pass it here, i love it. Who said the law states it has to be a roast?!?!
2006-12-03 02:28:06
·
answer #1
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Sounds like your partner is a bit of the old school that thinks Sunday food must be that little something extra special. My dad would only ever eat fish on a Friday - no other time. Sunday had to be steak (they were never much for roasts) and the steak always had to be T-bone! I think it was something to do with testosterone too. Strangely I also like something a bit "different" as opposed to "special" on a Sunday, but I'd have been very happy with a sausage casserole, especially one which was cooked for me.
Your partner, sorry to say, sounds a tad spoilt and maybe needs to try and realise how fortunate to be served food you can reject. Starving millions would have lived for months on that meal and considered it the best thing ever.
Either your partner shops and cooks it in future OR you just eat it yourself and let your partner go hungry. If you have probably of course, made enough for your partner too, please don't discard it...you must have an elderly neighbour nearby who would appreciate a free meal (as maybe your partner will when old age sets in.....even a sausage casserole on a Sunday)!
2006-12-03 07:44:29
·
answer #2
·
answered by nephtine 4
·
2⤊
0⤋
Personally I think there is nothing wrong with sausage casserole on a sunday! I know some people prefer to have roast dinners i.e my dad, but he would never refuse to eat something different instead.
Tell you partner to cook for himself if he's not happy with what you've cooked!
2006-12-03 02:43:00
·
answer #3
·
answered by Alison of the Shire 4
·
3⤊
0⤋
lol! there's nowt wrong with sausage casserole on a sunday. Your partner has grown up like hundreds of thousands of us believing that sunday has to be a special meal with a roast, e.g. beef, chicken, lamb or pork. Thnk it comes from the days when families could only afford it once a week, and as most people didnt work on a sunday opted for that when everyone was at home to enjoy it.
I've just had a freshly cooked curry, lurvely. We had roast on Friday/
2006-12-03 02:37:04
·
answer #4
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋
Absolutely nothing!
I have lived in the US for 6 years and miss food from home (England) so much! I would kill for a sausage casserole on a Sunday or any day. Any chance you could ship it over? lol
2006-12-03 04:08:05
·
answer #5
·
answered by Anonymous
·
1⤊
0⤋
Sounds like wonderful Sunday brunch food to me.....
Ideal Sunday no less..pop in the breakfast casserole you put together the day before and you have brunch. Pizza delivery that evening and you don't have to miss one second of a lazy quiet Fantasy Football filled Sunday.
2006-12-03 02:33:05
·
answer #6
·
answered by reevesfarm 3
·
1⤊
1⤋
I think its okay to eat, but maybe they don't want to eat meat on Sundays because it usually the day of worship. You could ask your partner and discuss it and then make a vegetable casserole instead on Sundays.
2006-12-03 02:28:57
·
answer #7
·
answered by Stareyes 5
·
0⤊
2⤋
Nothing wrong with that meal at all. Ok so it might be traditional to have a roast but I just had toad in the hole - no jokes please. If your partner is hungry and values you cooking for him then let him cook next week, and see how he likes it when you refuse to eat his offering
2006-12-03 02:29:43
·
answer #8
·
answered by mollygirl20002000 2
·
3⤊
0⤋
What an ungrateful pig!! Perhaps you should be chucking him out instead of the food!!
Why doesn't HE cook if he doesn't like what you make?
And if it's a traditional sunday roast he wants, perhaps he should go back to his mummy where no doubt he always had one!
2006-12-03 02:35:40
·
answer #9
·
answered by Honey W 4
·
2⤊
0⤋
Your partner seems to be a complete waste of time - You eat what you want when you want too eat. If your too lazy to cook your own meal then don't gripe when someone else decides to cook for you. Ungrateful pig :)
2006-12-03 02:34:40
·
answer #10
·
answered by Longjohn 4
·
3⤊
0⤋
Unless your Jewish, nothing. Jews abstain from it because of their religious attributes. While we eat anything on any given day. Guess we're going to hell. But hey if I'm gonna go, I'm gonna go on a full stomach, pork and all.
2006-12-03 02:44:31
·
answer #11
·
answered by Anonymous
·
0⤊
0⤋