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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To wonder why anyone would get a takeaway roast?

491 replies

NewAgeWiccan · 03/04/2021 19:17

I get supporting local pubs, but I just don't understand why anyone would get a takeaway roast?

Pubs are charging £15 for a one course Sunday roast (every week, not just Easter). Which isn't exactly cheap. I would have thought this would be pretty grim once you get it home, and a home cooked roast is far superior.

OP posts:
Insert1x20p · 04/04/2021 01:20

Lead times: it's not that a roast is hard but you need to be in for three hours (assuming you don't have 2 ovens) to get it done and while you can leave the meat, the last hour is full on and hot!

Tbh I'd be dubious about takeaway roasties as they go soggy quickly but I could just do those myself. I'd still get the takeout.

I agree as well that I find myself ordering more than I would to support businesses that are struggling and trying to come up with ways to adapt.

Susannahmoody · 04/04/2021 02:03

Just roast spuds are hard work

Susannahmoody · 04/04/2021 02:05

Can't believe all the calm down posts

It's about a feckin roast dinner

Quaagars · 04/04/2021 02:06

Exactly lol

1forAll74 · 04/04/2021 03:29

I had a takeaway roast dinner ! for Christmas day. My Son thought it was a nice idea to order,an go and fetch it for me.from some pub a mile away. MY son lives in the same village as me, and only a short walk to his house. But he has two lodgers at his home, so no mixing with me at Christmas.

I wasn't remotely bothered about being on my own for Christmas day, but guess it was good of him to think about me not starving ha ha, I had plenty of food in.

The meal was quite awful really. Just a few little thin slices of chicken that were quite tasteless, few bits of cut up carrots and broccoli bits.a tiny piece of hard stuffing, and a little container of gravy, that was very thin gravy, that was kind of greasy..

There was a tiny round piece of Christmas pudding, which I never eat, and another small container, that held some custard, so thick, that it could have bounced off the wall like a ball.

I don't know how much this meal cost.and didn't say anything about it to my son,and I did eat some of it..I made my own thicker and richer gravy,. But I told my Son, that the meal had been enjoyed by all., as my three cats enjoyed licking all the custard up, and a few birds had enjoyed the crumbled up Christmas pudding outside.

Belledan1 · 04/04/2021 04:01

There is a cafe by me that has been delivering Sunday dinner for years. Its opposite quite a lot of flats that house mainly oaps. A lot of them it's the hot roast dinner they have.

Insert1x20p · 04/04/2021 06:07

Just roast spuds are hard work

Yeah- I meant the M&S frozen ones Grin. I occasionally make from scratch but usually not worth the effort.

fifteenmillionmerits · 04/04/2021 06:44

Got ourselves a delicious Christmas lunch with all the trimmings in early December from our local pub. Reasonably priced, and pub was only about fifteen minutes drive there and back, so food was still warm when we returned home. Would definitely do it again.

MissTrip82 · 04/04/2021 07:13

Why does anyone get any takeaway?

Always surprised there are people who know nobody whose physical frailty or disability would prevent them cooking or who have never experienced stress so great that mundane life things like cooking a roast have been difficult.

maddiemookins16mum · 04/04/2021 07:15

I love a takeaway but a takeaway roast has never appealed to me.

alwayscrashinginthesamecar1 · 04/04/2021 07:33

We have two takeaways near us that only do roasts ( not in the UK). One of them is just ok, but the other one is bloody brilliant, nothing better on a lazy —hungover— Sunday.

makingmammaries · 04/04/2021 07:34

To eat possibly?

Okbussitout · 04/04/2021 07:35

@NewAgeWiccan

I get supporting local pubs, but I just don't understand why anyone would get a takeaway roast?

Pubs are charging £15 for a one course Sunday roast (every week, not just Easter). Which isn't exactly cheap. I would have thought this would be pretty grim once you get it home, and a home cooked roast is far superior.

Do you actually wonder or is this a terribly veiled attempt at humble bragging and an opportunity to judge others? How embarrassing.
SpiderinaWingMirror · 04/04/2021 08:03

I don't have the need want or desire for one. But if I were on my own or in a couple I would see the point.
In normal times nothing better than Sunday lunch in a pub

userxx · 04/04/2021 08:05

@ThereforeIAm

I’ve always wondered that. There are a few places that do it near me and there is a dial-a-roast van as well but I’ve never fancied it myself.

Dial-a-roast sounds like my idea of heaven.

HelloDaisy · 04/04/2021 08:09

We’ve had a roast dinner from our local pub on Mother’s Day and it was fantastic. All still piping hot and perfect when we got home. There was plenty of food and the Yorkshire puddings were in a separate container so didn’t get soggy.

Yes, I am happy to cook a roast but it’s definitely a treat to have it cooked for you and ds collected it too so all I had to so was have a drink and wait for it to arrive!

