I used to eat a sharp apple and a bit piece of cheese for my lunch when I was very young.
We thought it was slimming 
Very nice together, though!
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And it set me wondering. Do people who live in Leicestershire make this on a regular basis? And do people who live in Eccles and Bakewell have it as a standby bake? I can see Cornish pasties being a standby in Cornwall but Scotch pancakes or suchlike,do you grow up making a local speciality. I come from Liverpool and have never made Scouser or lobs course and in the NE I ve never met anyone who's made a singin'hinney.
I used to eat a sharp apple and a bit piece of cheese for my lunch when I was very young.
We thought it was slimming 
Very nice together, though!
Bramley apples and Leicestershire very much go together for me. No Bramleys where we live now sadly. We had a long front garden and 2 massive bramley apple trees at the side- just loved them. Our house is now a nursery, and named after those trees.
We buy oatcakes of the type you describe from a shop in Chesterfield. They are delicious with bacon, eggs and tomatoes. I didn't know they originated in Staffordshire. When I was young, a man used to come around the houses with a basket covered in a gingham cloth, selling oatcakes, and pikelets, which were like crumpets but thinner. I always thought oatcakes were seasonal, but they don't appear to be now.
Ooh! That Oxford pudding sounds lovely too. Love apricots. 
Ah yes, Staffordshire oat cakes. I haven't had one for years (and years)
DMIL used to make her own clotted cream when the milk was delivered in jugs.
Thanks for putting the link on again icyalittle, I did put the link on for the Berkshire bacon pudding for jings but I think she missed it (unless she had gone off to make one)
.
I have a 'Plymouth Sound' cookery book somewhere whitewave.
No I haven't, I must have thrown it out when I had a cull after DH kept nagging about all my rubbish
Oh! My mum-in-law used to make that newist. Very nice too. 
I'm not sure Wiltshire has any of its own recipes, we do have Wiltshire ham.
Bath Chap is the closest - pigs cheek cooked after being rolled in breadcrumbs.
I can't find my Cornish recipe book
It must be somewhere!!!!
Cornish Fairings.
Clotted Cream
No wonder I am the size of a house
What about oat cakes? I grew up in the Potteries and we had StaffordshIre oat cakes for breakfast on Sundays. Nothing like Scottish oat cakes - more like a Breton crepe. Ate with bacon, sausage, cheese or eggs. delicious!
I make Scotch pancakes often, and Granny, Mum and Aunties all did too. When children were small, I made the mixture into teddy bears, cats, pancake men, etc. My sis in law was clever. - she made football shaped pancakes for her boys! Easy, quick and tasty. I bake a lot, apple cake of different kinds, girdle scines and boiled fruit cake, easiest of the lot. We used to have a B and B so homebakes were useful.
I live in the North East (nearly), and I make singing hinnies. I call them girdle scones, but it is almost the same recipe! I used to live in Cumbria, and did make Nickie Cake (Cumberland Rum Nickie) but without the rum so the children could eat it. I soaked the currants in fruit juice instead.
Ooh, Nigella does a Berkshire bacon pudding www.nigella.com/recipes/view/berkshire-bacon-pudding-1155 Just for jings that one, pig and local!
jingl Oxford Pudding exists though I've never made it - see here for numerous supposedly local recipes. I've got so many apple cake recipes, but can never remember from one year to the next which one is our favourite. I'll try yours out Stansgran , thank you.
Quite different to Dorset Wye Valley Apple Cake:
www.lynsted.com/Recipes/Cookbook/English_Apple_Cake.html
Oh that's an unusual one. Must be like a rich pastry. I've done ones where the Apple is incorporated into a cake mixture. Yours sounds nicer.
Just waiting for our Bramleys to reach peak picking point...... 
This is the recipe my friend gave me . I have approximated the metric as she gave me the recipe a long time ago. It's a bit like a short cake top and bottom and I don't put the apple right up to the edge .
I've still got windfalls to use up.
Leicestershire Apple Cake
Ingredients
Butter4 Ounce (100 Gram)
Caster sugar3 Ounce (75 Gram)
Egg1 (Size 3)
Self raising flour6 Ounce (150 Gram)
Cooking apples1 Pound (450 Gram)
Caster sugar4 Ounce (100 Gram)
Directions
Preheat the oven to Gas Mark 4.
Cream together the butter and sugar, add the egg and beat well.
Gradually add the self-raising flour, beating well.
Stew the apples with the sugar, and drain off any juice.
Divide the pastry into two, and press one half into the base of an 18 x 18cm (7x7 inch) shallow baking tin.
Cover the pastry with the apple.
On a lightly floured board, press the remaining pastry out to a square to fit over the apples.
Bake on the third shelf for forty-five minutes.
When cold, turn out and cut into squares, and sprinkle with caster sugar
% Daily Value*
Total Fat 17 g25.5%
Saturated Fat 10 g50.2%
Welsh cakes are usually on sale in bakers and supermarkets all year round.
Tan Y Castell, Brace's, Village Bakery etc make them
I've got a tea towel with recipe for Welsh cakes. I did make them once. Bit high fat though! 
Love any baked goods with saffron!
I don't think we have any regional recipes in Surrey!
Or can anyone tell me one? I'd love to know.
Oh yes we make Welsh cakes!! On St David's Day.
Although I did buy them this year from a Welsh bakery. 
I have a good friend here who makes Welsh cakes, which DH, being Welsh loves. His mother used to make them. However, when we visit his family in Wales, we never see them and certainly no-one makes them.
Cornish saffron cake Ooh, yes!
When I worked in Devon many many moons ago we used to go to the nearby baker's on Friday lunchtimes and buy 'Friday Dough Cake' (a saffron cake). Friday's dough cake was extra special for some reason.
We'd eat it at afternoon tea spread with butter
And I was thin in those days 
Somehow hogs pudding doesn't sound quite as appealing Apple cake (of any geographical region)
I meant durhamjen Galen. You are Galen. 
I agree with jingle regarding Bakewell pudding, but I make Bakewell tart with black cherry pie filling in the base instead of jam. It makes a delicious pudding served warm with cream. As for Yorkshire pudding, hailing from Sheffield like Galen's mother in law, to my eternal shame I still can't make a decent one. I'm sure that every failure I have causes my dear late mother to turn in her grave! My daughter, on the other hand, makes splendid Yorkshires!
I made a Sussex Pond Pudding once, although we have never lived in Sussex (I think we lived in Middlesex at the time - near enough!).
It was utterly delicious but about a thousand calories a portion.
Oxford Marmalade? Perhaps you could make an Oxfordfshire pudding with it
And here you are: Berkshire Bacon Pudding
www.nigella.com/recipes/view/berkshire-bacon-pudding-1155
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