British Regional Products

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BRITISH

A-Z

REGIONAL products on string...


Cheese The are over 700 named British cheeses produced in the UK with a cheese available for every occasion. Most of the cheese eaten in the UK is made from cows' milk. To make 1 kg of hard cheese it takes around 10 liters of milk. British cheeses comes in many different colours, textures, tastes and appearances. Is a rich source of protein, calcium and vitamin B12, which we all need for growth and development. One of the most recognizable and widely made cheeses in the world is Cheddar. King Henry II declared Cheddar cheese to be the best in Britain! Chedar is named after the Cheddar Gorge caves in Somerset, where the cheese used to be stored to ripen. Some cheeses are stored for one year or longer before they are ready to eat.

Lanark Blue Dunlop

Redesdale

Wensleydale Swaledale Lancashire cheese

Garstang Blue Cheshire cheese

Dovedale Staffordshire cheese

One of the oldest British cheeses is Cheshire. It dates from Roman times and even gets a mention in the Domesday Book. Cheshire is a dense, semi - hard, crumby cheese produced in the English county of Cheshire and neighbouring counties. Cheshire cheese comes in three varieties: red, white and blue.

Stilton Suffolk Gold

Red Leicester Caerphilly

Double Gloucester Somerset Brie

Exmoor Blue Yarg

West Country Cheddar Sussex Charmer

Cornish Blue

Dorset Blue


Pie/Pastrie/Pudding The British tradition of meat pies dates back to the Middle Ages, when an open top pie crust was used as the container for serving the meat and was called a coffyn. Since then, they have been a mainstay of British cooking. Different types of pastry may be used, including the lard - rich pastry of a raised pie. Meat pies generally contain standard fillings such as chicken - and - mushroom, steak and ale, minced beef and onion, lamb, mixed game or meat - and - potato.

Haggis

Cottage pie Baby’s head

Yorkshire pudding Grovles Artisan pork pie Melton Mowbray pork pie

Steak and kidney pudding Cornish pastry


Bread Bread is one of the oldest prepared staple foods. Is usually made from a wheat - flour dough that is cultured with yeast, allowed to rise, and finally baked in an oven. There is a wide variety of traditional breads in Britain. Breads comes in many shapes (bloomer, cob, cottage, moulded tin, moulded twin, split tin, tin or pullman, vienna, etc). In 1960 was developed The Chorleywood process for mass - producing bread. Mass produced sliced white bread brands have been criticised on grounds of poor nutritional value and taste of the loaves produced. However traditional local bread production methods have not changed, thanks to this, such as loafs like Blaa, Bara brith still retain their uniqueness.

Buttery bread Bannock Veda bread

Plain loaf

Soda bread

Stottie cake

Barmbrack Barm cake

Potato bread

Malt loaf

Blaa

Crisp bread Crumpet

Bara brith

Chelsea bun Colston bun Bath bun

Cottage brick Cottage loaf Rye bread


Sausage Brirish sausages are colloquially known as "bangers". There are over 400 varieties of sausages available in Britain today, many named after the places they were originally made. A good British sausage is juicy and plump with a meat content of at least 70%. Sausages can be made from other minced meats (lamb, beef), but they are most often associated with minced pork. They are different varrieties of regional sausages dissenting in taste, texture, filling and appearance. To the most recognizable belong Lincolnshire (rich, meaty pork sausage with a distinctive herby flavour, sage or thyme) and Cumberland (a coarse sausage highly seasoned with black pepper and spices) sausages. Both regions are currently seeking European protection for their sausages.

Lorne

Cumberland

Lincolnshire

Suffolk Gloucester Welsh Oxford

Marylebone


Spirit The most recognizable spirit in Britain is whisky (Scotch) and whiskey (Irish). Whisky is a type of distilled alcoholic beverage made from fermented grain mash. Different grains are used for different varieties, including barley, malted barley, rye, malted rye, wheat, and corn. Whisky is typically aged in wooden casks, made generally of charred white oak. Whisky is a strictly regulated spirit worldwide with many classes and types. The typical unifying characteristics of the different classes and types are the fermentation of grains, distillation, and aging in wooden barrels.

Island Single Malts Speyside Single Malts Blended Scotch whisky

Highland Single Malts

Grain Scotch whisky Single malt Scotch

Lowland Single Malts

Islay whisky

Campbeltown Single Malts

Pot still whiskey

Single grain whiskey

Blended malt whiskey

Manx Spirit Irish single malts

Penderyn London Dry Gin


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