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UK ingredients
mrs_cruella wrote in :
> I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me > foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) > TIA! > > Living in the land of cows. > > > -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- > http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! > -----== Over 100,000 Newsgroups - 19 Different Servers! =----- > clotted cream, irish bacon, lyle's golden syrup and of course clotted cream... -- Once during Prohibition I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water. -------- FIELDS, W. C. |
UK ingredients
As to what to bring back from the UK, hahabogus suggests: >clotted cream, irish bacon, lyle's golden syrup and of course clotted >cream... -------------------------- I'm pretty sure you won't be allowed to bring back bacon. And I would question about the cream. How many hours would it go without refrigeration? Quite a few, 3 or 4 hours before boarding in UK, plus the flight, plus arrival in Us. |
UK ingredients
"Nancree" > wrote in message ... > >I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me > >foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) > > ----------------- > Lyle's Golden Syrup Can't you get that in Chicago? I can find the little tins of it here in many of the stupid little supermarkets of upstate New York. I recently used it in place of molasses in some gingerbread cookies. Very good. Paula |
UK ingredients
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UK ingredients
mrs_cruella wrote in :
> I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me > foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) > TIA! > > Living in the land of cows. Along with the other suggestions, shredded suet and pudding rice. |
UK ingredients
On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 04:06:40 GMT, Wayne Boatwright wrote:
> Along with the other suggestions, shredded suet and pudding rice. Is pudding rice anything like rice pudding? -Jeff B. yeff at erols dot com |
UK ingredients
<mrs_cruella> wrote:
> I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me > foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) > TIA! Beef products (even canned) are not allowed to be brought into the US. Most pork products aren't allowed either (I recently had to talk to the USDA about what foods are allowed in). Only things that have been processed or cooked. I'm doubtful of the clotted cream. I'd get some nice strong tea, some digestives, *chocolate*, smoked salmon, bramble jam, blackcurrant anything, Flake, orange marmalade. Oh, and a tin of baked beans (they're in tomato sauce, and you have them either on toast or with breakfast...yum!). Brown sauce, like HP. Colman's mustard (get a tin of the dry one...so much more versatile). I don't know if Mikados or Kimberleys are available in the UK (I think they're Irish only), but they're yummy. -- "In Finnegans Wake, he just made up words. Now that's just not sporting!" ...A friend on James Joyce |
UK ingredients
mrs_cruella a écrit :
> I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me > foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) > TIA! Nothing :-((((( The US has recently banned *all* private food importation (including boxes of chocolate that Swiss people often bring - that's how I know that, it made the newspaper headlines here), for "security reasons" (?!?!). Nathalie in Switzerland |
UK ingredients
"Elana Kehoe" > wrote in message ... > <mrs_cruella> wrote: > > > I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me > > foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) > > TIA! > > Beef products (even canned) are not allowed to be brought into the US. > Most pork products aren't allowed either (I recently had to talk to the > USDA about what foods are allowed in). Only things that have been > processed or cooked. I'm doubtful of the clotted cream. > > I'd get some nice strong tea, some digestives, *chocolate*, smoked > salmon, bramble jam, blackcurrant anything, Flake, orange marmalade. > Oh, and a tin of baked beans (they're in tomato sauce, and you have them > either on toast or with breakfast...yum!). Brown sauce, like HP. > Colman's mustard (get a tin of the dry one...so much more versatile). I > don't know if Mikados or Kimberleys are available in the UK (I think > they're Irish only), but they're yummy. All the above (including the Irish pork products -both fresh and processed) are available in the U.S. either in British groceries, mail order or online. There are lots of British and Irish foods for sale here in the U.S. My local British Grocery has 15,000 items available and will order what they don't have. Speaking of steak sauce, Alana Steak sauce is no longer available I understand. Anyone in the U.S. needs to be careful when buying HP sauce. Some of it is made in New Jersey and tastes awful Charlie |
UK ingredients
On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 11:44:50 +0100, Nathalie Chiva
> wrote: >mrs_cruella a écrit : > >> I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me >> foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) >> TIA! > >Nothing :-((((( >The US has recently banned *all* private food importation (including >boxes of chocolate that Swiss people often bring - that's how I know >that, it made the newspaper headlines here), for "security reasons" >(?!?!). Well, shoot. That *is* rotten news. Someone once brought me a box of (fresh) chocolates from a 1-person kitchen in Geneva, and they were absolutely the best chocolate I've ever had in my life, before or since. Poor innocent chocolate. |
UK ingredients
On Mon, 23 Feb 2004 21:55:47 GMT, mrs_cruella wrote:
>I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me >foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) If you (or your friend) didn't have anything specific in mind, there's not much point in making up a list. Kind as the offer is, many food items are messy, perishable, and heavy. As others have pointed out, the casual 'importation' of food or drink is highly regulated. Also, many items can be purchased through mail-order (wouldn't want to try this with cream!) or available in shops here. Even my culinarily-dark corner has a 'Best of Britain' shop that stocks candies, sauces, jams, teas, and canned goods for the homesick ex-pat. Have your friend bring recipes and experiment together. |
UK ingredients
Yeff > wrote in
: > On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 04:06:40 GMT, Wayne Boatwright wrote: > >> Along with the other suggestions, shredded suet and pudding rice. > > Is pudding rice anything like rice pudding? > > -Jeff B. > yeff at erols dot com > It's the raw rice one uses to make rice pudding. It's a short grain creamy-textured rice. Wayne |
UK ingredients
On Tue, 24 Feb 2004 11:03:53 GMT, "Charles Gifford"
> wrote: > >"Elana Kehoe" > wrote in message ... >> <mrs_cruella> wrote: >> >> > I have a friend coming to visit from the UK. She wants to bring me >> > foodie ingredients. What should I ask for? (I'm in the Chicago area.) >> > TIA! >> >> Beef products (even canned) are not allowed to be brought into the US. >> Most pork products aren't allowed either (I recently had to talk to the >> USDA about what foods are allowed in). Only things that have been >> processed or cooked. I'm doubtful of the clotted cream. >> >> I'd get some nice strong tea, some digestives, *chocolate*, smoked >> salmon, bramble jam, blackcurrant anything, Flake, orange marmalade. >> Oh, and a tin of baked beans (they're in tomato sauce, and you have them >> either on toast or with breakfast...yum!). Brown sauce, like HP. >> Colman's mustard (get a tin of the dry one...so much more versatile). I >> don't know if Mikados or Kimberleys are available in the UK (I think >> they're Irish only), but they're yummy. > >All the above (including the Irish pork products -both fresh and processed) >are available in the U.S. either in British groceries, mail order or online. >There are lots of British and Irish foods for sale here in the U.S. My >local British Grocery has 15,000 items available and will order what they >don't have. My local supermarkets carry most, if not all, of the items above. I live in a Houston suburb that has a large population from the UK (many of whom work for an oil-field services corp. in the area), so that may be the reason, but I would imagine that many supermarkets in the Chicago area would carry those items as well. |
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