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brawburd | 15:54 Fri 14th May 2004 | Food & Drink
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I hear it called a British childhood institution, but I don't know any Scottish folk who ate it as a child. Is it an English rather than British thing?
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No, it's not an english thing. I've never heard it called a british childhood institution, is that the manufacturers trying to turn it into one?

We certainly never ate it as kids and I don't think many others did either.

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It's bowfin'........maukit english scran.
I think Marmite, did try to market as a childhood institution. In the 1970's their TV ad's had the tagline, "Marmite. It's the Growing Up spread you never Grow Out of".
Vegemite is heaps better!
i'm with you nomad2.
I'm Scottish and remember eating it for the first time at a friend's house sometime in the 60s- with disastrous results.As a practical joke he neglected to inform me that it shouldn't be spread in marmalade size quantities.Didn't put me off though.I love it.
yeah we had marmite in the fifties . we would take marmite sandwiches to school everybody ate it and i still to its great.

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