menu on Friday I went for something a bit more straightforward on the Saturday and opted for a sirloin. It was good but not half as good as their other stuff. I've eaten juicy tender steaks all over the world so why can't I get one here?
Also with steak I find it is good to know what cuts you like best and how you like them cooked. Fillet for example has little fat so little flavour but is incredibly tender. But essentially I think best served blue-very rare. Rib eye has more fat and more flavour, but I prefer a bit more fat rendered down, so go medium-rare...
Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Never understood the obsession with fillet steak. You want me to pay twice the price for half the taste?
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- Abdoulaye's Twin
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Here in Dubai you can get rump heart. It's not a heart, it's just very similar to fillet without the price tag. Cooked and seasoned properly it's very nice. Still prefer prime rib mind.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Ladies cut though isn't it. No fat, innit!Prufrock wrote:Never understood the obsession with fillet steak. You want me to pay twice the price for half the taste?
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
You can get halfdecent steaks here but they're not in the same league as stuff I'vehad in Europe or the Americas. Even Gaucho in Manchester couldn't get closeBWFC_Insane wrote:You can. Get to a good butchers and buy one then cook it yourself. There are lots of good places for steak too. Only been once but Hawksmoor in Manchester is good for a chain, pricey though.Harry Genshaw wrote:Spent last weekend in Kirkby Lonsdale in a gourmet pub. The food was phenomenal and even the full English in the morning was the finest I've eaten. My bug bear though is steak. After the fancy menu on Friday I went for something a bit more straightforward on the Saturday and opted for a sirloin. It was good but not half as good as their other stuff. I've eaten juicy tender steaks all over the world so why can't I get one here?
Also with steak I find it is good to know what cuts you like best and how you like them cooked. Fillet for example has little fat so little flavour but is incredibly tender. But essentially I think best served blue-very rare. Rib eye has more fat and more flavour, but I prefer a bit more fat rendered down, so go medium-rare...
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Gaucho isn't very good I'll agree there.Harry Genshaw wrote:You can get halfdecent steaks here but they're not in the same league as stuff I'vehad in Europe or the Americas. Even Gaucho in Manchester couldn't get closeBWFC_Insane wrote:You can. Get to a good butchers and buy one then cook it yourself. There are lots of good places for steak too. Only been once but Hawksmoor in Manchester is good for a chain, pricey though.Harry Genshaw wrote:Spent last weekend in Kirkby Lonsdale in a gourmet pub. The food was phenomenal and even the full English in the morning was the finest I've eaten. My bug bear though is steak. After the fancy menu on Friday I went for something a bit more straightforward on the Saturday and opted for a sirloin. It was good but not half as good as their other stuff. I've eaten juicy tender steaks all over the world so why can't I get one here?
Also with steak I find it is good to know what cuts you like best and how you like them cooked. Fillet for example has little fat so little flavour but is incredibly tender. But essentially I think best served blue-very rare. Rib eye has more fat and more flavour, but I prefer a bit more fat rendered down, so go medium-rare...
Still I've had some cracking ones here. Had a porterhouse one a while back that I still salivate over. That was in a gastro pub too IIRC.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Nothing to touch a good T-Bone for me, although a mate who was a butcher with his own shop and surrounded by prime meat swore rump was the steak of choice for him every time?
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Rump has most flavour generally. But tends to be tougher than say a rib-eye.TANGODANCER wrote:Nothing to touch a good T-Bone for me, although a mate who was a butcher with his own shop and surrounded by prime meat swore rump was the steak of choice for him every time?
T-bone is sirloin and fillet! Same basically as a porterhouse! Think the bone gives extra flavour.
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Re: What are you eating and drinking tonight?
Cooking on the bone retains natural moisture.
I disagree on the Rump/Ribeye point though. A good butcher will age his meats (the last time I was in a restaurant my butcher's meat used to lose 20% of weight through salt-chamber ageing). After that, we'd water bath the ribeye to soften the fat, before flash frying in butter. I can't think of better steak. He's quite local to most guys on here I'm guessing.
I disagree on the Rump/Ribeye point though. A good butcher will age his meats (the last time I was in a restaurant my butcher's meat used to lose 20% of weight through salt-chamber ageing). After that, we'd water bath the ribeye to soften the fat, before flash frying in butter. I can't think of better steak. He's quite local to most guys on here I'm guessing.
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