Quote: sootyj @ January 19 2009, 1:44 PM GMTI suppose so would I, there's jsut something soul destroying about saying
"My biscuits come in a bin liner, in a box and like my dreams they're alrewady broken."
Elitist
*munch munch*
Quote: sootyj @ January 19 2009, 1:44 PM GMTI suppose so would I, there's jsut something soul destroying about saying
"My biscuits come in a bin liner, in a box and like my dreams they're alrewady broken."
Elitist
*munch munch*
Quote: Matthew Stott @ January 19 2009, 1:42 PM GMTWhat the f**k is haslet?
Haslet (pronounced 'Hacelet', though sometimes 'hazlet' in areas outside Lincolnshire) is a herbed pork meatloaf, originally from Lincolnshire in England. It is typically made of stale white bread, pork (traditionally the entrails), sage, salt and pepper, and sometimes onion. At least one butcher in Lincolnshire produces a gluten-free haslet. In parts of the South the inner organs of a pig e.g., heart, kidney, liver,lungs, etc are called Haslet, or haslet hash.
That's strangely similar to the Wiki entry......
Quote: Ben @ January 19 2009, 1:55 PM GMTHaslet (pronounced 'Hacelet', though sometimes 'hazlet' in areas outside Lincolnshire) is a herbed pork meatloaf, originally from Lincolnshire in England. It is typically made of stale white bread, pork (traditionally the entrails), sage, salt and pepper, and sometimes onion. At least one butcher in Lincolnshire produces a gluten-free haslet. In parts of the South the inner organs of a pig e.g., heart, kidney, liver,lungs, etc are called Haslet, or haslet hash.
Homo.
That is an unusually good looking illustration of a broken biscuit box, there's party rings, jammy rings, ginger nuts all sorts.
Quote: Ben @ January 19 2009, 1:40 PM GMTYou can have one of my sandwiches if you want. PM me your fax number and I'll fax one over.
Appreciate it.
Quote: Ben @ January 19 2009, 12:59 PM GMTI've got haslet sandwiches for this afternoon. I heart haslet.
Haslet! I ain't had that in years, mmm.
Quote: Matthew Stott @ January 19 2009, 1:57 PM GMTHomo.
Get back to your chips and gravy.
Quote: Ben @ January 19 2009, 2:06 PM GMTGet back to your chips and gravy.
Throw some cheese curds on there while you're at it.
Oh hellz yea!
Quote: sootyj @ January 19 2009, 11:58 AM GMT When you buy these then you know the credit crunch has made you crumble.
I buy those all the time. You get really good ones in them. It's just they might have a bit broken off, that's all. £1 in Poundland!
I also buy the reduced flowers in the supermarket. They are still good for a week and I hate to see good flower chucked.
The crunch hasn't affected me too badly cause I was poor before anyway!
Mmm the words "new pack" are a sign of quality.
I can't judge when my 99p store was selling diet vimto in cans I was buying it 20 cans at a time. Like a fizzy drink obsessed Soviet peasant.
Quote: Ben @ January 19 2009, 2:06 PM GMTGet back to your chips and gravy.
With lots of vinegar!
Quote: Curt @ January 19 2009, 2:12 PM GMTThrow some cheese curds on there while you're at it.
Oh hellz yea!
Poutine is a shining example of how Canadians are not just like Americans.
I am eating a strawberry bootlace.
Quote: Scatterbrained Floozy @ January 19 2009, 5:19 PM GMTI am eating a strawberry bootlace.
*jealous*!