Mate tikka masala is an "Indian" dish that was literally invented in England.
We appropriated all the shit from all over the world, then made it more universally good.
Meanwhile a fucking "bland" pie is wholesomely awesome comfort food, when done right.
If anything, it's our close ties to America that screw us over. We've taken their commercialised factory production and applied it to our stuff, and often the cost cutting has ruined it - just like American food. But, sometimes, we manage to make golden gems like a Gregg's sausage bean and cheese pasty.
Also, US (and Canadian) streaky bacon is shit. Back bacon - specifically "dry cured" back bacon (which is a protected term and must be done by hand instead of factory brine injected processing) - is the ultimate in piggy goodness.
But even factory back bacon is better than streaky, streaky is just the fat, while back has a chunk of meat to it. Harder to cook, but when you do it just right (render the fat at a low temp, then whack it up to cook the rest) it's bloody divine. Professional kitchens just do it in an oven, but if you carefully lay the bacon on top of one another in a frying pan, such that the fat touches the pan while the meat sits on top (except for the first piece, which is special) you can render the fat out at a low temp and then fry it perfectly all spread out. The goal is crispy fat, but tender meat.
Pigs won't fly, especially not in the US, but a good bacon bap in the UK can give you wings.
And I haven't even started talking about fresh little pork pies from small local Yorkshire butchers.
Omg change the record.... what next our teeth? Jeezuz. Dated tropes wheeled out again. Where are you from? Let's do your country next? Yawn. Just be nice. It's freaking easy.
Its vs it’s got me for a long time. I want to add the apostrophe because it’s possessive, but possessive pronouns are an exception and don’t need one. Think of his, hers, yours, theirs. All are possessive but don’t need the apostrophe.
I don't doubt it, but you'd need to do something incredible to mashed peas to make me prefer them that way over non-mashed (and not overcooked) peas seasoned with salt and pepper
Never tried the snails, maybe one day but I've never had the opportunity