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your mums sunday roast ....
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What do you remember about your mums sunday lunch. ... she may not be with you anymore .... but....memories never fade ....
Mine was her sage and onion stuffing from scratch ..... I would sit on a stool and watch her chop the fresh sage ..... onion ... bread crumbs and bind with eggs , salt and pepper .... it was magical
What do you remember .... |
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By *iss SJWoman
over a year ago
Hull |
My mums was awful. She boiled the arse out of vegetables so much so that I always thought I didn’t like them. Every mouthful was scrutinised for your reaction and she’d say things like ‘ the potato’s could have done with being in longer’ but if you dared agree you’d be in deep do do and told off for complaining |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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My mum was an excellent cook..
I really miss her sunday roasts but the best bit about Sunday's when i was kid was sunday tea..
Like a hotel afternoon tea but more of it with cakes and trifle too ... |
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By *.gerri.xTV/TS
over a year ago
North west visiting bpool |
We had a Sunday tea too
As long as you ate a couple of dodgy paste buttys first you had your fill off jelly an ice cream, trifle ,cake , biscuits and sweets
Made up for the boiled for hours veg on the Sunday dinner
Her cold water gravy was good though. |
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I'm lucky enough to be staying with my mum this weekend and she made Sunday lunch. The beef was delicious but the broccoli and cauliflower were way overcooked. But when she has gone to all that trouble, I wouldn't ever tell her so.
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My mum's Sunday dinner was pretty good, especially the gravy from scratch, she never quite got the hang of roast potatoes though.
Took hers as the benchmark and strive to make each part at least as good, or better than hers. My roasties are rather nice lol |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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Sunday roasts make me laugh at my parents bickering, it's always my dad's job to carve the meat but every single time he waits until mum is trying to serve and he basically just gets in her way.
The food is always amazing though. I feel sorry for my daughter not having a mum like mine |
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By (user no longer on site)
over a year ago
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My Mum is still with us
She was 80 earlier this week
Her cooking has never been up to much
In fact, she has a black belt in cookery
She can kill a man with one chop
;-) |
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My grandma was a wonderful cook and my mum was pretty good too when she was able to. Between them they taught me and my sisters when we were very young. We were all capable of cooking a full Sunday roast before we left primary school. My nephew was obsessed with food and cooking from the minute he could walk and talk, would stand on a step stool in the kitchen as a toddler learning from my mum and my elder sister. He’s now a chef.
Mum isn’t physically able to cook a Sunday roast now but my twin sister lives with my parents and is mums full time carer. Every week she cooks them a full Sunday roast which is every bit as good as mum and grandma used to make. |
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"What do you remember about your mums sunday lunch. ... she may not be with you anymore .... but....memories never fade ....
Mine was her sage and onion stuffing from scratch ..... I would sit on a stool and watch her chop the fresh sage ..... onion ... bread crumbs and bind with eggs , salt and pepper .... it was magical
What do you remember .... "
I do this still |
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My nana roasties were amazing, I can cook fairly well, but never been able to replicate her spuds, plus remember making gravy from meat juices with gravy browning and flour and veg water.... not bisto |
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"My nana roasties were amazing, I can cook fairly well, but never been able to replicate her spuds, plus remember making gravy from meat juices with gravy browning and flour and veg water.... not bisto"
Proper gravey ..... mmmmhhh |
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"My grandma was a wonderful cook and my mum was pretty good too when she was able to. Between them they taught me and my sisters when we were very young. We were all capable of cooking a full Sunday roast before we left primary school. My nephew was obsessed with food and cooking from the minute he could walk and talk, would stand on a step stool in the kitchen as a toddler learning from my mum and my elder sister. He’s now a chef.
Mum isn’t physically able to cook a Sunday roast now but my twin sister lives with my parents and is mums full time carer. Every week she cooks them a full Sunday roast which is every bit as good as mum and grandma used to make."
Nah......mine's better |
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By *aeganaWoman
over a year ago
birmingham |
Always loved my moms sunday roast she always does a jamaican twist so marinates the chicken overnight in jerk sauce the works then have it with gorgy roast potatoes veg yorkshire puds the works. Had it for dinner sunday and omg im wantin it again now haha. |
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