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- DavebytheSea
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 10:33 am
- Real Name: David Eastburn
- Location: Nr Falmouth, Cornwall
- Richard Ruck
- Button Grecian
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- Joined: Wed Feb 02, 2005 12:08 pm
- Real Name: Richard Ruck
- Location: Horsham
- DavebytheSea
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 2036
- Joined: Tue Nov 23, 2004 10:33 am
- Real Name: David Eastburn
- Location: Nr Falmouth, Cornwall
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- Button Grecian
- Posts: 1287
- Joined: Mon Feb 07, 2005 1:55 pm
- Real Name: Barbara Borgars
- Location: close de Saffend
Absolute rubbish ! May I remind you that there used to be a wall to keep you lot out ? Everyone knows ( well, they do in Devon, anyway) that the Cornish are ( or were.... let's protect PCism here) a wild, heathen bunch...vurriners, the lot o'em!DavebytheSea wrote:Ah! but who makes the Buckfast scrumpy? Why the monks of course! .... and who Christianised the heathen Devonians? Why the Cornish saints and evangelists who alone kept the flame of Christianity burning when you Devonians meekly succumbed to the barbarian English. The art of cider making was, of course, carried across the Tamar when the heathen there were converted - indeed is it not the case that Buck the Bad (after whose conversion the abbey was named) was baptised in Cornish cider by none other than Saint Carumpus himself - the doyen of early Cornish cider makers?
Hertford - 5s/2s - 63-70
" I wish I were what I was when I wanted to be what I am now..."
" I wish I were what I was when I wanted to be what I am now..."
- englishangel
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 6956
- Joined: Mon Feb 07, 2005 12:22 pm
- Real Name: Mary Faulkner (Vincett)
- Location: Amersham, Buckinghamshire
Never been to Cornwall, but I have been to brittany which I understand has a lot in common, right doewn to the similar flag!
Who cares where the cider comes from? I don't. though my parents live right across fromthe Merrydown factory, now sadly closed.
Who cares where the cider comes from? I don't. though my parents live right across fromthe Merrydown factory, now sadly closed.
"If a man speaks, and there isn't a woman to hear him, is he still wrong?"
- marty
- Grecian
- Posts: 838
- Joined: Tue Jan 18, 2005 1:29 pm
- Real Name: Marty E
- Location: Buckinghamshire
Now, now children - you'll all go and sit in the naughty chair if you don't start behaving yourselves. As someone who was born in Cornwall (Treliske Hospital, Truro) and has lived both there and in Devon, and whose parents now live in Somerset I still don't know which county can lay claim to inventing scrumpy. None of you have mentioned the greatest Cornish invention of all time - the pasty!!! At CH they used to force-feed us alleged pasties but they were awful, tastless bits of pastry with horrid brown lumps masquerading as meat - and, horror of horror - carrots!! You don't put carrots in a pasty - only swede, onion and potato. This most heinous of culinary crimes was then compounded by the fact that they put the crust on top and not at the side...don't get me started on THAT!!!
My therapist says I have a preoccupation with vengeance. We’ll see about that.
- englishangel
- Forum Moderator
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- Joined: Mon Feb 07, 2005 12:22 pm
- Real Name: Mary Faulkner (Vincett)
- Location: Amersham, Buckinghamshire
- J.R.
- Forum Moderator
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- Joined: Wed Mar 09, 2005 4:53 pm
- Real Name: John Rutley
- Location: Dorking, Surrey
jhopgood wrote:Did you know, said he, in the style of Michael Caine, that there is a stone on the hill just out Guildford, where I take the dog for a walk, commemorating the Cornish march of 1497? It's in two languages, at least I assume one of them is a language.
Must have taken place before the wall was built.
Whereabouts in Guildford is that, John ??
John Rutley. Prep B & Coleridge B. 1958-1963.
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- Button Grecian
- Posts: 1287
- Joined: Mon Feb 07, 2005 1:55 pm
- Real Name: Barbara Borgars
- Location: close de Saffend
Ahh - I am with you on that - although a devonian, I was also raised on the true tiddy oggie - lovely grub, and was horrified by the montrosity we also received at Hertford under the intitulé " cornish pasty"...marty wrote:Now, now children - you'll all go and sit in the naughty chair if you don't start behaving yourselves. As someone who was born in Cornwall (Treliske Hospital, Truro) and has lived both there and in Devon, and whose parents now live in Somerset I still don't know which county can lay claim to inventing scrumpy. None of you have mentioned the greatest Cornish invention of all time - the pasty!!! At CH they used to force-feed us alleged pasties but they were awful, tastless bits of pastry with horrid brown lumps masquerading as meat - and, horror of horror - carrots!! You don't put carrots in a pasty - only swede, onion and potato. This most heinous of culinary crimes was then compounded by the fact that they put the crust on top and not at the side...don't get me started on THAT!!!
On the same subject of "real" food - when I was a little girl in Topsham, there was a lovely old man who used to make his own ice-cream with devonshire clotted cream, served with a dribble of strawberry coulis on it ... XXX years on, I can still taste it !
Hertford - 5s/2s - 63-70
" I wish I were what I was when I wanted to be what I am now..."
" I wish I were what I was when I wanted to be what I am now..."
- Richard Ruck
- Button Grecian
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- Joined: Wed Feb 02, 2005 12:08 pm
- Real Name: Richard Ruck
- Location: Horsham
Bet it wasn't called 'coulis' then, though!Euterpe13 wrote: On the same subject of "real" food - when I was a little girl in Topsham, there was a lovely old man who used to make his own ice-cream with devonshire clotted cream, served with a dribble of strawberry coulis on it ... XXX years on, I can still taste it !
Ba.A / Mid. B 1972 - 1978
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
Thee's got'n where thee cassn't back'n, hassn't?
- Great Plum
- Button Grecian
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- Real Name: Matt Holdsworth
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- jhopgood
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- Real Name: John Hopgood
- Location: Benimeli, Alicante
Just of the Hog's Back coming out of Guildford.J.R. wrote:jhopgood wrote:Did you know, said he, in the style of Michael Caine, that there is a stone on the hill just out Guildford, where I take the dog for a walk, commemorating the Cornish march of 1497? It's in two languages, at least I assume one of them is a language.
Must have taken place before the wall was built.
Whereabouts in Guildford is that, John ??
If you leave Guildford on the A31 and go up the hill, there is a road to the left called Wodeland. A hundred yards in on the right is an opening to the grassy hill (by the allotments) and the stone is in the top right hand corner.
Or go up a road called the Mount, past the cemetry and continue a hundred yards along the lane and go right, into the field. The stone is at that corner.
Apparently there is an Anglo Saxon graveyard in the cemetry, but I couldn't get the dog over the wall to have a look.
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- Deputy Grecian
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- Real Name: No really, it is Hendrik.
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It really wasn't my intention to start World War Three over a glass of cider...
To save face, and a lot of miles for most of us, how about all those of you who think that you were born in the home of 'real' cider bring an oak of it with you for all the rest of us to judge impartially. costs would be shared among drinkers, naturally.
To save face, and a lot of miles for most of us, how about all those of you who think that you were born in the home of 'real' cider bring an oak of it with you for all the rest of us to judge impartially. costs would be shared among drinkers, naturally.