Category: food

Food Safety Week

Food Safety WeekThis week the Food Standards Agency is raising awareness of hygiene in the home with  Food Safety Week (Germ Watch), running from today 6th June to the 12th of June 2011.  Hygiene and cleanliness is high on the agenda for many of our BITE users, quite often we recieve comments regarding the cleanliness, or lack of, in the pubs BITE users visit.  But how much do you really know about food hygiene?  How much do you really abide hygiene advice when you are in your own home?

The Food Standards Agency has released a handy food hygene myths test, click here for the PDF. The FSA material will help you dispel some of the common myths surrounding food hygiene and teach us all a few things we might not yet know about safe food preparation. 

BBC Health reports that there are up to 9 million cases of gastroenteritis each year in the UK, that’s around 14 percent of the country’s population.  Many of us may feel that we are food conscious, but there’s always going to more that we can all do, especially this week, if you find any of  these basic food hygiene facts interesting, remember to spread the word and not the germs…

Food hygiene did you know?

1. Although the kitchen sink contains 100,000 times more germs than a bathroom or lavatory, most people still think of the toilet as the most contaminated part of the house. (Source NHS Choices website.)

2. Bacteria can grow and divide every 20 minutes. One single bacterium can multiply into more than eight million cells in less than 24 hours. (Source NHS Choices website.)

3. There are more germs on a computer keyboard than there are on your toilet. (Hygieneic Solutions UK website.)

4. Despite the pressure you may feel to rid your life of bacteria right now, a number of common bacteria (microflora) are essential in our diet and even help prevent harmful bacteria from spreading, bacteria form the foundation of life itself and first step in most food chains, they aren’t about to go away any time soon… (Source Buzzle website.)

5. The 5 second rule, is a myth, dropping food onto your floor and retrieving it within 5 seconds, harmful bacteria will make the leap to your food item in less than 5 seconds.  (Source Suffolk Coastal website.)

If you’ve got some good hygiene tips to use around the home and would like to share them with other BITE users, you can leave your thoughts in our comments section below or join in the conversation on our Facebook page.

 


British Sandwich Week

British Sandwich WeekIt’s British Sandwich Week, 16th – 21st May! Earlier this month we asked our readers to comment on their Favourite Pub Snack, it was no surprise to hear that crisps and pork scratchings came out on top,  what was surprising was the lack of votes for “sandwiches”… These bastions of snack were unrepresented in our poll, even though there are an estimated 1.8 billion sandwiches sold in the UK each year, in a market worth almost £3 billion annually.
So, let’s get out there and raise our sandwiches high, and show some support for Great British Sandwich Week 2011!

You may have heard the  legend that John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich asked his valet to bring him meat tucked into two pieces of bread so that he could continue to play cribbage without getting his cards greasy (hat tip to BITE user Alan Williams).  People saw what the Earl was eating, and they requested “I’ll have the same as Sandwich” the phrase was whittled down and forged into the name we know today. While this story is true, the Earl of Sandwich is not credited with the invention of the ‘sandwich’.  The British have been eating meat and cheeses with bread since the stone age.  During medieval times the first instances of dining plates were made from large pieces of rough, sometimes stale bread cut into thick slabs called ‘trenchers’. Food was served on the trencher and at the end of the meal – either consumed by the diner, or more popularly given to a family dog or a local beggar.

The sandwich remained in the realms of aristocracy as a fancy food until the industrial revolution in the 19th Century, where it was taken up by the working class as a cheap portable meal for many workers.  From then onwards it’s place on the British menu was forever concrete. Despite attempts to change it’s design with foreign influence the basic sandwich has long since comprised of two pieces of bread plus a filling or fillings, square cut or triangle cut.  Cheese has been the historic British favourite filling, until recently where chicken is currently the nations favourite sandwich filling.

