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Hang on, footnote here, I liked the song Cauliflowers fluffy, great Harvesat Festival Song, and as for Peas Pudding, try it! it really is not too bad, serve it with salad or fish/chicken dippers (not that I am an advocate of cheap convenience food,but give it a go!)
Tbf, as a child, I got my mum to write me a note excusing me from cheesepie when it was served as a school dinner, I often stay school dinners now and it's really nice.
I remember going to some friends of the family when I was young.
We were served very thick home made pea & ham soup as a starter, as they recently had a baby I joked that it was the only thing that all present could eat.
Remember the 'Harvest Festival' at school? I do...suddenly remembered it when I was cooking my Faggots for dinner (see other thread)...I always found it iffy, we'd all be told to bring some food in, like a tin of pears or peaches or something like a bottle of Orange Barley etc and it would all be displayed in assembly - and then promptly disappear, never to be mentioned ever again...
My Mum, being my Mum - had a theory: either the teachers cherry - picked the best items or more, or that it went to old peoples homes...I think the teachers scoffed it all...
Harvest festival.Can see it now.A line of tables set up on stage at primary school which gradually filled up with food as the weeks went past.Then it was all divided up into boxes or baskets.If you class was chosen you would follow the teacher in an orderly line around the estate delivering them one by one.It wasted a few hours of the day and saved us from lessons.In those days dad had most of his garden as a veggie patch so we always took in a few odd veggies followed by a tin or two of whatever mum felt was not needed or not going to get eaten.You would never put in what was necessary to keep a growing family as it cost money.But it was never seen as good to throw any food out either so it got donated.
My younger brother and sister done the same but the foster kids which came later never got to deliver their boxes or baskets as it was by then seen as too risky.
I work in school and after thinking for many years how boring it was ...........i have had a total change of mind.......there's something quite nice about this time of year.......hanging the corn dolly on the door, the harvesting of the crops, Autumn in the air........you don't have to be religious (i'm not) to appreciate this time of year.
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