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Posted

This may seem like an odd topic for a vegetarian to start, but I did use to eat meat and I do also have an almost completely carnivorous (vegetables? what vegetables?) brother!

Saveloys. I live in the South West (just outside of Bristol) and our local chippie does them. My mother has always looked upon them with disdain as some kind of horrendous, red-dyed franken-meat. I must confess, I can no longer remember what they taste like. But as children, they were almost the point of going to the chippie for us kids, and this is a feeling my brother retains to this day.

The trouble is, he lives in Reading now and can't seem to find a chippie that does them! This has led us to ponder a question: Are saveloys a regional thing? Are there towns that haven't heard of them? Are their actually English people who haven't heard of them?! Discuss.

Posted

Yes, I think they may be regional. Certainly I think of them as "southern" and our chippies in the north west don't have them.

However, I'll swap you your saveloy for our rag pudding.

John Hartley

Posted

They may be regional, but not southern. We had 'em in Scotland when I was a kid.

Your mother is right!

...your dancing child with his Chinese suit.

 

"No amount of evidence will ever persuade an idiot"
Mark Twain
 

The Kitchen Scale Manifesto

Posted

I seem to remember a sort of rubberiness about them, suspect they would taste rather naff if i tried one these days!

Interesting to hear about finding them in Scotland though- perhaps they are not that regional then, just dotted around in some places and not it others.

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