Mustard and steak...

Which mustard? Not Thomy stuff ...

Can't understand the pining for Colemans here ... have people not tasted Dijon mustard ... Colemans is so overpowering and no finesse ..

You're really into your sauces, aren't you?

laaaalaaaalallaaaaa... i can't hear you... laaallaaaaaa.....

People, people, please..... A good steak need nothing but salt.

No, only ze best for my hot dog man.

Hear hear. And this is true for all meat....and even the salt is optional. Pair a perfect quality cut of meat with the most appropriate cooking technique and you need nothing else - eg. Thinly sliced, raw fillet steak, or 10 hours at 150C for shoulder of pork.

Steak (as with roast beef) should only ever be eaten with horseradish.

Mustard (English/Coleman's) is for everything piggy.

At last.

I was just going to say, whatever happened to beef and horseradish!!!?

This is a pairing made in heaven.

Hmmm... I think I'll have to start sneaking in little tubes of Colemans, like my father used to do whenever we went abroad. Now I understand why!

Thanks everyone for all your comments... I don't feel like such a loser anymore

tomato ketchup goes very well with raclette.

Don't tell the Bavarians that! They are pretty proud of their own homemade sweet mustard (süßer Senf) .

I learnt a lot about food and cooking from the British people I know and from the BBC. I could listen to Simon Hopkinson and drool all day.

I have no idea where the bad reputation of British cooking comes from.

Mustard on stake? Haven't tried yet and ashamed to admit, but will try for sure!

I LOVE that mustard. It's sooooo yummy! But with pretzels not steak.

Anyway, I might have been a bit harsh earlier. Yes, a good steak needs nothing but salt. But that doesn't mean mustard isn't yummy.

In fact, I think I said this else where I'm a sucker for mustards and salts. I buy all different kinds when I see them. They are often what I bring home for "souvenirs" (talk about loser! ). Even on Friday I made a sort of stewed beef with mustard as a base. It was yummy. Just keep it off the steak!

Anyway to the OP, I hope you weren't really upset about the chuckles you got. I doubt it was malicious. Take care.

Er. No. It's an absolute.

To the OP - they may have laughed at you for having mustard, but at least you didn't compromise your tastebuds altogether by having that awful herbal butter thing the Swiss insist on adding to anything made of protein.

you mean the stuff containing Aromat? bound to destroy any food....

Roquefort, or foie gras, also go nicely!

Tom

Have you ever actually eaten in the UK?

Back in '84, I made the trips there, for a total of 6 1/2 weeks over a two month period.

In the end, I survived on breakfast, beer, and taking the hovercraft to France 2-3 times a week.

Tom

Nor the Swedes!

Tom

First of all, Germans are not supposed to keep your kind of moustard in store just in case you stop by.

Secondly, it might have been a good idea to think about what moustard is to Germans before commenting with such tasteless superiority. Germany has a sweet soft moustard that in deed would be ridiculous to eat with a steak.

Thirdly, asking for something you think about won't do it for normal communication. The message is supposed to get through and that is also the responsibility of the speaker.

Fourthly, if someone does not know that German (or Danish or Swedish or Russian for that matte) moustard is different, it is enough to enlighten her/him about the difference instead of starting a simplistic they against us kind of answer.

I am not pissed off at you personaly, but I am definitly pissed off big time because of this kind of thread just proving one single point: Being judgemental is all too human, unfortunatly.

I have NEVER commented on British food or social habits in that tone, even if there are several books to write about it from a continental perspective. And don't all come and tell me it's humour, because no it's not.

Dear OP, I am sorry for the awkward smiling of other people but the reason is that moustard is a different product with a very different taste in Germany and you were thinking and hoping for another kind of product. Just the kind of thing happening when in another country. No big deal.

Grumpy doesn't do 'tasteless'. It's only 'tasteful' superiority for him

Yes, I have. I lived there for almost a year (2005) and have visited a few times. Possibly a lot has changed since 1984.

What I meant was that there are so many British food connoisseurs, even on this forum, and therefore making sweeping generalisations about British food seems inappropriate or just wrong. Anyway, we are discussing tastes here.