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Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by TouristTrap
(Post 4519256)
- so I make them healthy organic wheat with flaxseed and sunflower seeds in it - two slices lasts them a while.
All "regular" bread is good for is toast and holding a sandwich together. When I was a kid every Sunday after church we'd stop at Marconi's bakery and get two loaves of wonderful Italian bread with a crust so hard you could knock someone out with it. We'd eat it as kind of a light lunch with salami or dipped in olive oil or a mixture of vinegar and oil or just with butter. Now that we out in the country, there is no good bread anywhere. |
Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by danfan
(Post 4519177)
ick, that's why is tastes so sweet.
I do admit we bought a bread machine & make our own most of the time now. And I don't eat the cheap stuff (horrible fluff is right!), You do have to spend a small fortune to buy anything remotely decent. |
Re: How homesick are you?
I find a lot of Indian grocers carry Brit products at a better price than you can find elsewhere ;)
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Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by TouristTrap
(Post 4529821)
I find a lot of Indian grocers carry Brit products at a better price than you can find elsewhere ;)
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Re: How homesick are you?
i enjoyed carrabbas, macaroni grill, olive garden, panera bread, bob evans breakfasts, chipotles, sbarro pizzas at the mall, steak escape, and so much more.
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Re: How homesick are you?
Used to get homesick, had one really bad bout too....just sat there at the end of the bed staring out of the window for a few days .... Then I flew back to the UK to sort out some financial things and wrap up loose ends and I couldn't get back to the USA fast enough. :blink:
I had a good standard of living in the UK and it was hard to leave behind some of things I had worked for years to achieve....starting all over again at the ripe age of 37 was never going to be easy...but its the best kick in the pants that I've ever had .... The quality of life here in hickville is superb and the opportunities endless. Add to that the lack of chav's and streets strewn with litter and dogshit ....There are always things I will miss but as the months roll by there is less and less to miss. |
Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by Ray
(Post 4529825)
And usually the best buy date is only a few months gone by ...
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Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by Ray
(Post 4529825)
And usually the best buy date is only a few months gone by ...
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Re: How homesick are you?
its weird, we lived in NZ for almost 3 years and i really missed the UK, moved back to the UK and i felt like id made a blunder, until id taken a trip to devon and explored the Hills of lancashire over the summer, then i was all happy again. THings took us to near chicago (18 months ago) where I very rarely get very homesick, i like the seasonality here which you didnt get in Auckland. Also just one flight to MCR is easy. the thing i miss the most aside from family is the fact you can hit the countryside and hike UP hill and DOWN, and get pleasure from exercise, here its flat and it can be frustrating to not have that opportunity to go up and feel cold wind, in fact it can be very frustrating and i feel myself getting unfit, somebody suggested a treadmill, i just laughed out loud and told them that wasnt really going to make me feel beter!!
Mum emailed me some photos/movies of her last weekends trip to he lake district, jees, its a picture compared to here for sure, almost as nice as the south island of new zealand! when i feel UK sick i watch Rick steins food heroes, with its combined scenery, food, beer and accents its a great tonic. oN the subject of food (a common topic) ive found some better brands of foods that as you know in the USA can be bloody awful!! Yoghurt: the best ive found is Meijers own brand, its live and tangy with none of that gluey gloopy rubbish added, also some of the more cosmopolitan food stores will carry east european style yogs like omur?? which again is excellent. Also the imported greek fage 'total' brand is excellent but pricey. meijers is also the cheapest ive found under $2.00 for those big tubs. Bread (LOL) the one i buy regularly now is Jewel oscos store baked 'hearty wheat bread' its about $3.30 a loaf but very dense and moist, YES, i said MOIST, I almost had a heart attack when i found i could swallow it without dipping in soup first! It also lasts a few days unlike many 'artisan breads which can go stale fast. oh and that one is sliced. some of meijers artisan baguettes are also OK. Cottage cheese, 'Michigan brand' small curd has just a few ingredients and has a nice fresh tangy taste, its by far the best ive tried here, not as good as longley farm cottage cheese from yorkshire but i can live with it. Tbags, i tred tetley british blend, forget it, bloody awful, im not sure if thats the same as in the UK but ive jaut made sure i brought a good supply of T&H yorkshire tea!! cream, the only FRESH cream ive found so far is deans brand, its still just the whipping so quite light. i brought back some Roddas cornish clotted cream after xmas and the neighbours were entranced by that yellow mana, and they also liked the lancs cheese i brought in. cheese: I just get whatevers on trader joes counter, i find the US sharp cheddar Ok in most instances, the mature UK ones often imported are way to strong for general eating, great for cheese on toast/welsh rarebit though!! i also wish all the UK cheese would be left alone instead of selling cheese with mango, onions, chives, all manner of stuff added. cereal, well aside from porridge i have found trader joes 'Os' to be only slightly sweet, most american cereals are diabetic nightmares, they are under $2 a box too. Aso Target farmers pantry Os are low sugar. |
Re: How homesick are you?
I was just told there was a British food store in Long Grove - don't know if you're anywhere near it. And Josephs in Crystal Lake has clotted cream.
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Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by Tracym
(Post 4546425)
I was just told there was a British food store in Long Grove - don't know if you're anywhere near it. And Josephs in Crystal Lake has clotted cream.
thanks for that, im about 25 miles away from either of those places, but if im in the area...... so that clotted cream is made here or imported?? thanks. bugman. |
Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by bugman
(Post 4546469)
thanks for that, im about 25 miles away from either of those places, but if im in the area......
so that clotted cream is made here or imported?? thanks. bugman. I haven't been to the store in Long Grove, but I was told they have nice sausages. So take a trip out into the country (after rain and must season stops) :) |
Re: How homesick are you?
I manage to get clotted cream at Safeyway and some of the other food stores in the town here. It's about $7. Target are stocking British bread here and they have put in Boots products under the British section.
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Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by JULIEROSE
(Post 4546569)
I manage to get clotted cream at Safeyway and some of the other food stores in the town here. It's about $7. Target are stocking British bread here and they have put in Boots products under the British section.
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Re: How homesick are you?
Originally Posted by JULIEROSE
(Post 4546569)
I manage to get clotted cream at Safeyway and some of the other food stores in the town here. It's about $7. Target are stocking British bread here and they have put in Boots products under the British section.
Put cream on the counter ... Leave it for days... Give everyone botulism... Storebought for me on that one. |
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