Serve? Or make? A lot of frozen pizzas are made in Baldoyle industrial estate and distributed to acquired needs
LimerickLad67 on
Ireland – usually??
We’re always horsing the Mariettas and taaay into people.
Active-Strawberry-37 on

Now if it was tea…
Bright_Second_9871 on
We had one of those houses where the whole county used to visit,it was called gáineallI don’t know the English word for it, visiting I think it means,anyway our house would be full of people at least twice a week,no alcohol just a get together, Sean nós songs(old Irish songs no instruments)etc,but the central part was the tea and sandwiches and it had to be the best you had,no cheaping out on your neighbours
FuzzyMathAndChill on
(Brits at it again)
agithecaca on
Unlikely to give you food…
god_in_a_coma on
I’m always buying biscuits for guests, then the guests keep declining them so I have to eat them all
ShouldHaveGoneToUCC on
There should be a different colour for Cavan.
Professional_Elk_489 on
Crazy that line in Italy
Momibutt on
I always offer what I made for dinner and get stroppy when they actually say yes lmao
nalcoh on
If you don’t offer at least tea or biscuits in Ireland then it’s considered pretty rude imo, especially towards tradesmen.
I’m surprised at the czech/slovak split. In Slovakia, offers of food are very much ala Mrs Doyle. The split would make more sense if light blue was food and dark blue was spirits.
Pigionlord98 on
Ah sure everyone will have a cup when visiting the gaff, sure go on, go on, go on, go on….
Legionsofmany on
Hmm I think we’re stretching what “food” is. In ireland you’ll get a tea/coffee and perhaps some biscuits but also maybe not, if theyre a relative then maybe a pretty plain sandwhich and some crisps. Other countries sit you down and force you to eat a full dinner and drink some wine/beer
brianybrian on
Dutch are mad cunts. They act like they didn’t even want you to visit when you come over.
Belgians are the opposite in my experience. Great bunch of lads for a snack platter.
17 commenti
France and Germany are torn up about the issue
Serve? Or make? A lot of frozen pizzas are made in Baldoyle industrial estate and distributed to acquired needs
Ireland – usually??
We’re always horsing the Mariettas and taaay into people.

Now if it was tea…
We had one of those houses where the whole county used to visit,it was called gáineallI don’t know the English word for it, visiting I think it means,anyway our house would be full of people at least twice a week,no alcohol just a get together, Sean nós songs(old Irish songs no instruments)etc,but the central part was the tea and sandwiches and it had to be the best you had,no cheaping out on your neighbours
(Brits at it again)
Unlikely to give you food…
I’m always buying biscuits for guests, then the guests keep declining them so I have to eat them all
There should be a different colour for Cavan.
Crazy that line in Italy
I always offer what I made for dinner and get stroppy when they actually say yes lmao
If you don’t offer at least tea or biscuits in Ireland then it’s considered pretty rude imo, especially towards tradesmen.
The GOAT.
https://preview.redd.it/ew0gxuq3bgve1.jpeg?width=960&format=pjpg&auto=webp&s=627a001ab6ae01bbd22a29d4efa635e0acf3fc8a
I’m surprised at the czech/slovak split. In Slovakia, offers of food are very much ala Mrs Doyle. The split would make more sense if light blue was food and dark blue was spirits.
Ah sure everyone will have a cup when visiting the gaff, sure go on, go on, go on, go on….
Hmm I think we’re stretching what “food” is. In ireland you’ll get a tea/coffee and perhaps some biscuits but also maybe not, if theyre a relative then maybe a pretty plain sandwhich and some crisps. Other countries sit you down and force you to eat a full dinner and drink some wine/beer
Dutch are mad cunts. They act like they didn’t even want you to visit when you come over.
Belgians are the opposite in my experience. Great bunch of lads for a snack platter.
Source: I live in Eindhoven.