Gransnet forums

Food

Typically English Food

(46 Posts)
GrandmaH Wed 08-Aug-12 16:20:55

The company my husband works for has asked everyone to bring in a dish next Monday that is typical of their country to celebrate the closing of the Olympics. There are a lot of different countries represented within the company so there will be curries, fajitas etc. so I would like to do something sweet.

I am a cake maker by preference & apart from Victoria Sandwich I am at a loss to know what to do. I come from Surrey so Bakewell Tart or Yorkshire Parkin are pushing it a bit although I enjoy baking both & I really would perfer to do something sweet. Any ideas anyone please?

Annika Wed 08-Aug-12 16:38:34

Queen of puddings
Bread and Butter pudding
Jam roly poly
Gooseberry fool
Rhubarb fool
Eton Mess
Summer pudding.

I love puddings...... can you tell !wink

kittylester Wed 08-Aug-12 16:43:26

Eton Mess for me Annika please. smile

What about a nice trifle or an alcoholic jelly?

granjura Wed 08-Aug-12 16:52:23

GranmaH - my OH is a Surrey boy (Weybridge), one of our daughter lives in Cobham and sil and bil in Guildford. What a lovely county which we visit often.

Scones, clotted cream and raspberry jam - although I realise Devon and Cornwall are almost as far as Yorkshire.

Traditional English food is wonderful, and sadly much maligned abroad.

Annobel Wed 08-Aug-12 16:58:48

Australia and New Zealand bicker about which is the originator of Pavlova, so if you fancy going 'foreign', you could make one of those. Yummy. Another one I can't resist, but have never made, is tiramisu.

Bags Wed 08-Aug-12 17:01:58

My American friends and relatives always ask me to make scones when we're together, and we eat them with whipped double cream and jam. Had a hard time getting real cream in the States once because the huge supermarket I was in was low-fat obsessed. Eventually I asked a very round person if there was any real cream, you know, full fat, full cholesterol, the works. He told me is wasn't good for me. I was probably half his weight and twice his age. I replied that it didn't seem to have done me any harm. His comment was "You're English, aren't you?" and he went to the store rooms and found me some smile.

Clearly being English means cream isn't bad for you wink

(Not that I've ever thought it was)

Ariadne Wed 08-Aug-12 17:11:53

Summer pudding! (once, and only once, referred to by DH as "that red glop.")

ninathenana Wed 08-Aug-12 17:17:15

I vote scones with jam n cream. for those with fat/cholesterol issues. What about good old rock cakes

Ella46 Wed 08-Aug-12 17:19:47

I say trifle with lots of sherry....they'll love it!

Annobel Wed 08-Aug-12 17:25:10

As I didn't read the OP properly, may I now suggest strawberry tarts or strawberry shortcake?

Butternut Wed 08-Aug-12 17:34:38

Apple Pie and clotted cream GrandmaH

Do you think your husband can manage to make that? wink

JessM Wed 08-Aug-12 17:43:01

If he wants to just buy something - a pork pie.
I agree though, puddings are supreme.
I could happily eat summer pudding every day.

jeni Wed 08-Aug-12 17:44:39

Simnel cake!

merlotgran Wed 08-Aug-12 17:44:41

Eve's Pudding if it can be served hot? smile

whenim64 Wed 08-Aug-12 17:57:03

A deep apple pie made with Bramleys, in butter pastry, and served warm with vanilla custard.

Butternut Wed 08-Aug-12 18:11:07

when - We're on the same page, as the American's would say. wink

As you can see, I'm going with a theme here......... smile

artygran Wed 08-Aug-12 18:32:20

If you enjoy baking Bakewell tart or Yorkshire parkin, why let the fact that you don't live in the county stop you? Yorkshire athletes have done so well in the Olympics this year that I think it would be most appropriate! Up here in Yorkshire, we are as proud as parkin of all of them!

whitewave Thu 09-Aug-12 10:52:22

Go Cornish

saffron cake
sweet pasty like apple and blackberry with loads of clotted cream

and for savoury

traditional pasty of course and hogs pudding

all delicious

GrandmaH Thu 09-Aug-12 20:02:40

Oh thank you all- I don't know where to start now. I had thought of scones but they are really better the day they are made & i am not keen enough to get up at 5am- just lazy obviously!
I may make a cake with the union flag on it in fruit- did one for Jubilee street party or apple pie & cream sounds good but then a trifle is brilliant too.
I may let DH decide & NO he will NOT be helping.
BTW I have a really good recipe for tiramisu that takes max 10 mins to make, Annobel. If you want recipe i will gladly share it.
(cupcake)

Grannylin Thu 09-Aug-12 20:06:41

Share it please,b*** MFP

Annobel Thu 09-Aug-12 20:17:25

I'm tempted, GrandmaH. You could put the recipe in the recipe section of
www.gransnet.com/food. Then I'd be even more tempted!

Sook Thu 09-Aug-12 21:17:27

If you bake a lot it is easy to assume a Victoria Sponge is a bit run of the mill. But it is really surprising how many people enjoy a homebaked VS. Failing that I would opt for a Trifle or Eton Mess.

eGJ Thu 09-Aug-12 21:19:46

Tiramsu recipe PERLEASE! flowers

Annobel Thu 09-Aug-12 21:49:04

My last Victoria sponge emerged from the oven as flat as two pancakes and I couldn't work out what I had done wrong. Then, last week, My DiL produced the most excellent light sponge - amazing, because my DS, who used to be a chef, does all the cooking and baking in that household. I had no idea that she could bake! She keeps that very quiet.

Anagram Thu 09-Aug-12 22:02:46

Sounds like a bit of witchcraft to me, Annobel!