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It, was pease pudding she gave me first: I can taste it now.
The word survives into modern English in pease pudding.
'Pease Pudding would not have won if you had let me ride it.'
For the pease pudding, drain the soaked split peas and place into a pan.
Unwrap the pease pudding and transfer to a warmed serving bowl.
I rather wanted your opinion of Pease Pudding.
He said that Pease Pudding was to be taken out of the Lincoln.
I don't want to sell my half of Pease Pudding.'
Tuck the pease pudding and onion into the pan beside the gammon.
Pease Pudding is not to go in the Lincoln.'
'And now on the stands' side it's Pease Pudding coming to take it up.
Three papers on the morning of the Lincoln quoted his opinion that Pease Pudding had no chance.
Common fillings include ham and pease pudding, but also bacon, egg and sausage.
In German-speaking countries, pease pudding is known under the name Erbspüree.
Pease Pottage is also an old name for pease pudding.
You can't get pease pudding.
Pease Pudding didn't run stinkingly badly.
Pease pudding complements the saltiness of gammon perfectly in this classic English dish.
Serve a spoonful of pease pudding with a slice of gammon and drizzle over the sauce.
Pease pudding was traditionally produced in England, especially in the industrial North Eastern areas.
Killick promises us pease pudding from the galley, followed by his own toasted cheese.'
'Did Pease Pudding, or did he not, seem to you to be moving fast and easily?'
'If Pease Pudding runs badly, people will only say that it shows how good a trainer you are yourself.'
Archangel and Pease Pudding ran the whole gallop stride for stride and finished together.
'Pease Pudding can't be ready for the Lincoln if Lancat can finish so near him.
He has also campaigned extensively for a new hospital in the Pease Pottage area.
The ridge is narrow to the west of Pease Pottage but widens to the east.
The end of the motorway at Pease Pottage is Junction 11.
Pease Pottage is also an old name for pease pudding.
The Pease Pottage tollgate was removed in 1877.
London to Brighton road traffic revived the fortunes of Pease Pottage.
She scurried up into the loft after serving them all hot bowls of pease pottage and warm, buttered bread.
The name comes from the motorway that stretches from Pease Pottage to south London.
Pease pottage suit ye, or ye druther I kill a chicken?"
Tilgate Row is now separated from Pease Pottage by ten traffic lanes.
No one could bake bread, cook pease pottage; the men trudged now chewing raw grains of wheat, their only sustenance.
Pease Pottage is situated on the Forest Ridge of the High Weald.
Pease Pottage is a small village on the southern edge of Crawley, separated from it only by the A264 road.
There are two country houses just outside the borders of Pease Pottage, but which have it as a postal address, and are accessed from the village.
Pease Pottage featured in the 1953 film Genevieve as a very remote village deep in the Sussex countryside.
The detached part of Crawley parish consisted of heavily forested land and one farm near Pease Pottage.
Other nearby settlements include Lambs Green, Rusper and Pease Pottage.
The name refers to a type of porridge made from peas, pease pudding, also known as pease pottage (in Middle English).
Where the terms "pease pudding" and "pease pottage" are used, the lyrics of the rhyme are altered accordingly.
To the south of Pease Pottage is Tilgate Forest Row which had three shops, a blacksmith and post office.
Crawley, north of Pease Pottage on the London-Brighton road, developed as a market town from 1202, when its market charter was granted.
Mel is a computer programmer from the 20th century who comes from the village of Pease Pottage in West Sussex, England.
Pease Porridge and Pease Pudding are the same English dish known earlier as pease pottage.
The rapes were sub-divided in Hundreds, and the area now known as Pease Pottage was in the Hundred of Buttinghill.
The parish also contains the settlements of Pease Pottage, Handcross and Warninglid, in addition to Slaugham itself.
A man like you can live years on pease porridge."
I made him Hand, and he would have sold my rights for a bowl of pease porridge.
More pease porridge in the morning, but there'd be rabbit for dinner.
Get a more assertive 'Pease porridge hot' quality into it.
As a child she had learned to convert her pease porridge to sweet pudding, and thought that others did the same.
"She thinks I'm some great lout with pease porridge between his ears, you mean".
In the morning they got up, dressed, and joined Sofia for a breakfast of pease porridge.
Sometimes it seems to me that all of London resembles nothing so much as cold pease porridge, both in colour and consistency.
She fetched a soiled wooden bowl and poured some cold pease porridge into it.
(The old word remains in the phrase pease porridge.)
"A bowl of stew, then, and two bowls of pease porridge, hot.
The film's title is a line from the nursery rhyme "Pease Porridge Hot".
"Pease porridge cold," she said.
'Sit down and eat your cold pease porridge.'
"Pease porridge hot," Rose tried, clapping her hands first on her thighs, then together, then silently outward.
"Pease Porridge Hot"
Baked beans and pease porridge were everyday fare, particularly during the winter, and usually eaten with coarse, dark bread.
Old Uredd broods over his pease porridge.
"Pease porridge hot."
"She does like pease porridge", the septon said, "and you as well, ser.
For example, in the case of the pease porridge, it's not "some like it hot," but "some babies like it hot."
Pease pudding is featured in a nursery rhyme, Pease Porridge Hot.
Eleven babies (and a teddy bear) who have porridge spilled all over them accompany "Pease Porridge Hot."
Schoolchildren often play Pease Porridge Hot by pairing off and clapping their hands together to the rhyme as follows:
There was hot bread and honey, a bowl of pease porridge, a skewer of roast onions and well-charred meat.