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  2. File:Full English Breakfast.JPG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../File:Full_English_Breakfast.JPG

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  3. Full breakfast - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Full_breakfast

    Cookbooks were important in the fixing of the ingredients of a full breakfast during this time, [5] and the full breakfast appeared in the best-selling Isabella Beeton's Book of Household Management (1861). This new full breakfast was a pared-down version of the country breakfasts of the upper-class, affordable to the emergent middle classes ...

  4. The Full English - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Full_English

    The Full English may refer to: The Full English, a 2005 solo album by Judge Smith; The Full English (folk music archive), a digital archive of English folk song collections; Full English, a British animated sitcom that aired in 2012; Full breakfast, a cooked morning meal centred on eggs and bacon, popular in the UK and UK-influenced cultures

  5. Culture of England - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Culture_of_England

    The Full English breakfast, [184] also referred to as 'bacon and eggs' or a 'fry up', typically comprises a choice from rashers of back bacon, [185] fried or scrambled eggs, pork sausages, black pudding, grilled tomatoes, mushrooms, baked beans, fried bread, hash browns (which largely displaced bubble and squeak [186] in the 1970s), and ...

  6. Fray Bentos (food brand) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fray_Bentos_(food_brand)

    The Fray Bentos brand is known for the manufacture and sale in the United Kingdom of a range of tinned meat pies such as steak and kidney and minced beef and onion. [1] [2] Since 2011, the brand in the UK has been owned by Baxters, who manufacture Fray Bentos products at their site at Fochabers in Scotland. [3]

  7. Kipper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kipper

    Members of the Canadian military referred to English people as kippers because they were believed to frequently eat kippers for breakfast. [18] The English (UK) idiom [to be] "stitched (or "done") up like a kipper" is commonly used to describe a situation where a person has (depending on context) been "fitted up" or "framed"; "used", unfairly ...

  8. Bully beef - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bully_beef

    English soldiers also used the term "bully beef" for their tinned meat ration. [8] This may still have been soup and bouilli in 1871 as there is an account of "bully" soup being served that year at a training exercise, [ 9 ] but by the Ashanti War of 1873–1874 , corned beef was being used, with a newspaper reporting one large tin being ...

  9. File:Audrey Hepburn in Breakfast at Tiffany's.jpg - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Audrey_Hepburn_in...

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