Curly99 2 Posted March 14, 2012 Report Share Posted March 14, 2012 just found this site after doing a search for Colwick cheese...anyway hello all Nottingham born and bred... currently residing in West Bridgford. Curly Quote Link to post Share on other sites
mick2me 3,033 Posted March 14, 2012 Report Share Posted March 14, 2012 Welcome Curly Quote Link to post Share on other sites
poohbear 1,360 Posted March 14, 2012 Report Share Posted March 14, 2012 EEC directive 4719B page3 paragraph 2 Find products that have been made in small villages and hamlets for centuries,and find a reason to ban them.Health and Safety is the usual route,don't be put off that nobody has ever been made ill using the product. A three hundred page report in Eurospeak will be usually be sufficiently confusing to bring about the demise of the product. Mornin' Curly..... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted March 14, 2012 Report Share Posted March 14, 2012 Welcome Curly. Colwick cheese for tea on a Saturday afternoon back in the 50/60's; LOVELY. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
piggy and babs 544 Posted March 14, 2012 Report Share Posted March 14, 2012 wellcome curly never liked it but mum always hadsome in at the weekend surposed to have been orrignally made colwick farm mile end rd. babs Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted March 15, 2012 Report Share Posted March 15, 2012 Hi Babs: 'Colwick Farm, Mile End Road'; I'm remembering this address written on the thin paper disc on the top of each individual, circular Colwick cheese. Colwick cheese, delicious with thinly sliced cucumber and a little bit of salt. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
piggy and babs 544 Posted March 15, 2012 Report Share Posted March 15, 2012 MY MUM SAID THAT AS A LITTLE GIRL YOU COULD ONLY GET COLWICK CHESE FROM THE FARM AND NOT IN THE SHOPS AND SHE WOULD WALK WITH HER DAD TO GO AND FETCH IT ON A SATURDAY OR SUNDAY YOU HAD TO TAKE YOUR OWN DISH WITH YOU THIS WOULD HAVE BEEN IN THE 1920S. THE FARM WAS OR AT LEAST PART OF IT WAS STILL THERE UNTILL 1970S IT WAS WERE THE NEW HOUSES ON MILE END RD . Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted March 15, 2012 Report Share Posted March 15, 2012 They must have marketed it then because it was in the shops in the 50's. Would I be right in saying that it was kept in a bucket that held a small amount of water at the bottom? Or would this have been Cream Cheese? Writing about Colwick cheese has made me want some; I'm going into Nottingham later, I'll enquire in the Market at the cheese stall as to whether it's still available. :tongue: Quote Link to post Share on other sites
.... 23 Posted March 15, 2012 Report Share Posted March 15, 2012 There has been an attempt to revive it: http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-england-nottinghamshire-13724561 I remember fondly those little tubs you could buy on Victoria Market. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted March 15, 2012 Report Share Posted March 15, 2012 COLWICK CHEESE WAS REVIVED Quote Link to post Share on other sites
piggy and babs 544 Posted March 15, 2012 Report Share Posted March 15, 2012 i too remember it from 50s and 60s but as i say i never liked it not much of a cheese fan the odd bit of mild chedar on toast is about my limit it gives me migrains. i remember going down the farm regularly in the sixties as one of my friends kept her ponies down there and i would go and ride her pony billy. also there was a old cart hourse kept down there called kit , said to be between 35 and 40 years old, she used to belong to a milk man who dillivered in the cavendish rd area stilldelivering in a van in the eighties but i carnt remember his name. he live just of burton rd pehaps beefy will remember him. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Gibbo 04 188 Posted April 4, 2012 Report Share Posted April 4, 2012 Hi Curly and welcome. Whereabout's in Bridgford do you live? I was born and raised there... Quote Link to post Share on other sites
meadows/broxtowe gel 0 Posted May 4, 2012 Report Share Posted May 4, 2012 !clapping! yummy colwick cheese that was arel treat wish Iknew how to get hold of some and not forgetting delicious MUSHY PEAS.My dad always had whelks and cockles on a saturday,mum used to cook tripe and onions couldnt stomach that now (excuse the pun ) Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted May 4, 2012 Report Share Posted May 4, 2012 Med/Bro Gel, you may find some Colwick cheese in the Victoria Market, Victoria Centre. A few weeks ago the lady who runs the cheese stall informed me that she was thinking of selling this cheese again - there has been a ban on it for a time, as I'm sure you know. I pride myself on being able to make superb mushy peas; I know the secret of getting them just right - foamy and loose - I suppose we've all got our favourite recipes. As for 'tripe and onions', I loved my mum to make this for dinner; she'd serve the 'tripe and onions' with white sauce and creamed potatoes - yummy, yummy, yummy, I can taste it now! :tongue: Quote Link to post Share on other sites