Did you know?
It was the Fool’s Gold Loaf sandwich that killed Elvis.  A single warmed loaf of bread, sliced, part hollowed, and filled with one jar of creamy fried peanut butter, one jar of grape jelly, and a pound of bacon, this calorific monster of a sandwich of course – supposedly attributed to ‘the Kings’ heart failure.
The sandwich that killed R-and-B singer Luther Vandross,  known as ‘the Luther’ is doughnut shaped brioche cut in half with two types of fried chicken, bacon, buttermilk and pecan nuts.  It’s a very popular sandwich in America too, despite being an artery clogging masterpiece.
“The Millionaire’s Cheese Sarnie” created in Britain, by Michelin chef Martin Blunos, as the name suggests, is the world’s most expensive sandwich you can buy.  Made from sourdough bread and cheese blended with expensive white truffles, dressed with 100 year old balsamic vinegar and gold leaf it costs around £100 per sandwich, it’s not much bigger than a regular sandwich by the way!
Golden Palace Casino purchased American singer Britney Spears half eaten egg salad sandwich from internet auction site ebay.com for $500 (£308) in 2009, to add to their collection of bizarre memorabilia which also includes the grilled cheese sandwich with the effigy of the Virgin Mary toasted into it – which was purchased for $28000 (£17280) in 2004.
The worlds longest sandwich measured 634.50 m (2,081 ft), created in Britain by Italian Pietro Catucci in 2004.

Do you know of a pub sandwich that is worth mentioning? Have you yourself created a master chef worthy sandwich that you have been keeping secret until now?  Have you ever looked across the pub table and thought “I want that sandwich!” Do let us know on our Facebook page, or in our comments section below – and thanks for all your input, we do read everything!


Pub snacks, which is your favourite?

favourite pub snacksThere’s been a symbiosis with pubs and peanuts as far back as we can remember, introduced into pubs initially as a method to get people to drink more by increasing their salt intake, peanuts became a corner stone snack for pub goers even surviving the urban legend that all communal bar-nuts have traces of other peoples piss on them.

Crisps too have made  a stoic appearance behind bars for decades show casing a rainbow of flavours but ultimately falling back to basics, salt and vinegar, cheese and onion, ready salted.  And lets not ignore the evil that is pork scratching’s, some people will point and stare but there is still a large contingent of pork scratching lovers out there munching through tonnes of fried pig skin each year.

Portions of chips are the ideal sharing platter for you and your friends if you can avoid the ‘ketchup vs. mayonnaise’ feud, and if you’ve just been on a hike you’ll most likely want to recharge your energy with something less salty or calorific and reach for a hearty pub sandwich.  Worth a mention is pizza, creeping into just a few pubs up and down the country, on-site pizzerias have been a real money spinner for some pubs… we’ll ignore fancy coffees and muffins – they simply don’t appear on our snack radar.

So, when you’re at that point in your pub excursion that you need something, not sure what… Not hungry enough for a full on meal, but need a snack, what do you reach for?

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Scotch eggs, Pepperami, onion rings, jellied eels, etc… didn’t make the list, but do you love them in your pub? Tell us how outraged you are in our comments section below!

 

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How often do you eat out in pubs?

How often do you eat out in Pubs?Today’s blog post is about food. Since the smoking ban came into effect in the UK in 2007 a lot of pubs have had to adapt. Some worked, some closed. For some people it was a shame, for others it was brilliant news. Either way, a lot has changed in pubs over the last few years. It’s rare these days to find ‘wet led’ (drinks only) pubs apart from in places like Central London – who are catering purely for the workers, these pubs are often shut weekends when their regular patrons are back at home out of the city.

So, our question is – how often do you eat in a pub? Have you replaced going to restaurants to eat in pubs instead? We all know that the quality of food can differ vastly from one pub to a next. Some are obvious microwave style setups, whereas others have full on kitchens rivalling some of the best restaurants. Do you only eat in a pub if it’s a pub lunch or sunday dinner? Or would you go for a evening meal to a pub and make a night of it?

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