janeainsworth, I absolutely agree, bread and potatoes were the staples of the British working man and woman's diet until at least the start of WW2.
In fact even in quite comfortable families meat was rationed and the purpose of the Yorkshire pudding, eaten before not with the meat course, was to curb people's appetite for meat.
I remember reading a 19th century novel, one by Charlotte Bronte I think, where the squire of a small villages admonished his son who wanted to skip the earlier courses to get to the meat ' No ball (Yorkshire pudding or suet pudding) without soup and no meat without ball.' In other words no one got meat until they had eaten their soup and their portion of 'ball' so that their appetite had been blunted and they wera already beginning to feel full.so that they would eat less meat.
On being called Darling and Love
Grandson of New Limerick (Son of New Limerick contd.)
Book Title by Their Authors (Parlour Game)
This weather is getting me down. Is it May or March?
Why do hospitals, most of whom have large catchment areas, make accessing them so difficult?




