Is there any Irish dish that doesn’t draw it’s origins from impoverishment? Anything from the last 20 years made an impact?
Stew you.
“Irish cuisine” is very new, given that not much over 100 years ago the majority of population was living in poverty. It never really got a chance to establish itself before food became global so it’s highly unlikely a uniquely Irish style of food will ever emerge.
The chicken fillet roll
No.
the full irish breakfast
Pandy
We’ve the best lamb in the world in this country. A rack of lamb or any kind of roast lamb dish is perfectly Irish
We don’t do food.
We do drink.
I can’t imagine a forum in another country in the world having a thread devoted to taking pictures of pints.
That reminds me…
Tripe and drisheen
Crubeens
Ox’s tongue
Nettle soup
Oops forgot, the dirty dubs have coddle
Goody
A cup of tea with a slice of white bread torn up added to it and topped off with a spoon or 2 of sugar. Who needed sweets eh!
Tayto.
Do we do drink? Aside from some micro breweries that have appeared in recent years, where are we leading the world in drink production? Whiskey probably the only one?
Much like the substandard food we ate for years and years, many Irish were happy to suffer absolute piss water like Heineken and Budweiser over the same period.
Most Irish people aren’t very imaginative when it comes to food and drink and stick to what they know. They’re terribly clannish and parochial.
Guinness is grand but it’s 4.2% and stout is of British origin so not really Irish.
Tayto sandwiches
Is black pudding more popular in Ireland than it would be in the UK?
Ask Eddie Brennan.
Black pudding is made from dried Guinness shite.
Banana sandwiches