No they serve Chinese food.
[...]
Sadly it's tradition in the UK for Chinese restaurants to serve this shit up.
You do realise that the pictures you are posting are of a plate of food someone has made with several different orders on it, right? It's not a "dish" that you can order.
No, it's more like "this is something that you'd be surprised is technically a British dish". If there was a British national dish it would probably be a sunday roast in that it's something fairly unique to Britain (the American thanksgiving dinner is similar but not the same), and a sizeable portion of Britain has one every week.
Fun fact that some of you might not know: the British call the French "Frogs" because they eat frogs, and their epic comeback to this is to call the British "rosbif" because the British eat roast beef a lot.
>rosbif; noun; informal, humorous >(originally among French-speakers) an English person: >"as far as Paris is concerned, the rosbifs of England are slovenly, drunken, and inordinately fond of pets"
Yes. And vindaloo. Truly the world's most fricked nation.
Their Chinese restaurants also serve fries / hot chips in the meals.
do chinese restaurants not serve chips?
Often. Anything that can be bought premade and thrown into a deep fryer, really.
No they serve Chinese food.
Sadly it's tradition in the UK for Chinese restaurants to serve this shit up.
i know chips might not be chinese, but surely salt and pepper chips are?
That looks a pic from a buffet from someone moronic enough to just put carbs on their plate
Every ethnic restaurant legally has to have chips on the menu to cater for the one picky c**t in every family.
You do realise that the pictures you are posting are of a plate of food someone has made with several different orders on it, right? It's not a "dish" that you can order.
I think the point is that chips is an odd thing to be on the menu of a Chinese restaurant.
No, some newspaper claimed it as a joke in the mid 2000's and all the homosexuals ran with it
>cry about whitey conquering the world for spices
>disbelief when whitey actually uses the spices
they didn't use the spices though, they watered down the dishes until they were palatable for whitey
Holy 3rd world copasaurus
It was a paki guy who invented it in Britain.
I prefer a korma personally, but vindaloo over everything.
No, it's more like "this is something that you'd be surprised is technically a British dish". If there was a British national dish it would probably be a sunday roast in that it's something fairly unique to Britain (the American thanksgiving dinner is similar but not the same), and a sizeable portion of Britain has one every week.
Fun fact that some of you might not know: the British call the French "Frogs" because they eat frogs, and their epic comeback to this is to call the British "rosbif" because the British eat roast beef a lot.
>rosbif; noun; informal, humorous
>(originally among French-speakers) an English person:
>"as far as Paris is concerned, the rosbifs of England are slovenly, drunken, and inordinately fond of pets"
I thought they called you gays, "limeys" because of the seamen eating citrus in the Navy.
thats an old maritime joke from many countries
its incredible such a small country with a few boats can create so much seethe
Isn't it technically Glaswegian?
This is true but for some reason the media in this hellhole of a country keep shilling the 'LOL ENGLANDS NATIONAL DISH IS HECKIN' LE CURRY!!! X--Ddd'
Curry is Bri'ish now
London is the new Constantinople and will later be the new Byzantium