Daily Star

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The pie can ousands of when a form s or wheat was popular. e thought to y. The er st TV’s s Danniella Secretary ls Chrissy isters along rgent from DAN: The d cowboy – from enorhit the shelce medieval Gloucester ies containys to Royal s. E: The natype of pie ing to a poll Steak and h apple pie k pies sixth. nish pasty th. is for GREGGS: First opened in 1951 in Newcastle, bakery chain Greggs is one of our top places to get pies. It now has more than 1,700 outlets. is for HABITS. A massive 84% of us describe pies as the ultimate comfort food. The average person will eat more than 1,500 pies in their adult lifetime. is for INEDIBLE: In the Middle Ages pie crusts were known as “coffyns” and used as containers for the filling rather than designed to be eaten. They were often given to the poor or beggars. is for JUST DESSERTS. The first recorded recipe for apple pie was written in England in 1381. is for KILLJOY. In 1644 Oliver Cromwell banned pie as he declared it was a pagan’s form of pleasure. Fortunatel­y the ban was lifted again in 1660. Phew! is for LUXURY. The most expensive pie ever cost customers at the Fence Gate Inn, Lancs, a tasty £1,024 per slice. It was filled with Japanese wagyu beef fillet, fine wine and gold-leaf pastry. is for MURDER. Fictional killer Sweeney Todd and Mrs Lovett had their victims baked into pies. Last year a real-life Russian cannibal couple were reported to have sold human meat “pies” made from remains of their 30 victims. is for NAME: The Oxford English Dictionary defines a pie as “a baked dish of fruit, or meat and vegetables, typically with a top and base of pastry”. is for OFF THE MENU: England fans won’t be getting meat pies at stadiums in Russia at the World Cup. They’ll have to make do with cabbage ones! is for PIE-GATE. Roly-poly reserve goalie Wayne Shaw, now 46, caused a storm when he gobbled a pie during his side Sutton Utd’s FA Cup clash with Arsenal last year. The 23-stone player got a fine and a ban for breaching betting rules. is for QUANTITY: As a nation we spend £1billion on pies every year, with pork pies making up £145million. They originated with hunters around the town of Melton Mowbray in Leicesters­hire in the 18th Century. is for ROMANS: They are thought to have been the first to bring pies to Britain but the first written record in English of the word “pye” was in 1301. is for SOCCER: The famous football chant “Who Ate All the Pies?” was first used in 1894 by Sheffield Utd fans, taunting club goalie William “Fatty” Foulke, who weighed 24 stone. is for TELLY. In 2015 Great British Bake Off contestant Ian Cumming shocked viewers by serving up “roadkill pie” containing venison, partridge and guinea fowl. is for UMBLE PIE. This was the old name for a pie filled with chopped or minced innards. MOORE JAMES “Pie in the sky” comes from a 1911 US folk song lyric. is for VOTES. The British Pie Awards have been going since 2009. The 2018 competitio­n will see 120 judges tuck into 900 different pies. is for WORLD PIE EATING CHAMPIONSH­IPS. Held annually at Harry’s Bar in Wigan. Martin Appleton-Clare is the current champ, downing a meat and potato pie measuring 10cm by 3cm in just 32 seconds. is for X-RATED: Boffins at the Smell and Taste Treatment and Research Foundation in Chicago found that sniffing pumpkin pie was one of the biggest turn-ons for blokes! is for YIKES. The World Custard Pie Championsh­ips are held in Coxheath, near Maidstone. is for ZANY: Rolling Stones rocker Keith Richards always has shepherd’s pie before going on stage.

 ??  ?? ®Ê WEIGHTY ISSUES: Boris Johnson and, right, Yolanda Hadid with her model daughters Gigi and Bella
®Ê WEIGHTY ISSUES: Boris Johnson and, right, Yolanda Hadid with her model daughters Gigi and Bella

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