Tate and Lyle, a small quiz

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dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
Tate and Lyle. Built on slavery. Out of Strength comes forth Sorrow. (And that's quite beside the misery that lies under the Tate Gallery)
800px-Burial_ground_at_Millbank_Prison.JPG
 
OP
OP
Arch

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
Treacle Pudding. Double cream.....

http://www.deliaonli...ge-pudding.html


Take that, you mincing sorbet losers...

Yeah, I realise that I would routinely refer to treacle pudding, which I know full well is made with syrup, but I'd never call syrup, treacle.
 
OP
OP
Arch

Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
When I lived in Hull they would call syrup pudding treacle pudding. Used to annoy me no end! I thought that was an English thing but maybe just Yorkshire.

Not just Yorkshire, I grew up mostly in the Midlands.

Treacle tart too - that's made with syrup.
 
Syrup Crisis!


Since this thread started I have had a desire to eat some Syrup on Toast (Hot white toast to be exact).


Lunch time today (at home) popped the toast in. Went to the cupboard for the Syrup....

We have two tins of Treacle in there and no syrup!!!


I had to make do with Honey but it was not the same.
 

dellzeqq

pre-talced and mighty
Location
SW2
Is that right though, slavery was abolished 50 years before Tate and Lyle started - or by slavery do you mean piss-poor wages and conditions?
sugar slavery persisted well after the 1807 Act, both in British colonies (British Guiana only abolished slavery in 1838), the southern states in the US (1865) and Brazil (1888). Indentured labour (which is the next worst thing) continued in British Guiana until after the Great War.

Tate and Lyle do deny profiting from slavery, but Tate's business was founded on John Wright and Son who certainly did trade slave sugar.
 

brokenbetty

Über Member
Location
London
Calling syrup treacle is a northern - or rather a not-southern - thing I think. We always called it treacle in Newcastle.

Fresh industrial white bread, spread thick with butter and treacle, folded in half then bite right in the middle :hungry:
 
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