katyjay 5,091 Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 Jackson, I think you are the only person I know that liked tripe and onions as a youngster, or the only one that's ever said so. I never tried it but couldn't get past the look and smell of it. My parents loved it, so did my in-laws, it must be the generation. I guess it was a cheap, filling meal in the 40's and most likely before. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
mick2me 3,033 Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 If you saw what Tripe actually was you would never touch it! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 Excuse me now but I think it's Utter Tripe what you two are saying and I think I must defend 'ye most humble tripe': If tripe hadn't been a popular dish at one time, then how come there used to be 'Tripe Shops'? I once kept a Scottish Terrier - name of Judy - and almost the only thing she'd eat was tripe; this was back in the 80's and I remember it certainly wasn't cheap serving her this delicacy for dinner most nights! I suppose everybody could make claim to their mums being the best cooks ever but in all honesty my mum was a good cook; any guest sitting at her table would have found it hard to have said no to her delicious tripe and onions - especially with tomato ketchup or HP sauce to accompany it! And finally, remember what Gordon Ramsey believes: it's not the ingredients that are used in a dish, it's the way that they are used. Dedicated to the dish: 'Tripe And Onions' that once was. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Paulus 541 Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 That told those two 'Tripehounds' (whatever that means)................I never did like tripe, but loved the suace & onions cooked with it, with bread & butter (well, bread & stork) Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Trevor S 2,003 Posted May 5, 2012 Report Share Posted May 5, 2012 Tripe! My father used to get a truck load of the guts from the Abattoirs (Bitterlings?) to feed the pigs in the early days. Still remember the intact guts wobbling on the back of the truck, the smell and the mess being pushed off into a boiler to be cooked. The pigs went mad for it whether cooked or not. Later years at the Kennels, used to get the tripe and I had the job every now and then cook it in a large vat over a fire. The stink can still be remembered, especially when you took the lid off and got a face full of steam. When cooked, used to chop up the tripe into much smaller pieces for the dogs meals. Funny thing, I never ever developed the taste for tripe. 1 Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Michael Booth 7,364 Posted May 6, 2012 Report Share Posted May 6, 2012 You brought back the stink of Bitterlings, Trevor S after all these years of trying to forget it...lol (see 'Meadows' thread). We used to have tripe and onions and mashed potatoes when we were little kids. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted May 6, 2012 Report Share Posted May 6, 2012 Bless you Paulus for defending me in my loyalty to the dish: 'Tripe and Onions'. And double bless you Paulus for having the guts to confess that you didn't have butter on your bread but Stork! Remember the 'Stork Test' anyone? Where some kind of early mobile caravan travelled around different areas, asking housewives to participate in a test as to who could tell Stork from butter. If you could, you'd be the lucky winner of £10. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
Paulus 541 Posted May 6, 2012 Report Share Posted May 6, 2012 Chivalry is my middle name!!...............it's Joseph actually, but that's another story.....................I couldn't have passed the stork test as I'd never tasted butter before, only my dad had butter, me mam told us it would make uys sick!! Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted May 6, 2012 Report Share Posted May 6, 2012 Must confess Joseph, we used Stork for our toast and marmalade - it never did me any harm. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
jackson 301 Posted May 6, 2012 Report Share Posted May 6, 2012 And my mum used it - Stork, that is - to make her pastry; very versatile was / is Stork. Quote Link to post Share on other sites
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