I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day.
-
@CiaraNi When googling it I discovered that the main thing people call “fish tea” is a Caribbean fish soup.
@Nickiquote I did not know that. Two fish teas, each at the opposite extremity of the spice spectrum. Unless vinegar counts, which might push the chipper-chips chip-butty version a little farther in from the edge.
-
@swisslet @sdarlington We can’t start talking about scraps, it’ll break the internet.
@Nickiquote @sdarlington let’s do it!
-
Had a roommate from Edinburgh in San Francisco who made chip buttys. Also, salad sandwiches, which I'd never heard of, either

-
Just as an aside, in Scotland when you sit in at a chip shop you can order a “fish tea”. This is fish, chips, a pot of tea and buttered bread, essentially inviting you to make chip butties.
What the Hell is Fish Tea?
Followers will know of our penchant for Fish and Chips, well, here we give you, the savvy traveller, the correct patois for your visi...
(outlandish-spirits.blogspot.com)
@Nickiquote Can you guess where the fish goes?
Me: Ooh, ooh, I know! It goes...
That's right. Fish goes on the side.
Me: ...
And where do the chips go?
Me: ... on the ...?
You guessed it. Chips go on the bun.
Me:

-
️ A friend from Christchurch also ate them. -
I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day. One, to the astonishment of the other, said she had never had a chip butty.
Being a true man of the world, I have had many chip butties in my time.
FYI, if needed, a chip butty is chips (ie french fries, NOT crisps) sandwiched between bread slices or in a bap/bun. Arguably it should be buttered, but we will ignore that for the purposes of the following poll:
Q. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A CHIP BUTTY?
@Nickiquote
Never heard of it, I think. But last summer, I saw someone eating that in France at a roadside restaurant / gas station. -
@Knitronomicon @Nickiquote
1) sugar isn't starch even though it started life as starch.Chemically starch + heat (or other process) -> sugar.
Starch and sugar taste differently and stimulate different taste buds.
2) closest I've got to sugar or golden syrup or condensed milk sandwiches was '"fairy bread"
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fairy_breadI tried it but even as a child it wasn't my thing.
I don't like sugar or jam with peanut butter either.
Maybe I'm in a minority and it you love all thise foods, go you! I don't. Maybe my taste buds are different?
-
I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day. One, to the astonishment of the other, said she had never had a chip butty.
Being a true man of the world, I have had many chip butties in my time.
FYI, if needed, a chip butty is chips (ie french fries, NOT crisps) sandwiched between bread slices or in a bap/bun. Arguably it should be buttered, but we will ignore that for the purposes of the following poll:
Q. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A CHIP BUTTY?
@Nickiquote
I don't think that a Pomm-#döner qualifies, as it does include meat… -
@Nickiquote as a 56yr old Scotsman living in exile in London I've had my fair share of chip butties and fish teas.
Since marriage moved me to Englandshire they've been few and far between.
As an aside I haven't had butteries (Aberdeenshire rolls or "rowies") in over a decade either. I miss those too.
@PeteLittle miss those too. Even the shitty ones in Glasgow Tesco. Some similar things here but more on the sweet side than the savoury end of flavours.
-
I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day. One, to the astonishment of the other, said she had never had a chip butty.
Being a true man of the world, I have had many chip butties in my time.
FYI, if needed, a chip butty is chips (ie french fries, NOT crisps) sandwiched between bread slices or in a bap/bun. Arguably it should be buttered, but we will ignore that for the purposes of the following poll:
Q. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A CHIP BUTTY?
@Nickiquote only a fool makes a chip butty with french fries, big thick chips or gtfo
-
I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day. One, to the astonishment of the other, said she had never had a chip butty.
Being a true man of the world, I have had many chip butties in my time.
FYI, if needed, a chip butty is chips (ie french fries, NOT crisps) sandwiched between bread slices or in a bap/bun. Arguably it should be buttered, but we will ignore that for the purposes of the following poll:
Q. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A CHIP BUTTY?
@Nickiquote no, but Döner Kebap with French fries. They call it a ”Döner Américain"
-
@bodluricon @Nickiquote
North Manchester: muffins.
South Manchester: barm cakes
Probably the Mercia/Northumbria border.
Boundary a bit blurred these days.@markhburton @Nickiquote
For those interested ... I did a spot of searching last night and there is an unexpected amount of research on who calls a "bun" what and where across the UK... Including regional distribution maps. People have put an impressive amount of work in to this...https://stephenliddell.co.uk/2022/08/08/different-words-for-a-bread-roll-across-the-u-k/
https://yougov.com/en-gb/articles/21204-cobs-buns-baps-or-barm-cakes-what-do-people-call-b
https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/z3rpjfr
Apologies if BBC articles are geo-blocked
-
@Nickiquote The key to a good chip barm is mushy peas.
@TMangnall @Nickiquote Bonus Points for the use of the correct terminology: Barm.

