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ProfilePosted byOptionsPost Date

Wend

Wend Report 4 Jan 2014 22:20

Meanie.

Got any of your home-made shortbread then?

Sharron

Sharron Report 4 Jan 2014 21:54

Too right, not for you,

I don't share my roly with anybody!

Sharron

Sharron Report 4 Jan 2014 21:54

Too right, not for you,

I don't share my roly with anybody!

GinN

GinN Report 4 Jan 2014 18:43

Not for me, I'm afraid, though I've only got experience of school dinner ones - grey and heavy, with weird tasting lumpy custard (shudders......)

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it Report 4 Jan 2014 18:33

Yep mum did that too and dad would mend our shoes. would be sent to the local cobbler to buy a piece of leather suitable for ether ladies or gents shoes and dad would used a snobbing foot and take off the old sole and put the new piece of leather on it and cut around the sole to fit it , he used something called heel bole ?? in the right colour to melt around the leather to match the shoe colour . he would do the heels too with maybe quarter segs on the outside of the heel wear.

On my shoes he would tack segs on the toes too and I loved it would tapdance on the pavement to hear the noise.

The segs really were to reduce wear on the parts that wore out first

Phyll

Phyll Report 4 Jan 2014 18:23

I use one of my daughters old nappies (after having boiled & boiled it) for my steam puddings.
She is now 42 years old

Sharron

Sharron Report 4 Jan 2014 17:42

I can still turn collars.

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it Report 4 Jan 2014 17:33

i think mum would tear up old pillow cases or sheets to make pudding cloths once they had outgrown their use on the beds.

I know sheets that wore in the middle got cut across the holey area and turned about so the worn areas were at each end . And she did all the sewing by hand to turn them about . Meant the middle of the sheet had a seam across it but you learnt how to lie so as not to feel the seam.

Once the sheets couldnt be reused they then became pudding cloths. dishcloths , floor cloths so they certainly paid for themselves in use.

Make do and mend was certainly the mantra then :-)

Sharron

Sharron Report 4 Jan 2014 17:24

I always loved the slimy bit but can't replicate it in the steamer.

Have never tried the pudd'n cloth bit, haven't got one.

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it

Shirley~I,m getting the hang of it Report 4 Jan 2014 17:12

Not that keen on Roly Poly or other steamed puddings.

This is because mum would make em and put used margarine papers around them .she coudlnt afford to buy grease proof paper.

She would roll em in pudding clothes and then set them on top of a saucepan of boiling water on a metal plate to steam. Puddings too got the margarine paper treatment and the pudding cloth and were put into the saucepan to cook .

They all came out with coloured patches on them from the print off the paper but more URGGGG was they always had a slimy outside where the water had penetrated . I hated that

Not into that sort of texture, hated too bread and milk that was the standby for brekkie when food was short .

Was a WW2 girl so this was after then when food was still in short supply especially for a big family to feed

Sharron

Sharron Report 4 Jan 2014 16:24

Jam roly-poly for tea.