View Full Version : Favourite childhood foods?
Sonic
28th December 2010, 16:19
Ok peeps. Yet another one of my pointless and time wasting threads about nothing in particular (hey when you've got a talent, use it ;) ).
Today's topic is this;
Was there a food or snack that you remember from childhood? Perhaps something your Mum (or Mom) made you if you were ill. Or a fave chocolate bar that you haven't seen in decades.
Annnnd go. :)
Captain VXR
28th December 2010, 16:27
I used to love McDonalds happy meal fish fingers
pino
28th December 2010, 16:32
Mum's pasta al forno (lasagna) and Nutella, which I still eat now :lips:
And btw, food-threads are never pointless :p :
Sonic
28th December 2010, 17:08
I used to love McDonalds happy meal fish fingers
Mmmmm.
billiaml
28th December 2010, 17:56
Spaghetti & meatballs.
Easy Drifter
28th December 2010, 18:51
Mother's Brownies and fresh corn on the cob. Still do with the corn.
Mark
28th December 2010, 18:59
Meals out the kids option was often a giant fish finger!
Tazio
28th December 2010, 19:52
Rhubarb Cobbler :)
Daniel
28th December 2010, 20:20
Mum's pasta al forno (lasagna)
My mum makes a fantastic lasagna..... :facelick:
Bob Riebe
28th December 2010, 20:34
Fried chicken oven baked in heavy cream.
Fish egg tapioca, cooked in coffee cream.
I have a large bag of the fish egg size tapioca, may have to cook some up, it has been a few years.
JackSparrow
28th December 2010, 21:54
Any kind of dessert or cake
Rollo
28th December 2010, 22:53
Bird's Angel Delight - Strawberry Flavour.
Although now, I don't understand how I let alone anyone else could eat it. Nowadays I think it's vile.
gloomyDAY
29th December 2010, 03:53
Caldo de pollo, which is chicken stew with vegetables and a delicious broth.
Sonic
29th December 2010, 15:38
Caldo de pollo, which is chicken stew with vegetables and a delicious broth.
I misread that! I thought you said you ate Cote de Pablo! You cannibal! ;)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cote_de_Pablo
J4MIE
30th December 2010, 00:57
Due to my mum being a terrible cook I am struggling to remember anything from my childhood which I miss these days :s My dad used to make curries properly but hasn't done so in years sadly.
Neil J
30th December 2010, 16:51
Spangles. Those were the bestist sweets ever :)
62motorsport
30th December 2010, 18:34
Cream of tripe and onions or raw tripe and vinigar, YUM ! YUM !
Mark in Oshawa
31st December 2010, 10:07
I used to eat Peanut Butter and Jam sandwiches all the time.
Also put me down for Grilled Cheese Sandwiches or a plate of Kraft Dinner ( a Canadian invention of the world's easiest and plainest Macaroni and Cheese...
Eki
31st December 2010, 12:45
I used to eat Peanut Butter and Jam sandwiches all the time.
Also put me down for Grilled Cheese Sandwiches or a plate of Kraft Dinner ( a Canadian invention of the world's easiest and plainest Macaroni and Cheese...
Wow, there's a dish invented in Canada? I would have guessed frozen beaver poo on stick dipped into maple syrup.
Jag_Warrior
2nd January 2011, 06:35
Buckwheat pancakes, topped with sorghum (or honey) and butter... along with fresh bacon and sausage on the side. Oh yeah, and a big, tall glass of milk!
slorydn1
2nd January 2011, 17:33
Linguini topped with white clam sauce, plenty of romano cheese, and garlic bread on the side.......the best!!!! :D
Now if eating out was on the menu-then it hadda be a Big Mac, maybe 2
I can't stand Mc D's now though....
pino
3rd January 2011, 10:35
Linguini topped with white clam sauce, plenty of romano cheese, and garlic bread on the side.......the best!!!! :D
That sound good, btw is romano cheese what we call Pecorino Romano ? ;)
schmenke
3rd January 2011, 17:31
karjalan piirakka ;)
I used to gorge on them when my mom made them. Even though she was not from the region, my dad was and she had to learn how to make them :D
Thanks to some forum members for pm'ing a recipe in the past, but I still can't make them like my mom used to :(
billiaml
3rd January 2011, 18:06
karjalan piirakka ;)
I used to gorge on them when my mom made them. Even though she was not from the region, my dad was and she had to learn how to make them :D
Thanks to some forum members for pm'ing a recipe in the past, but I still can't make them like my mom used to :(
Probably some subtle nuance that's difficult to pass on in a pm, but easy to show one-on-one. A perfect example of that would be my mom teaching my daughter how to make dumplings Saturday. The consistency has to be just right, but how do you explain that via pm? You can't hold the whisk over the bowl & say, "when the batter is like this, it's ready."
Eki
3rd January 2011, 18:09
karjalan piirakka ;)
I used to gorge on them when my mom made them. Even though she was not from the region, my dad was and she had to learn how to make them :D
With egg-butter?
schmenke
3rd January 2011, 18:20
With egg-butter?
Yup! :)
DexDexter
3rd January 2011, 18:36
Fresh, warm ryemeal bread with some margarine (not butter because I didn't like the idea that it came from a cow) and a slice of cheese :D . That's still very delicious.
Captain VXR
3rd January 2011, 23:14
Fresh, warm ryemeal bread with some margarine (not butter because I didn't like the idea that it came from a cow) and a slice of cheese :D . That's still very delicious.
Even though the cheese and margarine did?
schmenke
3rd January 2011, 23:50
Not all cheeses come from a cow, and margarine is made from hydrogenating vegitable oil.
Brown, Jon Brow
4th January 2011, 00:03
Even though the cheese and margarine did?
Might have been goats cheese or ewes milk cheese.
I wonder if you could make cheese from luxury mothers milk?
devid
4th January 2011, 11:29
be lated
marry Christmas to all forum member
Captain VXR
4th January 2011, 13:33
Not all cheeses come from a cow, and margarine is made from hydrogenating vegitable oil.
But most margarines have cows milk as an ingredient, and the vast majority of cheeses come from cows
schmenke
4th January 2011, 15:11
I'm no expert in the exact process, but I believe some margarines use skim milk as a liquid base, but most use water.
Anyways, damn the cow... I prefer butter :D
billiaml
4th January 2011, 16:52
Rose, my youngest, eats butter with a spoon.
Captain VXR
4th January 2011, 22:55
Rose, my youngest, eats butter with a spoon.
....and i thought i was odd for eating slices of ham by theirselves
billiaml
4th January 2011, 23:00
Seems normal to me :D
DexDexter
5th January 2011, 14:55
Even though the cheese and margarine did?
The cheese did, margarine was based on rapeseed oil. That's child's logic for you :)
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