Things you were shockingly old when you learned

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1844 H. Stephens Bk. of Farm II. 709 Meat is then set down to them on a flat plate, consisting of crumbled bread and oatmeal.

moose; squirrel (silby), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 16:21 (five years ago) link

Where I live we have long-since galaxy-brained into "lacto-ovo", "dairy" seems so old-world (apologies old-worlders).

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 16:22 (five years ago) link

They played pretty fast and loose with food groups back in the day. Butter/margarine, for instance, was once a group unto itself. Not sure how many servings they recommended.

The First Time Ever I Fly @ U Face (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 16:22 (five years ago) link

Four sticks a day keeps adulthood away!

The First Time Ever I Fly @ U Face (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 16:23 (five years ago) link

eggs are in their own special section in the supermarket here (which you can never find)

seriously

every time

Number None, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 16:59 (five years ago) link

lol i knew this would happen

?!

― d'ILM for Murder (Hadrian VIII), Tuesday, March 26, 2019 8:40 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Expand on that, flappy

― moose; squirrel (silby), Tuesday, March 26, 2019 8:41 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I want to believe

― d'ILM for Murder (Hadrian VIII), Tuesday, March 26, 2019 8:44 PM (yesterday) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

I'm getting over a cold and have been avoiding dairy (I usually do anyway). the other day I thought twice about getting eggs for breakfast, because they would contribute to my congestion. in other words, i am a Stupid man

flappy bird, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:06 (five years ago) link

I know where they are in my local Morrisons but I couldn't tell what section they are in and what's shelved alongside them. I will have to investigate this.

Don't Go Back to Brockville (Tom D.), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:07 (five years ago) link

Eggs are next to the sugar and flour in our Sainsbury's for obvious cake related reasons.

Ned Trifle X, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:09 (five years ago) link

the association of the milkman's cargo must be where the confusion comes from

flappy bird, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:09 (five years ago) link

Not sure whether this explanation from Quora was machine-translated or just ESL but I like it.

The misguided judgment that eggs are dairy items is regularly an aftereffect of perplexity between the terms dairy item and creature repercussion. While eggs are, in reality, delivered by creatures and, in this way, a creature side effect, they are not a dairy item or a subsidiary of dairy items.

Albeit numerous persons who don't devour dairy items likewise don't expend eggs as a consequence of sensitivities, dietary confinements, moral convictions or different reasons, persons who have milk hypersensitivities or are lactose narrow minded yet don't have a sensitivity to eggs can devour eggs as a piece of their eating routine without the antagonistic results connected with dairy intolerance or hypersensitivity.

mick signals, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:11 (five years ago) link

LACTOSE. NARROW. MINDED.

I am using it from now on.

The First Time Ever I Fly @ U Face (Old Lunch), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:17 (five years ago) link

Eggs are in the vegetable/fruit section at my supermarket. Beside some nuts.

Yerac, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:19 (five years ago) link

...creature repercussions!

d'ILM for Murder (Hadrian VIII), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:27 (five years ago) link

After reading back over this thread I have just discovered that Crabtree & Evelyn was founded not in some quaint Cotswolds village but in Cambridge, Mass. I am a marketing man's dream.

Ned Trifle X, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:35 (five years ago) link

i'm about to devour some beans as a piece of my eating routine

kinder, Wednesday, 27 March 2019 17:51 (five years ago) link

Wait, people still have milkmen delivering!?

Stoop Crone (Trayce), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 22:52 (five years ago) link

it's rather less quaint but in the city I live now and the city I lived before now there have been local/regional dairy companies that will deliver milk on a weekly schedule

moose; squirrel (silby), Wednesday, 27 March 2019 23:36 (five years ago) link

I always wondered why milk and papers were delivered, but nothing else. My little bro used to do the milk run back in the 80s, seems so oldschool to think of now.

Stoop Crone (Trayce), Thursday, 28 March 2019 02:27 (five years ago) link

I think it was a timing thing - milk, news, post delivered before breakfast.

Milk deliveries were quite ahead of their time, really - electric vehicles, reuse of bottles...

But, yes, mostly killed off by supermarkets.

koogs, Thursday, 28 March 2019 06:21 (five years ago) link

it should be the other way round, we have just started a daily delivery and having milk magically appear on your doorstep every morning >>>> trudging to a supermarket to pick it up.

what if bod was one of us (ledge), Thursday, 28 March 2019 06:41 (five years ago) link

yeah I know several ppl who are getting milk delivered now

kinder, Thursday, 28 March 2019 08:53 (five years ago) link

There was an association between milk and health that maybe made the idea of having the stuff delivered lack stiugma.
THough you would have other things delivered at the time, coal was delivered door to door and there are hatches in old houses for teh process. butchers would send their delivery boy around with meat delivery, probably other merchants/grocers/tradespeople/ whatever would too. It probably only fell away with the decline of the help level service industry and the subsequent rise of the supermarket etc. & now supermarkets deliver.
But there was a drive to have people drink milk to help growth in the wake of the first world war finding a lot of the conscripted men being seriously undersized. hence free school milk which i think Thatcher stopped.

Stevolende, Thursday, 28 March 2019 09:13 (five years ago) link

The milk delivered at home would also magically *dis*appear - there was a lot of theft from doorstops apparently, to the point where the milkman was talking about giving up.

koogs, Thursday, 28 March 2019 11:40 (five years ago) link

Feel sad for people who have never experienced cream-top milk sitting outside their door when they wake up in the morning.

Then again, the House Of Pain lyric "I'm the cream of the crop/I rise to the top" must have rang hollow in their youth.

