Breakfast (aka brekkie)
The most important meal of the day, they say. The classic ‘full English breakfast’ can include eggs, bacon, sausages, baked beans, fried tomatoes and mushrooms, and sometimes a slice of blood sausage called ‘black pudding’. As if that’s not enough, it usually comes with toast and butter, fried bread or hash browns (a fried potato cake) – or even, occasionally, chips (French fries).
Of course, most people in the UK don’t eat a ‘full English’ every day. It’s usually served as brunch, a meal that covers breakfast and lunch together and that tends to be a weekend treat.
On a working day, most people eat cereal with milk, toast with jam or honey, or porridge – a bowl of hot oats cooked in milk. The traditional way to eat porridge is with salt, but many people prefer honey, brown sugar or syrup, or pieces of fruit. More than half of Brits say they start their day with a bowl of porridge – it’s healthy and it keeps you going until lunch!
Elevenses
This is an old-fashioned name for your mid-morning snack. Paddington Bear – the famous English children’s book character – always had marmalade sandwiches at 11am. Winnie the Pooh liked honey on his.
For others, nothing beats the hunger pangs like a cup of tea and a couple of biscuits.
Lunch
On most days, people in the UK eat a light, quick lunch – such as a sandwich, soup or salad – at some time between 12 and 2pm.
Lots of cafés and restaurants do special lunch deals, and you might see ‘meal deals’ in supermarkets, where you can buy a drink, a sandwich and a bag of crisps (potato chips) at a discount.
Sunday lunch – also called 'Sunday roast' because the main dish is roasted – is the classic, big meal at the weekend, and can be served as late as 5pm.
‘Dinner’ usually means the evening meal, which most people eat between 6pm and 9pm, with their family or friends. A ‘dinner date’ is a classic way of getting to know someone better in a romantic restaurant.
Sunday roast |
Tea
Yes, tea is the classic British drink – but it’s also an afternoon snack, like the mid-afternoon version of ‘elevenses’, and another word for the evening meal too. Confused?
Let’s start with ‘afternoon tea’, which finds its home in ‘tearooms’, particularly in seaside towns. This is usually served as a pot of tea with a selection of small sandwiches, pastries and cakes arranged on a tiered cake stand.
Afternoon tea |
But then some people call their evening meal ‘tea’ instead of ‘dinner’ – especially in northern parts of England.
Supper
There are also people who call the evening meal ‘supper’. Supper tends to be served a bit later (between 7.30pm and 9pm) and is normally home-cooked. This is a more old-fashioned word now, and most young people would have ‘dinner’ instead.
Supper can be an evening meal and a snack before bedtime.
An invitation to supper would mean the arrangement is more casual than an invitation to dinner, which is usually more formal.
Dessert or pudding?
It would take a lot of strength to resist all the sweet treats on offer at the end of a British meal. ‘the sweet’ or ‘pudding’ – or in slang, ‘pud’ (rhymes with ‘good’).
Sticky toffee pudding, apple crumble, treacle tart… even the names are enough to make you put on weight!
Adapted from educationuk.org/global/articles/guide-to-uk-meals/
No comments:
Post a Comment