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Otta Wrote:

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

> aquarius moon Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > This thread could provide amazing ideas.

> >

> > My cheese on toast has always been just CHEESE

> ON

> > TOAST!

>

>

> I'm with you on this one. Why must EVERYTHING be

> fancied up these days?

>

> If I want cheese and other ingredients on toast

> I'll ask for it, but to me cheese on toast means

> cheese on toast with maybe a drop of sauce or

> sprinkle of seasoning.

>

>

> I'm a red Leicester fan.


Seasoning...

Sauce...

Just put baked beans on top.

Haha Jah and Seabag you read my mind!


Love all the suggestions. Actually Red Leicester is a great choice I got into habit of making it chilli cheese on toast though, so colourful, so hot.


But bog standard cheese on toast is great. Glad no-one mentioned bacon. Or kale.


Grilled cheese sandwich in the states is a fried in butter cheese and not cheese on toast, grilled. Weird eh.

I find myself making this once in a blue moon, when the tide of my creative juices are out


Take a good oblong loaf and slice along the lenght, and then again, crating an oblong slab


Light a good fire of Oak and beech, then lightly toast the bread one side, then the other


Retire to a mirrored hall, light the candles and place the toasted bread upon a well upholstered chair


Dress youself in a gray fur cotume, then place the many cheeses of the world upon a banqueting table, in a block pattern Piet Mondrian style


Nibble the toast like a rat, and using a mallet, randomly whack a cheese. Take the crumb of the whacked cheese and nibble in tandem with the toast


It's delicious



Ps. If i'm in a more sureal mood, then I'll go for Brie and other soft cheese

Did I not mention the floor was made of ice ?


I skate round after, whacking the midget on the head. With each whack, he fires a fermented Muscat grape from his mouth into mine


Maybe that's where you confuse his "forrwars yet backwards" speak Otta?


I'm also considering a giant lawn made from Cheese Straws, and a golden mower that cuts it. As it rotates past me, im laying on a sunbed made out of a giant sourdough baguette


A lens tied to a girrafe catches the sun, thus toasting my bread bed


The mower passes me on its ever tighter arc, and 'clippings' of the cheese straw lawn rain down upon me


I roll face down and gorge myself on this delightful snack

http://static0.bornrichimages.com/wp-content/uploads/s3/images/2006/04/15/ewqewwqerwew.jpg


A recent auction on the eBay is going to stun you, where Tom Bridge from Newburgh, Lancashire is going to put up his renovated cheese toast, costing ?345 a slice for sale.

I know I am going to stop every time I bite into my slice of Cheese toast. But if you think of the contents you would know why Bridge tagged a slice at such a high - L'Aquila White Umbrian truffles, worth ?1,400 per kilo, and Matsutake Chinese mushrooms, at ?250 per lb.

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http://most-expensive.com/wp-content/uploads/2010/12/expensive-cheese-toast1.jpg


Bridge?s Welsh Rarebit is a slice of Warburtons Toastie bread topped with creamy Lancashire cheese, chosen for its unique melting consistency, as well as L?Aquila white Umbrian truffles and Matsutake Chinese mushrooms. Considering the high price of both the truffles and the mushrooms, the dish cost a grand total of £345 (about US $609 at the time) to create.


http://most-expensive.com/cheese-on-toast

Jeremy Wrote:

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> Apologies for the change in subject, but if you're

> ever in Hong Kong, you need to sample the local

> version of French Toast. Sandwiched together with

> a peanut butter filling, and then deep fried. Then

> topped with a slab of butter and golden syrup.


Didn't that kill Elvis?

Jeremy Wrote:

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

> Apologies for the change in subject, but if you're

> ever in Hong Kong, you need to sample the local

> version of French Toast. Sandwiched together with

> a peanut butter filling, and then deep fried. Then

> topped with a slab of butter and golden syrup.


Jeremy that sounds absolutely horrendous!


In fact, I think it tops the Norfolk pub that 'ironically' deep fries sandwiches in batter.

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