Jersey Al (Albert R. Broccoli), Thursday, 28 March 2019 11:44 (five years ago) link

I've been having milk delivered in N London for 20 years. When I started it was from a chap in a blue overall jacket and an electric float who gave me a cheery wave when he saw me walking to work. These days its from a bloke in a tracksuit who comes three times a week in the middle of the night with the bottles in the boot of his beemer. Real England.

fetter, Thursday, 28 March 2019 11:54 (five years ago) link

i re-signed up to milk delivery about 6 months ago and they have still never given me a bill, despite continual emails, phone calls, notes left with the empties etc. I am slightly dreading the reckoning!

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 28 March 2019 12:32 (five years ago) link

> Feel sad for people who have never experienced cream-top milk sitting outside their door when they wake up in the morning.

Blue tits pecking through the aluminium caps. Enduring image. Frozen milk coming out of the tops of the bottles in winter, isn't it?...

koogs, Thursday, 28 March 2019 12:47 (five years ago) link

I grew up all over the eastern half of the US but never anywhere where this was a thing. I feel bereft.

The wettest sandwich you ever ate, guaranteed! (Old Lunch), Thursday, 28 March 2019 12:54 (five years ago) link

Tracer, that sounds like a mob front tbh

rob, Thursday, 28 March 2019 13:13 (five years ago) link

i thought milk delivery had to do with freshness - getting it from the farm to the dairy to your door asap. can imagine the appeal of that lasting even after electric refrigeration.

|Restore| |Restart| |Quit| (Doctor Casino), Thursday, 28 March 2019 13:27 (five years ago) link

Our house was built in 1946, and by the side door, which opens into the kitchen, there is one of these things for the milkman to make deliveries. It has a corresponding door inside the house so you didn't have to go outside to retrieve the delivery. I need to see about having it removed and bricked up, because all it does is bleed heat out of the house in the winter.

http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_H1VS629Rajo/S8S_YIVqyEI/AAAAAAAABKI/Lq2W3m4zJRo/s1600/DSC01279.JPG

Plinka Trinka Banga Tink (Eliza D.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 13:33 (five years ago) link

newspapers and milk, the consumables with the shortest shelf life

mh, Thursday, 28 March 2019 13:47 (five years ago) link

by law milk is pasteurised now so I'm not sure it makes much of a difference. and i expect it's coming from the same dairies that supply supermarkets anyway. also not that fresh when it gets loldelivered at 8:45, after you've left for work. a little milk safe in the wall sounds perfect actually, particularly if it were insulated!

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 28 March 2019 13:53 (five years ago) link

Ice was also delivered of course.

dan selzer, Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:30 (five years ago) link

Not in the UK afaik.

Don't Go Back to Brockville (Tom D.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:31 (five years ago) link

When I was a kid in the 70s in Glasgow there was a guy who sold fruit door to door, I called him the Bananaman coz he carried a string of them around his neck, like the stereotypical "Onion Johnnies" of old. There was also a van that sold fish & meat that came round our street once a week - more importantly it sold crisps that were gulp not one of the usual 3 flavours, blowing my childish mind.

( X '____' )/ (zappi), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:40 (five years ago) link

Did you have the ginger van?

Don't Go Back to Brockville (Tom D.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:41 (five years ago) link

naw but did have an icey, had a painting of the Fonz down the side haha

( X '____' )/ (zappi), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:45 (five years ago) link

Spot of googling reminds me it was Alpine they used to sell - but it was more of a lorry than a van and it was not just a Scottish phenomenon.

Don't Go Back to Brockville (Tom D.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:46 (five years ago) link

- i thought it was "brass tax" until only a few years ago

they're not booing you, sir, they're shouting "Boo'd Up" (Will M.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:56 (five years ago) link

like let's get down to talking about the tariffs on various alloys. seems serious

they're not booing you, sir, they're shouting "Boo'd Up" (Will M.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 15:57 (five years ago) link

you still get the once a week fish van in scotland

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:07 (five years ago) link

I somehow only realized that the Vincent Price Dr. Goldfoot movies were a Goldfinger thing a few days ago

You guys are caterpillar (Telephone thing), Thursday, 28 March 2019 16:09 (five years ago) link

damn Will, that's a good one

mh, Thursday, 28 March 2019 17:13 (five years ago) link

lol thanks you know it's a good one when you convince yourself that the mistake is, in fact, better

like the time i had an argument with someone about "play it by (EAR/YEAR)" and she gave me very good, self-made-up reasoning for why year makes more sense (you're not planning 20 years in the future, only, like, 1 year, so it's more improvised)

they're not booing you, sir, they're shouting "Boo'd Up" (Will M.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 17:38 (five years ago) link

it should be the other way round, we have just started a daily delivery and having milk magically appear on your doorstep every morning >>>> trudging to a supermarket to pick it up.

how small are the containers that you need a new one every day?

steven, soda jerk (sic), Thursday, 28 March 2019 18:47 (five years ago) link

traditionally in britain it would be a pint of milk. with the amount of cups of tea you get through plus your cereal that would definitely be done by the end of day with any sort of household with more than 1 person

( ͡☉ ͜ʖ ͡☉) (jim in vancouver), Thursday, 28 March 2019 18:50 (five years ago) link

Which is why people often had more than a pint delivered.

Don't Go Back to Brockville (Tom D.), Thursday, 28 March 2019 18:52 (five years ago) link

i get 4 every Monday, they last a week. (i guess because of the aforementioned pasteurization?)

illegal economic migration (Tracer Hand), Thursday, 28 March 2019 18:53 (five years ago) link


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