Britain’s changing culinary habits

Today of all days, while you’re still digesting your Christmas dinner, the last thing you want to read is about food, but here goes.

Not so long ago, Britain’s national meal was probably a roast dinner. Chicken or on special occasions a capon or turkey, likely sliced thinly and served up with plump roast potatoes and various spoonfuls of veg, all covered in thick gravy with a dollop of cranberry sauce on the side. The perfect roast dinner would be served up by Lynda Bellingham, an OXO-crumbling Mum ladling out gravy every Sunday to a smiling family sitting around a bountiful dining table.

As a change (and to give Mum a rest) on Friday nights, the national takeaway meal was fish and chips. Plump white cod fried to within an inch of its life in thick crispy batter, packed together with a mountain of greasy thick chips, unwrapped from a semi-transparent fat-stained sheet of grease-proof paper, rolled up in last week’s news. Dolled out by Dad and sprinkled liberally with brown malty vinegar and salt.

That was in the days when the family meal was a regular feature in our homes and yesterday might be the only time everyone sat down together this year.

I posted some months ago about how London’s high street is changing from a place to shop for essentials to somewhere we can graze, when my local had 24 fast food outlets since then more have arrived from a vegan ice cream parlour to a purveyor of waffles.

I blame that 1970s invention, the chicken tikka masala. A meal so convincingly Indian that legend tells it was probably invented in Glasgow. De-feathered meat from battery farm hell, already pre-chunked to save effort should you choose to hurl it all up later. The perfect chicken tikka masala would arrive in a thick liquid gloop that’d stain your carpet orange should you spill a drop, and stain your intestine orange if you didn’t.

The orange gloop spelt the end for mobile grazers, it’s not easy to walk, check out your socials and shovel rice immersed in the sauce at the same time.

Enter the Holy Grail of takeaways, Chicken-in-a-Box. It’s quick to cook, easy to get hold of, and extremely portable. It slips off the fingers with ease, and it slips down the throat in seconds. You can see the evidence on the streets – generally littered all across them. It’s Chicken-In-A-Box. And it’s everywhere, all over London you’ll find signage above these outlets, many with slightly different names, but all with a similar corporate identity.

As cheap and nasty fast food goes, there’s little to compete with Chicken-in-a-Box. In fact, our local NatWest Bank has become an outlet, who would think there’s more money to be made in selling the very dodgiest scrapings of scrawny poultry, recombined in over-salted water, and given a greasy overcoat of soggy breadcrumbs, than making money from, well money?

Naturally, this isn’t eaten in a restaurant but served with a liberal portion of thinly chopped potato sticks, similarly fat-soaked, dumped into a cardboard box and topped off with artificial squirtings of slimy red sauce. Throw in a can of sugared fizzy water for good measure and there you have a balanced meal. No wonder the nation is in the grip of an obesity crisis.

Now because this food is cheaper today than the roast dinner of our grandparents’ day, a new tradition has gripped our Nation. This ‘food’ is so indigestible that it is rarely entirely consumed, but disposed of upon the pavement for the foxes. Will we soon see overweight canines roaming our towns?

Featured image: Roasted Chicken Dinner Plate, Broccoli, Stuffing, Potatoes, Demi-Glace by Michael J. Bennett (CC-BY-SA-3.0)

 

3 thoughts on “Britain’s changing culinary habits”

  1. Ahhh the memory of alighting the last train at Seven Kings Station, wobbling into the KFC next door and consuming that extra greasy chicken on the stagger home, what a way to finish a night out , or was that the finish of me.

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