Jump to content

Recommended Posts

There's a self imposed rule of thumb here at our house


If you can make it, then eat it. That is fresh (and often simple) food. However, cooking has gone from food preparation to food assembly. And last night I crossed the line, yeah I did and then again today in Sainsbury's


My transgression?


Ready chopped onions, in a pot. Just pull the lid off and whack them in a pan, like fuck what was I thinking before, with all that peeling, chopping and general time heavy prep


And further, with courgette and butternut squash 'pasta' to make me wonder. Where have you been all my life!


I feel liberated and wonder how I'm going to spend all this saved time


*punches air*

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/123894-crossing-the-line/
Share on other sites

I was the same because the vegetarians in my house eat all that processed veggie food- even pink stuff that looks like bacon...how is that vegetarian? I use a pressure cooker for beans cheap meat etc I used to cook all these things from scratch but then about 5 years ago I discovered frozen chopped onions, peppers and mushrooms...instant stir fry, egg fried rice (after I discovered microwaveable brown rice)...takes 5 minutes instead of half an hour.....an extra 25 minutes for marking and prep....

OK if they're frozen but anything else will be losing nutritional value very quickly and will have stuff added to stop it degrading, so I avoid those. I tried the butternut squash noodles and there's definitely something added that smells unnatural.


Pink bacon? Processed veggie food is still processed food... I know several veggie people who think they're healthy but you only have to look at their skin or their shape to see they're eating cr@p.

Oh Jezs seabag


You really have crossed that line, I had you pegged down as a foodie and well into the latest food trends but your confession has just trashed and tarnished your foodie credentials!!!


FFS shopping in Sainsburys, OMG I would never ever have thought it was possible!

When I was younger I tried frozen mashed potatoes. It was truly horrible - tasteless beige pellets. Never again.

I'd rather have Smash potatoes (showing my age here!!)


The only ready-chopped convenience thing I'd LOVE to see more widely are coconut pieces for making south indian dishes.

In my late teens, Smash was the perfect food to mop up an evening's drink before falling into bed. Bacon and onion flavours were particularly good, topped with butter and a dollop of ketchup.


That was before my conversion to puritanism, obviously.

numbers Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------


> The only ready-chopped convenience thing I'd LOVE

> to see more widely are coconut pieces for making

> south indian dishes.


Sainsbury's do 'em, a quid for a small punnet - you need at least a couple for a decent sized dish.

Hold up now, I totes draw the line at frozen stir fry


I mean at least the things I buy are fresh and chopped or sliced into strips, but blasted in a freezer or dehydrated is just too far


Bloody hell, get a grip please people


We're some way off advocating a Rustlers Burger and microchips for dinner



And honestly who cooks rice from scratch any more?

I get the convenience of stuff being sliced already and understand that prep can be a hassle.

Maybe it's what I cook (mainly curries, Indian subcontinent fare) which makes it fairly quick but I never need to spend more than 15mins total in prep, even when making 4x curries at same time like I did last Friday. It's IMO time well spent. It can be relaxing to block other stuff out and concentrate on your food (incl. prep) for a short while - heaven knows there's enough other shite distracting us all the time.

To be able to do something as straightforward and useful as slice some veg and grind a few hard spices down is a welcome intermission.

Like I say, I get the convenience argument, but I feel robbed if I don't have time for fundamentals - perhaps I enjoy cooking too much so it's not such a bind.

You can also help your prep by doing stuff in front when you have spare time, such as shredding bulk amounts of ginger / garlic etc. to freeze, blending tomatoes/ginger/chillis (or whatever combo you'll need) for curry purees. Whatever you cook there may be ways to lighten the prep way in advance. This may sound terribly organised, but I'm actually very dissorganised which is why I do the above.

Horses for courses tho innits.

Yes, ready chopped onion is a bit far. Just chop a load next time, and freeze them yourself. Much more sustainable than the carbon footprint and wastage from the supermarket's mechanically chopped batches.


Ready chopped garlic and chilli on the other hand: gone are the days of accidentally rubbing your eye and regretting it for the rest of the day!

I've got a rice steamer , which is really easy - although the microwave packets of rice are even easier (and I buy those so my daughter can make rice for herself after school)..



What's wrong with frozen veg? I thought it was fine - we've always frozen it.....

malumbu Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I was in Sri Lanka donkeys years ago. Some of the

> locals could cut up a mango so you could have a

> proper feast rather than just slithers.


