Put down the salad
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Discussion

rsbmw

Original Poster:

3,466 posts

131 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
Black pudding is a superfood!

http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/health-and...

Time to put a delivery order in to my favourite Scottish butcher.

HTP99

24,886 posts

166 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
I've suggested black pudding to the wife, to go in her smoothies, along with the blueberries, kale and pomegranate seeds, she wasn't too keen on the idea.

rsbmw

Original Poster:

3,466 posts

131 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
Can't blame her, who the hell wants kale in a smoothie.

Murph7355

41,378 posts

282 months

Friday 8th January 2016
quotequote all
And why the feckin salad on the photo in the article?

Black pudding's great. As is white pudding. But now all the Tristrams and Ffionas will be eating! smile

calibrax

4,788 posts

237 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
That article claims this is a full English breakfast...



No egg
No bacon
No sausages (just some stuff which MAY be Scottish square sausage)

Not even close to a full English! Missing egg is bad enough, but missing bacon?! That's like serving up a risotto without the rice...

rsbmw

Original Poster:

3,466 posts

131 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
That's a Scottish breakfast, i'd take that over English any day. Would typically have egg though.

marshalla

15,902 posts

227 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
rsbmw said:
That's a Scottish breakfast, i'd take that over English any day. Would typically have egg though.
It is not. It needs a portion of fried fruit pudding to come close to being a Scottish breakfast.

HTP99

24,886 posts

166 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
Had a full English this morning, with two slices of black pudding, I feel so much healthier already!

rsbmw

Original Poster:

3,466 posts

131 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
marshalla said:
It is not. It needs a portion of fried fruit pudding to come close to being a Scottish breakfast.
Haggis, fruit and white puddings are only occasional additions, the omission does not stop it being a Scottish Breakfasst. However, I have since noticed the omission of tattie scones, which is unforgivable.

Murph7355

41,378 posts

282 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
Regardless of what that is or isn't (a square breakfast on a round plate would make me twitch irrespective of which of our nations it comes from!), at least there is no lettuce on the plate.

Drive Blind

5,687 posts

203 months

Saturday 9th January 2016
quotequote all
the only thing scottish about it IMO is the square slice. Nae tattie scones and is the bread brown?

We can argue all day whether it's Scottish, English, Irish or from mars. It's a piss poor fry up.

Murph7355

41,378 posts

282 months

Sunday 10th January 2016
quotequote all
Drive Blind said:
the only thing scottish about it IMO is the square slice. Nae tattie scones and is the bread brown?

We can argue all day whether it's Scottish, English, Irish or from mars. It's a piss poor fry up.
Agreed...the subject of the thread - black pudding - looked good though.

Vyse

1,224 posts

150 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
Apart from eating the stuff with a full english what other ways can you eat black pudding? (P.S. Ive never eaten it before).

anonymous-user

80 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
^ fried cubes on new potatoes with a poached egg on top is nice.

Google [bot]

6,828 posts

207 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
Vyse said:
Apart from eating the stuff with a full english what other ways can you eat black pudding? (P.S. Ive never eaten it before).
Cheese & black pudding toasties.

Output Flange

17,023 posts

237 months

Monday 11th January 2016
quotequote all
Wrapped around an egg and fried in breadcrumbs.

Or with some scallops.

Or on its own.

Nom.

fking nom.

rsbmw

Original Poster:

3,466 posts

131 months

Tuesday 12th January 2016
quotequote all
Vyse said:
Apart from eating the stuff with a full english what other ways can you eat black pudding? (P.S. Ive never eaten it before).
Make sure you get decent stuff if trying for the first time. The standard English fayre with big white lumps of fat is awful. Bury stuff isn't too bad but for the best you have to go Scottish!

escargot

17,122 posts

243 months

Tuesday 12th January 2016
quotequote all
Vyse said:
Apart from eating the stuff with a full english what other ways can you eat black pudding? (P.S. Ive never eaten it before).
The French eat it with a fruit compote (like apple or something). It works surprisingly well as a starter.

calibrax

4,788 posts

237 months

Tuesday 12th January 2016
quotequote all
Works well with steak & scallops too.

Here is something I did a couple of years ago... fillet steak with seared scallops, crispy bacon & black pudding on a pea puree, with a lemon butter drizzle. It was delicious! biggrin


HTP99

24,886 posts

166 months

Tuesday 12th January 2016
quotequote all
escargot said:
Vyse said:
Apart from eating the stuff with a full english what other ways can you eat black pudding? (P.S. Ive never eaten it before).
The French eat it with a fruit compote (like apple or something). It works surprisingly well as a starter.
I had a lovely black pudding and potato mash, topped with a poached egg with hollandaise sauce, starter recently.