• 10_0
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    4 hours ago

    Banger meal tbh, if you want to top it with 10 quids worth of spice that’s up to you, but most people who eat this on the regular can barely afford salt and pepper.

    • @[email protected]
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      13 minutes ago

      I’m actually having fish fingers, chips, and beans tonight.

      I’m late thirties and there is nothing wrong with fish finger and beans.

      Edit: Don’t even have to be poor to enjoy it by the way.

    • @[email protected]
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      144 minutes ago

      British fish fingers are usually mind-blowingly tasty compared to American fish-sticks. That might explain some of the disagreement.

    • @[email protected]
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      113 hours ago

      How the fuck are you spending 10 quid on spices?! You can get a good few for 5 at Lidl or Aldi.

      Also, having been someone that poor, people in that position should understand spices and at least have a few of them because it was one of the few things that kept me going that at least my toast and tinned veg & hotdog pasta both had some flavour.

      • @[email protected]
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        61 hour ago

        How the fuck are you spending 10 quid on spices

        If it isn’t saffron and Italian white truffle, it doesn’t go on their toast.

  • @[email protected]
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    5 hours ago

    I’m British and I see it’s wrong because it simply isn’t true… We have a ton of spicy foods. The stereotype that we only eat comfort foods like in the meme is old and worn out. Maybe that’s all you eat, but that’s on you.

    • @[email protected]
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      174 hours ago

      Yeah never got this. The nation’s favourite dish is curry. My favourite dish is curry. Isn’t it a running joke amongst Indians how much the Brits love curry?

      Things like beans on toast and fish finger sandwiches are cheap and easy lunch snacks for students but not our actual diet.

        • @[email protected]
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          123 hours ago

          Stops carving the Sunday roast and holds off putting the apple crumble in the oven…

          But we are one of the most multicultural societies in the world and have long since adopted everyone else’s cuisines.

          By this logic the Japanese don’t have curries and the Americans don’t have pizza, or any other food for that matter.

          • @[email protected]
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            01 hour ago

            Stops carving the Sunday roast

            Fun fact: Britain didn’t invent roasting hunks of meat. Or Sundays. Or the combination thereof.

            apple crumble

            That’s not a real thing. That’s just something English people say to sound whimsical.

            By this logic the Japanese don’t have curries and the Americans don’t have pizza, or any other food for that matter.

            Correct. Only Neolithic cultures have their own foods.

      • @[email protected]
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        114 hours ago

        Yep, just seems disingenuous to act like the history of the spice trade hasn’t affected our food culture when it clearly has massively. Hell, even curry in Japan is popular not because of India but because of British influence. The reason “Katsu Curry” is called Katsu is because of the English word “Cuts” referring to the cuts of meat in the curry, which is Japanese sounds like ‘katsu’.

    • @majestictechieOP
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      45 hours ago

      I see nothing wrong because buttered bread, fish fingers and beans is a banger of a meal

  • @[email protected]
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    145 hours ago

    Tbf, wouldn’t coffee, tea, chocolate and sugar cane have been considered spices by then’s definition?

  • macniel
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    13 hours ago

    perhaps a tiny bit of tartar sauce for the fish sticks, but otherwise its a delicious and fast meal :)

  • @[email protected]
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    5 hours ago

    Baked beans actually contain a number of spices, it’s “a trade secret” but at least chilli, paprika, pepper and garlic among others, equally though when brits create something that only somewhat resembles actual indiaj food as it’s made with indian spices it doesn’t get considered as british food and the “british people no eat spices” thing continues - it’s like rejecting every italian dish with potato, tomato or chilli leaving them with… ham and basic pasta pesto, I guess?

    Also countries can eat both trash and objectively good food, see South Korea and to a lesser extent Japan for more details (or of course they could be like Finland or Nauru and exclusively eat trash, save for the occasional berry or mushroom in Finland which hardly constitutes a whole meal)