I'm no whizz in the kitchen, but... isn't cubing a mango quite a simple operation?

peckham_ryu Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------


> Ready chopped garlic and chilli on the other hand:

> gone are the days of accidentally rubbing your eye

> and regretting it for the rest of the day!



Worse still working with chilli then removing contact lenses (ouch) only to rediscover the pain the next day when putting the lenses back in (double ouch)

I rarely get home from work much before 7:45pm, anything which makes cooking a bit quicker has to be a good thing! But to be honest I usually bypass the whole "ready chopped onion" or "minced garlic/chilli/ginger" dilemma and go straight to "M&S curry" or "takeaway".


I actually had a couple of days off work recently, and decided I wanted to make a proper curry from scratch one afternoon. Only to remember that my wife recently threw out my big bag of spices, because it hadn't been touched in over two years. So I had to settle for a ready-made paste... it was less than satisfactory.

Frozen ready mixed stir fry is naff, we all know that


Whereas ready chopped onion *fresh is fine


Minced garlic & ginger doesn't taste good out of a jar


Much as Dolmio doesn't taste good


But ready made pesto is fine



Please keep up, next thread "Steak W4nk" where we can discuss the merits of dry aged beef vs Findus Steakhouse thingy's

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Having  current and relevant experience of both Charter North and Charter East with regards to their conduct towards SEN pupils and their families, I would say that their conduct and behaviour is wholly lacking in understanding as well as making no effort to make reasonable adjustments for the SEN pupil as legally required under Equality Act 2010. Furthermore, I believe that their behaviour is wholly illegal. According to data from Ambitious About Autism, unfortunately that is not uncommon We have separately requested legal advice as to whether or not the specific conduct of the school and certain teachers constitutes a criminal offence under the Children and Young Persons Act 1933 or other legislation. These links have some very good materials to assist parents: https://www.ambitiousaboutautism.org.uk https://www.ambitiousaboutautism.org.uk/understanding-autism/education/exclusions-know-your-rights https://www.ipsea.org.uk https://sossen.org.uk   Also, this link specifically for girls with autism as this tends to be diagnosed at a much later stage than boys and requires different support and reasonable adjustments that the neither of the policies nor behaviours of Charter East or Charter North reflect. https://autisticgirlsnetwork.org   Helen Hayes MP for Dulwich & West Norwood and whose constituency includes Charter North is Chair of the Education Committee at the Houses of Parliament They published this report on the SEND crisis on 18 Sept 2025 https://committees.parliament.uk/work/8684/solving-the-send-crisis/   Ellie Reeves (Rachel Reeves’ sister and formerly Chair of the Labour Party) is the MP for Lewisham West and East Dulwich - the constituency under which Charter East falls I would urge any parents who are concerned about their children, whether SEN or not, who attend Charter North or Charter East to write to your MP canvassing their support and requesting that they write to their respective school on this subject, referencing this report of the Education Committee and the failures of Charter East and Charter North with regards to SEN, their illegal behaviour and soliciting a plan of action from them to immediately stop such behaviour and support SEN pupils with reasonable adjustments as required under the Equality Act 2010. Even if your child is not SEN, the school implementing the correct and legally required procedures materially improves the school environment for all pupils, teachers and non-teaching staff. Often the reasonable adjustments can actually be relatively minor but have a very material benefit. In our experience, there have been one or two teachers who have shown this with very positive results; however, this is the opposite of the institutional approach of both schools which is wholly negative, unsupportive and often illegal. In addition to EHCPs, there is also huge pressure at CAMHS and insufficient resource to support all cases and meet demand.  Even if families and their child are lucky to get access to it, there remains very long wait lists to access treatment.  The same is true in the private sector. A proactive and practical, common sense approach to SEN in this manner by Charter North and Charter East would also help to reduce pressure on CAMHS The latest tragedy last week at Charter North means that this is more pressing than ever.    
    • Thought I'd add a comment as sadly there are now too many primary schools for the number of children in this area... St Anthony's is a wonderful school and my 2 sons were extremely happy throughout the time they were there. They have some open days for reception and  nursery in Nov I believe and welcome children and families of all faiths and backgrounds. It has lovely staff and I cannot recommend it more highly!
    • Anyone has lavender buds they don’t want/that I could harvest/cut and use? Ideally in Peckham/ED goose green area.  Thanks in advance!
    • The tissues would absorb secretions from your nose.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...