ChatterBank1 min ago
Does any one know of a food called 'frizettes' - W W2 savory pancake
I think it could be in packet form so you add water or milk and it might have potato, or onion in it.
I have tryed specialist places but everyone looks at me like I am weird!!
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.By changing the spelling to 'Frizets', I've found a few web references to this product.
Google has cached Radio 2's 'Mike Mendoza's website of the day' from 30/11/04. This is the 'Campaign to revive discontinued products':
http://66.249.93.104/search?q=cache:Jr8qp2hK7E wJ:www.websiteoftheday.info/2004/11/campaign_t o_rev.html+frizets&hl=en&gl=uk&ct=clnk&cd=1&cl ient=firefox-a
Here are the posts about Frizets from that site:
1. "Hi,Finding the website and seeing Cremola mentioned my mouth watered, I believe this was made by the same people as FRIZETS. This was a powder which was mixed with water to make a batter and dropped into the bacon fat to make little savoury pancakes. (no good now we have to grill bacon for health reasons perhaps). In the early 1950's -ie before supermarkets-we used also as a batter to coat deep fried. corned beef for deep frying. Anyone else remember it and can it still be obtained?"
2. "FRIZETS Many years ago I wrote to Tony D'Angelo who was a guest food journalist on the "Jimmy Young Radio Programme" on Radio 2 ,asking about Frizets.After a great deal of nostalgic discussion about cooked Full English Breakfasts with savoury pancakes(tomato or plain)Tony informed the listeners the product had been withdrawn in the late 50's and the manufacturing company had no plans to reintroduce Frizets.They added that all ceased products are reviewed from time to time.Perhaps with enough interest they might relaunch?."
4. "All my family still rave about Frizets and would dearly like to to be able to buy it again. It was still available after 1972 because I was able to buy it in the Co-op and in a large store with a Food Hall after we moved house, and we also knew other afficionados here."
5. "I was surprised to find an entry for FRIZETS on Google. Only looked because I have kept a small cookery booklet about them. I beg to differ on the date that Tony D'Angelo says they were withdrawn as I remember cooking them after I got married in 1968! Not sure if I was still using it after my daughters were born in the 70's, though. We really enjoyed them & cooked breakfasts on Sunday morning were not the same without them. I preferred the plain to the tomato flavoured & can taste them now!!"
The following quote is from a discussion about 'forgotten foods' on the Heanor District Local History messageboard:
http://www.chatarea.com/HeanorDistrictLocalHis tory.m2930237-3
"I have 5 Be Ro cook books-earliest 1940s -sepia print! . . . . One recipe is for "Frizets"-just flour, milk and a pinch of salt-mixed together and spoonsfuls dropped into bacon fat-fried till browned-they were lovely-but you don't get bacon fat that is fit to fry anything in nowadays!"
Hoping something here is of interest,
Chris
I think Chris has said they were withdrawn in the late 1950's but we were still eating them in the 60's - or perhaps they were just old stock! Were they made by the Creamola Foam people? Memory does play tricks I know, but I have visions of Greens being on the Frizzet packets. I do remember the overall flavour was an oniony savoury sort of taste - but like most of the childhood food(Symingtons Jelly Creams, Table Creams etc) sadly no longer with us.
I can still taste them to this day, they were Golden, Crispy at the edges and I remember that they formed tiny bubbles in the mixture as they fried in the hot bacon fat.
The taste was as I remember it, it must have included Cellery salt, Powdered Egg, but it also had a sort of dry but pleasent after taste.
About 20 years ago I sold an Air conditioning system to the
CO-OP's Computer Suite in the Wirral, where all purchases were ordered, The computer manageress at the time checked the name frizettes /frizzettes ect but the CO-OP's records did'nt go back far enough to help.
I do remember my Granny used to buy it for my Mum
from the CO-OP shop in Dovecote Shops, Liverpool, it was the only and nearest place we could get Fizettes around our end of Liverpool.
The CO-OP is most definately the Key, it was the only place I know of, were it was available, and it was in a white and yellow box. A well as Elvis Bring Back Frizettes.
We used to have Frizets (?sp) as part of our breakfast way back in the 1950s. They came in a packet and you just added water to make a batter, a bit like scotch pancakes. I have never found anything like them. Recently I was mixing up some gram flour with water and the smell immediately brought them to mind so I am wondering if they were made using pea flour.
We used to fry them in lard. I'm not sure they would taste the same fried in healthy olive oil!
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