English Breakfasts and Afternoon Teas
The quintessential British gastronomic experience!
BREAKFASTS
"To eat well in England you should have breakfast three times a day."
W. Somerset Maugham
Perhaps the most telling evidence of the pervasiveness of American culture throughout the world is the fact that in most hotels outside the UK the traditional English hearty meal that starts the day is known as the American Breakfast.
Personally, I prefer the continental approach, but you will still get a full English Breakfast served to you in most UK hotels. Usually, this will consist of fried bacon and egg, mushrooms, sausage, grilled tomatoes, fried bread and, especially in the north, black pudding (blood sausage). It was also traditional to serve grilled kippers (salty, oak-smoked herrings), but this is more rarely found nowadays. These dishes will be accompanied with white toast, butter and marmalade (Frank Cooper Vintage Oxford or the original Keiller Dundee Marmalade are best) and of course, tea with milk.
If you're in Wales, look out for Laverbread, a dark concoction made from seaweed which is often served with bacon, grilled tomatoes and buttered toast. It has been called an acquired taste.
Warning: Coffee
This may be a good time to warn you about coffee in Great Britain. If you are an afficionado and particularly partial to good italian espresso (see, I'm already showing my prejudices) YOU WILL BE DISAPPOINTED in the UK. If you like the US style of weaker filter coffee you may survive, but for the most part abandon all hope of hotels producing the real deal. Starbucks are creeping in, but apart from a few small cafe outposts in the wilderness waging a lonely campaign that's about as good as it gets.
AFTERNOON TEA
Tea at the Peninsula , Hong Kong
This quintessentially British tradition is alive and thriving throughout the world (the Peninsula Hotel in Hong Kong does it especially well) and nowhere more so than in England, where it began.
The tea is usually black tea from India or Sri Lanka, with milk or perhaps a slice of lemon. Earl Grey is a particular favourite. Politely small sandwiches with the crusts removed, usually filled with cucumber, cream cheese or salmon paste are followed by a selection of freshly-baked cakes and/or scones with butter, jam and clotted cream (a heart-stopping speciality of the west of England). Welsh Tea Bread or Barra Brith is a sweetish bread containing dried mixed fruit.
So. as you see, food in England needn't be so bad!
Here are our other English food pages:
Food in England and Wales: look out for these traditional specialities!
Traditional English Food Specialities: look out for them!
And here are some recipes for English and Welsh food specialities.
I refer to Helen Gaffney's informative website on British cooking several times, it's definitely worth a visit.
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Our other England and Wales pages:
Travel to England - it's much more than a pub-crawl!
When to travel to England and Wales for your UK tour
Tour Routes in England and Wales
Events, calendar, holidays and useful facts for your tour of England and Wales
Food in England and Wales: look out for these traditional specialities!
Traditional English Food Specialities: British favourites
Daily Newspapers in England (Great Britain)
Brief History Timelines of England and the UK
English Weights and Measures and their equivalents
Clothing and Shoe Size equivalents
Book your sightseeing tours or day-trips in the UK online
Book your hotel in the UK online
Hire a Limousine in London, England
Residential telephone directory England, Business too!
More interesting, fast facts about England
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