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What constitutes the perfect cooked breakfast?


ISeeRed
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Beans with a full English?  

229 members have voted

  1. 1. Beans with a full English?

    • Aye, bean me up, Scotty.
      124
    • Nay, poke your beans up your bum, one at a time.
      73


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15 minutes ago, Paulie Dangerously said:

My nan lives round the corner and they left their van right outside her house, it was filled with rubbish and stank. He went in to complain and in the process told them they'd left it unlocked. They asked how he knew, and he said that he'd tried all the doors and it was open. They didn't like that and things escalated to the point he was asked to leave and not return. 

 

Edit: we love a boycott us Dangerouslys. We once boycotted a fruit and veg shop because they made a mildly sarcastic comment about the amount of tomatoes my nan was buying. 

My wife might well be descended from the Dangerouslys.

 

She’s a keen boycotter as well. In her case she usually does it without the establishment knowing or because of something she did, not them. 
 

The local garage is currently on the black list because she accidentally drove off without paying and they took appropriate steps to recover their losses.

 
We’ve since moved but she also boycotted the local convenience store for years as she’d congratulated the owners daughter on her pregnancy, only to be informed she wasn’t with child. 
 

The above, in her head, were the fault of the other party, not hers, so she boycotts with the righteousness of the truly wronged. 

 

 

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15 minutes ago, Paulie Dangerously said:

My nan lives round the corner and they left their van right outside her house, it was filled with rubbish and stank. He went in to complain and in the process told them they'd left it unlocked. They asked how he knew, and he said that he'd tried all the doors and it was open. They didn't like that and things escalated to the point he was asked to leave and not return. 

 

Edit: we love a boycott us Dangerouslys. We once boycotted a fruit and veg shop because they made a mildly sarcastic comment about the amount of tomatoes my nan was buying. 

Repped for being banned/boycotting. We’re not related, are we?

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12 hours ago, YorkshireRed said:

Ken Morrison’s contribution to the cause. It is what it is. I had to purchase extra toast which knocks a mark off. The lady who served me it was kindly so mark back on. 
 

Distinctly average but doing the job and still a lot better than anything from the Kurtz stable of breakfasts shaming the nation.

 

5/10. 

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I had the big breakfast at Morrison’s on Saturday while my little girl had scrambled eggs on toast. Practically none of mine other than the others egg was good. The bacon was undercooked, the sausage was cheap shite, the fried bread was horrible (but fried bread is horrible, so I’d have swapped it out if I’d realised it was coming), the tomato was raw, the beans were microwaved but probably the next best bit after the egg.

 

the mushrooms were so bad I left them.

 

the toast was warm bread.

 

it wasn’t expensive, but still gets 2/10 and not worthy of a photo.

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12 hours ago, Colonel Kurtz said:

And they have capitalised quintessentially for no reason. 

There is a reason. In fact, two.

 

1) They're cunts.

2) When they order they can say QBB and the cunts at both ends will know what they're ordering.

 

I feel like I've forgotten anothr reason.....

 

Oh yes.

 

3) They're cunts.

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2 minutes ago, Fluter in Dakota said:

There is a reason. In fact, two.

 

1) They're cunts.

2) When they order they can say QBB and the cunts at both ends will know what they're ordering.

 

I feel like I've forgotten anothr reason.....

 

Oh yes.

 

3) They're cunts.

Words like Quintessential should always be capitalised. They’re what made Britain great. Having said that people believing that words such as quintessential made Britain great is one of the reasons we’re not great anymore. 
 

As you were...  

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12 minutes ago, YorkshireRed said:

Words like Quintessential should always be capitalised. They’re what made Britain great. Having said that people believing that words such as quintessential made Britain great is one of the reasons we’re not great anymore. 
 

As you were...  

Quint is of French origin. As is the word essence. So Britain is made great by taking something French and pretendending it's British?

 

We are talking about Gordon Ramsay so that makes perfect sense. Fucking cunt.

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1 hour ago, Fluter in Dakota said:

So Britain is made great by taking something French and pretendending it's British?

Not always French but much of our perceived ‘greatness’ has/was built on the innovation of others. Nothing particularly wrong with that until these origins are conveniently forgotten in a nationalistic fervour.

 

I was joking by the way, I don’t really think quintessential should be capitalised or that it put the great into Britain. 

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4 minutes ago, Dave D said:

 

I had a toasted sausage sandwich at the weekend with plenty of these two on it- it works. Needs good sausages though  

image.png

Not sure if I'm following this correctly but are you suggesting that you put pepper and jam... JAM... on a sausage sandwich? 

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4 minutes ago, Dougie Do'ins said:

It's not something I'd try but why is it acceptable to put apple sauce on pork or cranberry sauce on turkey  ?

I dont use either, I prefer horseradish and have it with all roasts (Only a little bit) and I've always been anti apple/cranberry sauce but I did have a pork roll at a festival once and it had apple sauce on. It was one of the nicest things I've ever eaten. 

 

Mint sauce is for paedophiles. Why would you ruin a nice bit of lamb with mint fucking sauce? 

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5 minutes ago, Bjornebye said:

I dont use either, I prefer horseradish and have it with all roasts (Only a little bit) and I've always been anti apple/cranberry sauce but I did have a pork roll at a festival once and it had apple sauce on. It was one of the nicest things I've ever eaten. 

 

Mint sauce is for paedophiles. Why would you ruin a nice bit of lamb with mint fucking sauce? 

In mints defence,  at least it's a herb.

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