Little Chef

Nictrix said:
BeeEmm said:
Flyingfifer said:
BeeEmm wrote: ↑11 May 2021 17:27
I expect you mean cannae, not canny. Canny means nice or shrewd.
You expect wrong, spelling can be either or, a bit like jobbie/jobby
Nah!, not like jobbie/jobby. Scots say nae for not, so cannot is cannae. :poke:
Wait, someone from London telling Scots how to pronounce things or spell things.
Whatever next, telling us we cant have independence! :lol:
Oh, I thought you were Scotch. :poke: :D :fuelfire:
 
enuff_zed said:
Nictrix said:
BeeEmm said:
Nah!, not like jobbie/jobby. Scots say nae for not, so cannot is cannae. :poke:
Wait, someone from London telling Scots how to pronounce things or spell things.
Whatever next, telling us we cant have independence! :lol:
Oh, I thought you were Scotch. :poke: :D :fuelfire:
Is that not a drink similar to whisky :lol:
 
Mr Tidy said:
Not at all, the 40M+ residents of England get no say on Scottish independence - that is apparently decided by the 4M or so Scots.

Anyway having a father born in Invenesshire and a mother born in Kent my allegiances are a bit torn!

Regardless of that AFAIK "cant" is spelt "can't" either side of the border. :lol:

People that live in the rest of the UK dont get a say and neither they should :thumbsup:
 
Flyingfifer said:
Mr Tidy said:
Not at all, the 40M+ residents of England get no say on Scottish independence - that is apparently decided by the 4M or so Scots.

Anyway having a father born in Invenesshire and a mother born in Kent my allegiances are a bit torn!

Regardless of that AFAIK "cant" is spelt "can't" either side of the border. :lol:

People that live in the rest of the UK dont get a say and neither they should :thumbsup:

Apart from....................... Goodbye. :thumbsup:
 
Getting back on track...

Little Chef was my 'go to' eatery when I was working long hours in the early 90's, as a lot of the other places simply weren't open at 2am when I was driving back home.

Can't remember what it was called, but I used to regularly order a double-burger with bacon, cheese & onions...for about £6. If it was the opposite trip I'd go for the huge breakfast (can't remember if it was Champion or Olympic) and swap the potatoes for black pudding.

My regular stop was about 1/2 way home near Uttoxeter on the A50...but there's a 24hr McDs over the road now, so it probably lost a lot of business to that.

Even tried one of Heston Blumenthal's re-worked Little Chef menus at the Popham one on the A303 when I was working down in Basingstoke. The braised ox-cheeks were great, but it was a bit slow, and most people who went were just ordering the classic offerings.
 
Why is a post about Little chef ending up in yet more Independence chat.
Don't see the connection,lol.

We had our vote on that,the once in a lifetime vote, nver to he repeated again...and the Majority at that time of the vote,voted No for Independence.

Back on topic, Little chef was a bit overpriced,but the Breakfast and those pancakes were great,and also better than service stations at the time,when doing family holidays when growing up in the 70s/80s.

Sign of the times sadly,Pondrew.
 
craig3.2 said:
Why is a post about Little chef ending up in yet more Independence chat.
Don't see the connection,lol.

It started with the injection of a little humour, as many of these posts do.
Did you miss it? :poke: :D :D
 
enuff_zed said:
craig3.2 said:
Why is a post about Little chef ending up in yet more Independence chat.
Don't see the connection,lol.

It started with the injection of a little humour, as many of these posts do.
Did you miss it? :poke: :D :D

Must have done, lol
Just quickly read through it,and it seemed to have went off topic quickly,about Independence and spelling,haha

Anyway, Little chefs were good in my book, back in the day,but replaced by 1001 Starbucks or Costa coffees.
Is that improvement?
Not so sure :rofl:
 
mmm-five said:
Can't remember what it was called, but I used to regularly order a double-burger with bacon, cheese & onions...for about £6
It was called something like the "big 7" or "magnificent 7" IIRC. More recently called "the works" burger. :)
mmm-five said:
Even tried one of Heston Blumenthal's re-worked Little Chef
I went to school with him; he was a pretentious t*t then aswell :D
 
Flyingfifer said:
Obviously all you old yins experienced wee thief before it was garbage
Are you trying to draw me into saying, "If you are going to use yins in old yins, it should really be Auld Yins but I am not going to fall for it. Bugger! :oops:

I hated Little Chef.
 
BeeEmm said:
Are you trying to draw me into saying, "If you are going to use yins in old yins, it should really be Auld Yins but I am not going to fall for it. Bugger! :oops:

I hated Little Chef.

:rofl: :rofl: :rofl: 10/10
 
Never thought I'd get a lesson in Scottish colloquialisms in a thread about Little Chef. It could only happen on here :lol:

I cannae understand why only the auld yins thank LC was not a load of auld pish. How's that? :thumbsup:
 
Pondrew said:
I cannae understand why only the auld yins thank LC was not a load of auld pish. How's that?
Spoiled it with thank instead of think. I believe thank is rhyming slang. :D

I still hated Little Chef.
 
enuff_zed said:
Nictrix said:
BeeEmm said:
Nah!, not like jobbie/jobby. Scots say nae for not, so cannot is cannae. :poke:
Wait, someone from London telling Scots how to pronounce things or spell things.
Whatever next, telling us we cant have independence! :lol:
Oh, I thought you were Scotch. :poke: :D :fuelfire:

You go and say that to your Scottish wife and report back in a few days when you’ve recovered :rofl:

Oh and I’m with [ref]BeeEmm[/ref], LC were P!sh :lol:
 
Argyll Andy said:
enuff_zed said:
Nictrix said:
Wait, someone from London telling Scots how to pronounce things or spell things.
Whatever next, telling us we cant have independence! :lol:
Oh, I thought you were Scotch. :poke: :D :fuelfire:

You go and say that to your Scottish wife and report back in a few days when you’ve recovered :rofl:

Yup, she still rants every time I call one of your lakes a 'lock'.
Apparently I'm supposed to pronounce it somewhere in my lungs so it comes out sounding correct, but usually accompanied by a degree of phlegm. :roll:
 
Pondrew said:
I cannae understand why only the auld yins thank LC was not a load of auld pish. How's that? :thumbsup:

Ah canny unnerstaund hou ounlie thon auld yins hink LC wisney a laid eh auld pish

:thumbsup:
 
Flyingfifer said:
Pondrew said:
I cannae understand why only the auld yins thank LC was not a load of auld pish. How's that? :thumbsup:

Ah canny unnerstaund hou ounlie thon auld yins hink LC wisney a laid eh auld pish

:thumbsup:

Dae ye hink baith loons and quines hink ra sem, or dae only wan o’ them ken it’s keech? :rofl:
 
Little Thief was usually the most convenient option.
I was always quite partial to the Magnificent Big Seven burger tbh.
The only way to justify the expense was to make sure you got away with large handfuls of those lollies they had at the checkout.
 
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