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Dorothy’s Mixture Sandwiches – Nostalgic Afternoon Tea
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A picture of Dorothy’s Mixture Sandwiches – Nostalgic Afternoon Tea.

Dorothy’s Mixture Sandwiches – Nostalgic Afternoon Tea

Laura
Laura @FeelBetter
Milton Keynes, England

My mother was a good teacher (albeit a tad ogreish) but her cooking skills were much to be desired. All I can remember mother serving was a dry pork casserole consisting of a slab of pork loin and an onion cooked to death in a tin my dad made for her and mixture sandwiches served with milk shake.

Mixture sandwiches consist of boiled eggs, cress, cheese, salt and pepper and our British staple, Salad Cream (NOT mayonnaise) spread on buttered bread. The milk shake involved drinking a glass of milk and being shaken, not something I would advocate nowadays but it was funny at the time.

In the 19th century salad dressings became popular. Heinz introduced the first commercially bottled Salad Cream in 1914 and was initially made by hand in a factory in Harlesden, London. Intended as a salad dressing, this tangy condiment found its way onto sandwiches, fried fish, chips and just about anything and everything. In the early 2000s Heinz’s decision to discontinue Salad Cream was met with a public outcry as it’s not just a condiment, it’s a symbol of British culinary heritage and so was saved.

Garden cress has always been more of an accoutrement to dress plates or a fun thing to grow on window ledges inside egg shells but it’s fab with cheese, especially one of our oldest traditional cheeses, Lancashire.

If the vicar is coming to tea, get out the best china and serve mixture sandwiches with a slice of best ham and a strong cup of English Breakfast Tea #oldfashioned #CA2025

My mother was a good teacher (albeit a tad ogreish) but her cooking skills were much to be desired. All I can remember mother serving was a dry pork casserole consisting of a slab of pork loin and an onion cooked to death in a tin my dad made for her and mixture sandwiches served with milk shake.

Mixture sandwiches consist of boiled eggs, cress, cheese, salt and pepper and our British staple, Salad Cream (NOT mayonnaise) spread on buttered bread. The milk shake involved drinking a glass of milk and being shaken, not something I would advocate nowadays but it was funny at the time.

In the 19th century salad dressings became popular. Heinz introduced the first commercially bottled Salad Cream in 1914 and was initially made by hand in a factory in Harlesden, London. Intended as a salad dressing, this tangy condiment found its way onto sandwiches, fried fish, chips and just about anything and everything. In the early 2000s Heinz’s decision to discontinue Salad Cream was met with a public outcry as it’s not just a condiment, it’s a symbol of British culinary heritage and so was saved.

Garden cress has always been more of an accoutrement to dress plates or a fun thing to grow on window ledges inside egg shells but it’s fab with cheese, especially one of our oldest traditional cheeses, Lancashire.

If the vicar is coming to tea, get out the best china and serve mixture sandwiches with a slice of best ham and a strong cup of English Breakfast Tea #oldfashioned #CA2025

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Dorothy’s Mixture Sandwiches – Nostalgic Afternoon Tea

Laura
Laura @FeelBetter
Milton Keynes, England

My mother was a good teacher (albeit a tad ogreish) but her cooking skills were much to be desired. All I can remember mother serving was a dry pork casserole consisting of a slab of pork loin and an onion cooked to death in a tin my dad made for her and mixture sandwiches served with milk shake.

Mixture sandwiches consist of boiled eggs, cress, cheese, salt and pepper and our British staple, Salad Cream (NOT mayonnaise) spread on buttered bread. The milk shake involved drinking a glass of milk and being shaken, not something I would advocate nowadays but it was funny at the time.

In the 19th century salad dressings became popular. Heinz introduced the first commercially bottled Salad Cream in 1914 and was initially made by hand in a factory in Harlesden, London. Intended as a salad dressing, this tangy condiment found its way onto sandwiches, fried fish, chips and just about anything and everything. In the early 2000s Heinz’s decision to discontinue Salad Cream was met with a public outcry as it’s not just a condiment, it’s a symbol of British culinary heritage and so was saved.

Garden cress has always been more of an accoutrement to dress plates or a fun thing to grow on window ledges inside egg shells but it’s fab with cheese, especially one of our oldest traditional cheeses, Lancashire.

If the vicar is coming to tea, get out the best china and serve mixture sandwiches with a slice of best ham and a strong cup of English Breakfast Tea #oldfashioned #CA2025

My mother was a good teacher (albeit a tad ogreish) but her cooking skills were much to be desired. All I can remember mother serving was a dry pork casserole consisting of a slab of pork loin and an onion cooked to death in a tin my dad made for her and mixture sandwiches served with milk shake.

Mixture sandwiches consist of boiled eggs, cress, cheese, salt and pepper and our British staple, Salad Cream (NOT mayonnaise) spread on buttered bread. The milk shake involved drinking a glass of milk and being shaken, not something I would advocate nowadays but it was funny at the time.

In the 19th century salad dressings became popular. Heinz introduced the first commercially bottled Salad Cream in 1914 and was initially made by hand in a factory in Harlesden, London. Intended as a salad dressing, this tangy condiment found its way onto sandwiches, fried fish, chips and just about anything and everything. In the early 2000s Heinz’s decision to discontinue Salad Cream was met with a public outcry as it’s not just a condiment, it’s a symbol of British culinary heritage and so was saved.

Garden cress has always been more of an accoutrement to dress plates or a fun thing to grow on window ledges inside egg shells but it’s fab with cheese, especially one of our oldest traditional cheeses, Lancashire.

If the vicar is coming to tea, get out the best china and serve mixture sandwiches with a slice of best ham and a strong cup of English Breakfast Tea #oldfashioned #CA2025

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Ingredients

6 minutes
2 servings
  1. 2organic eggs
  2. boxgarden cress
  3. Chunk of Lancashire or Cheddar cheese, coarsely grated
  4. Good pinch of sea salt
  5. Good pinch of freshly ground white or black pepper
  6. To serve:
  7. Thick slices of farmhouse bread or finger rolls
  8. Salted butter
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Steps

6 minutes
  1. 1

    Add the eggs to boiling water and cook for 6 minutes. Drain, peel and chop. Add in the remaining ingredients and stir to combine.

    A picture of step 1 of Dorothy’s Mixture Sandwiches – Nostalgic Afternoon Tea.
  2. 2

    Butter a slab of farmhouse bread or a finger roll with best butter and slather with the mixture. Pour the adults a lovely cup of tea (made from tea leaves of course) and give the children a glass of creamy milk.

    A picture of step 2 of Dorothy’s Mixture Sandwiches – Nostalgic Afternoon Tea.
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Laura
Laura @FeelBetter
on August 01, 2025 17:05
Milton Keynes, England
Out and Out FoodieSandgrounder#FeelBetterMK
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Comments (5)

ifuchi
ifuchi @cook_112236741
September 04, 2025 18:59
Wowww your stories are just so beautiful 🤩 and much delightful humor 😂
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