Two Fat Ladies

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List Price: $59.99
Our Price: $36.99
Your Save: $ 23.00 ( 38% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Acorn Media Starring: Jennifer Paterson, Clarissa Dickson Wright, Two Fat Ladies
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Aspect Ratio: 1.33:1 Audience Rating: NR (Not Rated) Binding: DVD EAN: 0054961809493 Format: Box set Label: Acorn Media Manufacturer: Acorn Media Number Of Items: 4 Publisher: Acorn Media Release Date: 2008-07-29 Running Time: 30 Studio: Acorn Media Theatrical Release Date: 1996
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Fat but not forgotten Comment: Well, you've got to like Brits, and you've got to like upper-class Brits, and you've got to like food, and you've got to like to laugh... But if you can say YES to all four, then you're likely to find these shows very entertaining indeed. It's such a charm to spend time with people who don't take themselves too seriously, and who share their love of eating so generously.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Cooking with "Well Seasoned Cooks" Comment: While I was growing up, my dad owned a restaurant. I learned early on that the most interesting place to be was in the kitchen with the cooks. Not only were there great smells and the occasional morsel of food to be had, but also the intermittent scrap of overheard adult conversation, spiced with local gossip and experiences that young ears were probably not supposed to hear. The kitchen was certainly never boring. The cooks put me to work doing all sorts of elementary tasks like peeling vegetables and helping make deserts and, in payment, I learned a lot of colorful information about the outside world. I also learned how to cook. Many years have passed. They are all gone now and I miss them terribly, especially when I'm in my own kitchen cooking as I do now quite often. It's no fun cooking by oneself.
Now something delightful has happened. After many years of absence from television, a comprehensive compilation has been made of the smash 1990's BBC cooking show, The Two Fat Ladies, and it is available for American audiences to buy. I find that I can go into my kitchen, slip one of my four new DVDs of the Two Fat Ladies into my computer, and cook with ladies very much like my former idols. The two fat ladies are the late Jennifer Paterson, a spirited lady who spent her life living in many different corners of the world both as a privileged member of the British upper class and as a cook, caterer, and eventually food writer for the Spectator. She relates the most remarkable stories from her past and has the tendency to sing an occasional show tune or pub song, or recite a childhood poem. Clarissa Dickson Wright is her down to earth complement. Early circumstances for her also included maids, cooks, butlers, and travel. Both women are able to bring to the screen a multitude of cultural dishes with a side dish of entertainment similar to that provided to me in my childhood.
Each week, the beginning of the show features Jennifer, driving her trademark BSA motorcycle, with Clarissa sitting beside her in the sidecar, to some of the most picturesque parts of the English or Scottish countryside. After arriving at their destination, they are given the use of a remarkable kitchen, sometimes in a century old building complete with the quintessential Aga stove. In those kitchens, the two ladies turn out sumptuous meals using enough butter, double cream and lard to send people conscientious of their fat intake away screaming. In the process they are delightful. Along with watching them making wonderful looking meals, one is treated to an occasional history of food, utensils or ingredients; weekly trips into the country to buy farm fresh ingredients; local folklore; royal gossip and a lexicon of pre 20th Century measuring terms that have always given the serious measurer fits: a `slop' of cream, a `touch,' a `slurp' and a `splash' of this and that. For anyone who loves to hang around in kitchens, The Two Fat Ladies is not to be missed.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Two Fat Ladies Ride Again Comment: I am so thrilled that this is finally available in the states. Jennifer(God rest her soul) and Clarissa are so entertaining. I would say the recipes are not for the American pallet, the best part is seeing all the various places in the UK that they visit and who they cook for.
They are so interesting and they tell little quips of their lives.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Two Fat Ladies Rock! Comment: This set of videos is exactly what I expected-- dry British humor, interesting food preparations and two eccentric "seasoned" chefs with a beautiful English backdrop. Clarissa and Jennifer are a hoot and I'd love to have a dinner party with them!
Customer Rating:      Summary: I think I am disappointed Comment: Maybe I was under a false impression, but I expected better, funnier and more appetizing!
