Do you mean those in the round tins?Barley Sugar. You can probably still buy it but at one time it was seen as being a good sweet for long car journeys or to pre-empt sore ears during plane take-offs or landings.
Do you mean those in the round tins?Barley Sugar. You can probably still buy it but at one time it was seen as being a good sweet for long car journeys or to pre-empt sore ears during plane take-offs or landings.
Or in packets. There were however different types of boiled sweet including barley sugar in round tins with the sweets being coated with a sort of powdery sugar. Someone else may recall who manufactured them. They were particularly popular for car journeys.Do you mean those in the round tins?
I don't recall anyone mincing leftover bars of soap, but I do remember my next door neighbour having an electric boiler that she used for towels and sheets. It was kept in the shed and the stuff she put in it wasn't like ordinary washing powder. I can't remember exactly what it was, but I do remember her asking me if I wouldn't mind going to one of the local shops to "do a message" for her (rewarded by a "penny for a sweetie" - usually 10p). The word "snow" rings a bell, but I'm not 100% sure.My grandmother putting the leftover bits of bars of soap through a mincing machine and storing the result in a large jar ready for doing the washing. She had a copper to heat the water.
The round tins of sweets my family bought were made by Simpkins of Sheffield, and they are still avaliable. It is several years since I bought any (the last purchase was from Morrisons) but my father always had a tin or two in store which i took advantage of when visiting him.Or in packets. There were however different types of boiled sweet including barley sugar in round tins with the sweets being coated with a sort of powdery sugar. Someone else may recall who manufactured them. They were particularly popular for car journeys.
Friend of mine received a Get Well Soon card from his local pub. It made him realise he probably spent too much time & money in thereI received a Waterstone's gift card from my dentist….
I'm a fan of Premium Bonds, even more so when interest rates were really low. So I think they can only be considered in the paper form as out of fashion.In similar anachronistic vein: Premium Bonds - bought by favourite aunts & uncles, or happy grandparents on the occasion of one of a child's life milestones. Christening - confirmation - passing the 11+ and that sort of thing.
The boxed washing powder, (or was it flakes?), was “Fairy Snow”. Part of the same brand as Fairy Liquid.I don't recall anyone mincing leftover bars of soap, but I do remember my next door neighbour having an electric boiler that she used for towels and sheets. It was kept in the shed and the stuff she put in it wasn't like ordinary washing powder. I can't remember exactly what it was, but I do remember her asking me if I wouldn't mind going to one of the local shops to "do a message" for her (rewarded by a "penny for a sweetie" - usually 10p). The word "snow" rings a bell, but I'm not 100% sure.
If I walked into a supermarket today and asked for a kilo of the stuff, I'm fairly sure I'd get some funny looks!![]()
Same here. We have some bonds bought by an aunt in the early 70s through the mid 80s - which have won exactly nothing.If I can ever find the numbers and cash them in, the principal might just about pay for a couple of bus fares or a cup of coffee - unless I happen to have won one or more of the big prizes (up to £1million) over the intervening years.
Wasn't there also a stick version that was two strands twisted together and encased in cellophane?The round tins of sweets my family bought were made by Simpkins of Sheffield, and they are still avaliable. It is several years since I bought any (the last purchase was from Morrisons) but my father always had a tin or two in store which i took advantage of when visiting him.
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Travel Tins Collection
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Ireland's economic strategy and resuls shows the UK how it should be done.A growing Economy????
I'd totally forgotten about that but yes you're right - barley sugar sticks were an alternative to the standard size boiled sweets.Wasn't there also a stick version that was two strands twisted together and encased in cellophane?
I never found that sticking barley sugars in your ears helped prevent sore ears. More likely to make them soreBarley Sugar. You can probably still buy it but at one time it was seen as being a good sweet for long car journeys or to pre-empt sore ears during plane take-offs or landings.
I like how much work "and other" is apparently doing there. I had no idea Ireland is being funded almost exclusively from the corporation tax returns of those three companies. Seems a little unwise given who is about to become the Internet Guy / Pharmacist In Chief.Ireland's economic strategy and resuls shows the UK how it should be done.
Ireland’s decision to cut corporation tax to just 12.5% in the late 1990s raised eyebrows, but, by attracting Google, Apple, Pfizer and other top tier organisations, Ireland created jobs, boosted investment, and drove economic growth.
Ireland is sitting on a €25 billion budget surplus. Meanwhile, the UK is sitting on a £40 billion deficit.
If you're referring to Musk, he's a tiny player in the Internet space, mainly due to destroying Twitter.Seems a little unwise given who is about to become the Internet Guy / Pharmacist In Chief.
I bought a beef joint from Tesco just before Christmas and I was quite surprised to see that it had a layer of dripping across the top. It came in handy for the roast tatties.Beef dripping.
We had a joint of beef this weekend and no fat so no chance of taaty bread and dripping sandwiches today. 50 years ago there'd have been a layer of fat on the joint to provide the dripping that would have been kept for later.
Jack Sprat could eat no fat,
His wife could eat no lean.
And so between them both, you see,
They licked the platter clean.
That said, you can buy blocks of beef dripping the same as you can get blocks of lard. As noted by @GusB it makes for excellent roast tatties.Beef dripping.
We had a joint of beef this weekend and no fat so no chance of taaty bread and dripping sandwiches today. 50 years ago there'd have been a layer of fat on the joint to provide the dripping that would have been kept for later.
I bought a beef joint from Tesco just before Christmas and I was quite surprised to see that it had a layer of dripping across the top. It came in handy for the roast tatties.
You can keep your bread and dripping sandwiches, though! (Blergh)
With salt on them. For added unhealthy eating.You can keep your bread and dripping sandwiches, though! (Blergh)
Was beef dripping not the magic ingredient in Clootie Dumpling? (Along with the sixpences wrapped in greaseproof paper.)That said, you can buy blocks of beef dripping the same as you can get blocks of lard. As noted by @GusB it makes for excellent roast tatties.
Well I suppose they are - who wears 'coms' these days?When the perfectly accommodating "Y-Fronts" were the underpants of choice for many males and whose manufacture appeared to succumb to the notion that your pants were to be considered as some kind of lifestyle "statement". (Sigh).
I'm afraid that reference will be completely lost on anyone from South of Gretna.Was beef dripping not the magic ingredient in Clootie Dumpling? (Along with the sixpences wrapped in greaseproof paper.)
I remember my grandmother’s gas powered ‘copper’, a large drum to boil water and manually agitate the contents. It had a flexible hose to connect to a gas tap in the same way that bunsen burners did in our science classes.I do remember my next door neighbour having an electric boiler that she used for towels and sheets.
That reminds me of one of the Dilbert comic strips . . .Blue Carbon paper
Rolls of fax paper