-
@Verovitry @Nickiquote
And those are real chips, not silly 'French fries'!@markhburton @Nickiquote of course. This is Belgium!
-
I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day. One, to the astonishment of the other, said she had never had a chip butty.
Being a true man of the world, I have had many chip butties in my time.
FYI, if needed, a chip butty is chips (ie french fries, NOT crisps) sandwiched between bread slices or in a bap/bun. Arguably it should be buttered, but we will ignore that for the purposes of the following poll:
Q. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A CHIP BUTTY?
@Nickiquote
Without wishing to take this off on another tack, ..but I will, it may be worth mentioning the two aspects of the "butty". It is usually a "*something fried* butty". Where *something fried* is usually one (or more) of:
️ Chips : bulky, thick cut sticks of twice fried potato (French fries outside of places that call a chip a chip but not to be confused with the string thin waif like wisps of spud sold in fast food restaurants or on the continent)
1/2 -
@Nickiquote
Without wishing to take this off on another tack, ..but I will, it may be worth mentioning the two aspects of the "butty". It is usually a "*something fried* butty". Where *something fried* is usually one (or more) of:
️ Chips : bulky, thick cut sticks of twice fried potato (French fries outside of places that call a chip a chip but not to be confused with the string thin waif like wisps of spud sold in fast food restaurants or on the continent)
1/2@Nickiquote
️Bacon : Rashers of greasy, or crisp fried thinly sliced pig.
️Sausage : the traditional "banger"
️Fried Egg : a fried egg.
EDIT: missed the second element!
The "Butty" is the bread, be it sliced bread or roll, with a "bread grease" (butter, marge, lard, dripping or other similar bread lube) applied thickly so it will melt and run down your fingers and chin (the filings all being hot from the pan / frier).
Giving you:
️Chip butty
️Bacon butty
️Sausage butty
️Egg butty
2/2 -
@markhburton @Nickiquote
For those interested ... I did a spot of searching last night and there is an unexpected amount of research on who calls a "bun" what and where across the UK... Including regional distribution maps. People have put an impressive amount of work in to this...https://stephenliddell.co.uk/2022/08/08/different-words-for-a-bread-roll-across-the-u-k/
https://yougov.com/en-gb/articles/21204-cobs-buns-baps-or-barm-cakes-what-do-people-call-b
https://www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/articles/z3rpjfr
Apologies if BBC articles are geo-blocked
@bodluricon I’m from Nottinghamshire so it’s always been a cob for me. I used to work for a couple from Barnsley who used teacake (it was a pub that sold cobs at lunchtime)
We challenged them of course and asked what they called an actual tea cake (a sweet roll with dried fruit in, similar to a hot cross bun without the cross), they insisted, “That’s a teacake with currants in”
We agreed to differ but only ever sold cobs

-
I can attest that spreading the bread with olive oil works just as well. Indeed, I might ask: why mess about with a hit-and-miss method of heating butter to reproduce the rheology of olive oil when you could just use olive oil in the first place?
-
I was involuntarily listening to two old ladies talking loudly to each other the other day. One, to the astonishment of the other, said she had never had a chip butty.
Being a true man of the world, I have had many chip butties in my time.
FYI, if needed, a chip butty is chips (ie french fries, NOT crisps) sandwiched between bread slices or in a bap/bun. Arguably it should be buttered, but we will ignore that for the purposes of the following poll:
Q. HAVE YOU EVER EATEN A CHIP BUTTY?
@Nickiquote What are the counties representing
1. Where I and from?
2. Where I live?
3. Where I ate said butty (if I ate one)?FWIW I have lived significant parts of my life in multiple countries and also have more than one nationality.
-
Respectfully I beg to differ.
In t' north of England, commonly, it can mean either.