RosesAndHellebores · 04/04/2021 08:12

Tips in case anyone fancies making one - we have a roast every Sunday - always in the evening at about 7pm. Today, Easter Sunday we are having lamb. Just a half leg as there are only 4 of us.

At 5pm, I'll put the oven on and peel the potatoes, enough to make 3 pieces each. While they are boiling I put a glug of rapeseed oil in a small baking tray and pop into the oven.

As spuds boil I put the lamb into a small roasting tray and shove a few slices of garlic and rosemary sprigs into little slits. And bung a quartered small onion in with it.

Once potatoes have been bubbling for 2 minutes I strain the water into another saucepan - give the potatoes a juggle round the dry pan to fluff the edges and tip them into the sizzling oil - turning to makensure every bit is covered in oil.

Lamb and potatoes go into the oven together for about 90 minutes.

Bring the spud water back to the boil and pop in a sliced sweetheart cabbage and boil until cooked. Strain, reserving the water. Pop cabbage in one side of a serving dish.

While cabbage boils slice two leeks and wash well in cold water making sure there is no grit. Pop leeks into the reserved cabbage water.

In the second pan you have been using melt a slice of butter, about 1/4 inch and add a tablespoon of flour and stir in well. Add about 1/2 pint of milk, teaspoon of chopped lazy garlic and gently simmer, and season. Pour sauce into a serving dish and rinse pan at sink. Strain leek into pan, reserving the water. Add leeks to sauce and set aside.

Bung sugar snaps in reserved water and boil. Strain, again reserving the water. Add snaps to serving dish with cabbage.

Put anybdirtie in dishwasher. Get out carving tray, meat platter, and 4 plates.

(You will only have used two saucepans and the reserved water for the gravy is now full of goodness from the veg)

Set table (don't forget the mint sauce) and have a sit down with a glass of wine for 45 minutes.

At 6.45 tootle back into kitchen and take out meat. Leave spuds in but turn them and turn down the oven and put in plates, and meat platter.

Drain fat from roasting tin leaving just a bit and the meaty juices and the roasted onion - pop on the gas and add a desert spoon of flour. Call husband to carve. Add reserved juices to roasting tin, stirring all the time. Depending on flavour add a lamb stockpot and of course a glug of wine. Pour hot water into gravy boat. Pop 1st bowl of veg in microwave on high for 2 mins.

DH carries through meat platter and plates. Gravy simmers gently.

Veg goes through and leeks go in microwave. Strain gravy into jug squishing the juicy goodness out of the onion. Pour into gravy boat and take gravy and leeks through. Quickly tip spudsbinto warm dish and take through.

DH pours wine, everyone tucks in, kitchen is spotless at this stage.

Grown up children load dishwasher. Wipe down table mats and table. Drink more wine.

The caveat of course is that I enjoy it and find the sauce and gravy making quite soothing.

saraclara · 04/04/2021 08:30

@RosesAndHellebores why are you womansplaining how to make a roast? Do you think we don't know how?

Peppa are simply explaining that under some circumstances they might choose to have a takeaway roast instead.

RosesAndHellebores · 04/04/2021 08:36

Well clearly not @saraclara as there have been so many posts saying that or that it's all too much trouble.

If people want to get a take-away roast that's absolutely fine if it suits the. If they would like to know some ways to make it as easy as possible, that's also fine is it not?

And womansplaining - why because it's about food rather than sport? You do know that mean can cook and women can play sport I suppose.

ThursdayLastWeek · 04/04/2021 08:38

I live literally right next door to a pub, and they are delivering a roast dinner later. Cant wait.

ClarkeGriffin · 04/04/2021 08:38

@LondonWFuck

You literally do not understand? Really? Hmm
You're surprised by this? Grin OP is just another example of someone on here who has no thinking capability.
stairway · 04/04/2021 08:39

Buying a roast makes more sense then ordering pizza. Pizza is mainly just bread that you can buy ready made from any supermarket and costs the same as a roast dinner.

KnottedFern · 04/04/2021 08:47

My brother a pub and has obviously had a shit show of a year since last March. I apply that logic to the pubs/restaurants in my local area and am more than happy to support them. Plus I don't have to cook it or wash up after it and I'm never disappointed. Not rocket science really is it.

userxx · 04/04/2021 08:52

And womansplaining - why because it's about food rather than sport?

No, more because it was easy to follow. I know how to make a roast but after all the faff I just push it around the plate and don't eat it.

Bluntness100 · 04/04/2021 08:54

I also think supporting local businesses is a huge positive. It’s a win win, we get a great meal and the business brings in more income. I know ours are really grateful for the business. They are doing everything they can to stay afloat, during such a difficult time. One local pub has already shut its doors permanently as they couldn’t survive it. However unlike the other pubs they didn’t change their business model and start doing food deliveries.

The pub we buy take aways from we usually go for dinner or lunch in a couple of times a month, during normal times, we really like it and the owner, so for us, the only difference is the location of where we eat the food , Ie at home v in the pub, and we aren’t buying wine or anything with it.

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