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Editorial Reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Fat but not forgotten Comment: Well, you've got to like Brits, and you've got to like upper-class Brits, and you've got to like food, and you've got to like to laugh... But if you can say YES to all four, then you're likely to find these shows very entertaining indeed. It's such a charm to spend time with people who don't take themselves too seriously, and who share their love of eating so generously.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Cooking with "Well Seasoned Cooks" Comment: While I was growing up, my dad owned a restaurant. I learned early on that the most interesting place to be was in the kitchen with the cooks. Not only were there great smells and the occasional morsel of food to be had, but also the intermittent scrap of overheard adult conversation, spiced with local gossip and experiences that young ears were probably not supposed to hear. The kitchen was certainly never boring. The cooks put me to work doing all sorts of elementary tasks like peeling vegetables and helping make deserts and, in payment, I learned a lot of colorful information about the outside world. I also learned how to cook. Many years have passed. They are all gone now and I miss them terribly, especially when I'm in my own kitchen cooking as I do now quite often. It's no fun cooking by oneself.
Now something delightful has happened. After many years of absence from television, a comprehensive compilation has been made of the smash 1990's BBC cooking show, The Two Fat Ladies, and it is available for American audiences to buy. I find that I can go into my kitchen, slip one of my four new DVDs of the Two Fat Ladies into my computer, and cook with ladies very much like my former idols. The two fat ladies are the late Jennifer Paterson, a spirited lady who spent her life living in many different corners of the world both as a privileged member of the British upper class and as a cook, caterer, and eventually food writer for the Spectator. She relates the most remarkable stories from her past and has the tendency to sing an occasional show tune or pub song, or recite a childhood poem. Clarissa Dickson Wright is her down to earth complement. Early circumstances for her also included maids, cooks, butlers, and travel. Both women are able to bring to the screen a multitude of cultural dishes with a side dish of entertainment similar to that provided to me in my childhood.
Each week, the beginning of the show features Jennifer, driving her trademark BSA motorcycle, with Clarissa sitting beside her in the sidecar, to some of the most picturesque parts of the English or Scottish countryside. After arriving at their destination, they are given the use of a remarkable kitchen, sometimes in a century old building complete with the quintessential Aga stove. In those kitchens, the two ladies turn out sumptuous meals using enough butter, double cream and lard to send people conscientious of their fat intake away screaming. In the process they are delightful. Along with watching them making wonderful looking meals, one is treated to an occasional history of food, utensils or ingredients; weekly trips into the country to buy farm fresh ingredients; local folklore; royal gossip and a lexicon of pre 20th Century measuring terms that have always given the serious measurer fits: a `slop' of cream, a `touch,' a `slurp' and a `splash' of this and that. For anyone who loves to hang around in kitchens, The Two Fat Ladies is not to be missed.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Two Fat Ladies Ride Again Comment: I am so thrilled that this is finally available in the states. Jennifer(God rest her soul) and Clarissa are so entertaining. I would say the recipes are not for the American pallet, the best part is seeing all the various places in the UK that they visit and who they cook for.
They are so interesting and they tell little quips of their lives.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Two Fat Ladies Rock! Comment: This set of videos is exactly what I expected-- dry British humor, interesting food preparations and two eccentric "seasoned" chefs with a beautiful English backdrop. Clarissa and Jennifer are a hoot and I'd love to have a dinner party with them!
Customer Rating:      Summary: I think I am disappointed Comment: Maybe I was under a false impression, but I expected better, funnier and more appetizing!
"An antidote to solemn cooking shows" -- The Boston Globe "An Anglophile’s delight" -- The Boston Globe "Go-for-the-gusto cooking style" -- The Wall Street Journal With an outsized passion for fun, Jennifer Paterson and Clarissa Dickson Wright take cooking and conversation to places where ordinary food shows dare not go. These eccentric dames crisscross the British Isles on their Triumph Thunderbird motorcycle and sidecar, preparing sumptuous feasts for all manner of folks, from lumberjacks to teenage lacrosse players. They shun faddish, health-conscious fare in favor of big, old-fashioned flavor -- usually enhanced by bacon, cream, and butter. All the while, the ladies hilariously hold forth on every topic under the sun, often bursting into song as the spirit moves them. Their generous wit and lust for life remind us that fine cooking -- like fine dining -- always goes better in good company. Join Jennifer and Clarissa on all 24 of their adventures, from a Benedictine abbey to the Brazilian embassy. As Jennifer would say, "Quelle treat!" As seen on Food Network and public television. DVD SPECIAL FEATURES INCLUDE bios of Jennifer Paterson and Clarissa Dickson Wright, documentary tribute to Jennifer Patterson, and a recipe booklet.
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