A rarebit is not a rarebit without cheese A cheese sandwich is a not a cheese sandwich without cheese A cheeseboard is not a cheeseboard without cheese (unless it is actually the board the cheese rests on) A cheese biscuit is just a biscuit without cheese unless it is Tuc (other cheese filled biscuits are available) A cheese straw is not a cheese straw without cheese it is just a baked flour stick A cheese souffle without cheese is a souffle A cheese puff without cheese is just a puff A Lancashire(cheese) bomb possibly based on the Barnes Wallis design as dropped by the Lancaster Bomber. LANCASTER BOMBER Cheese Lancaster Bomber Strong and creamy Lancashire cheese Lancaster Bomber - A tasty Lancashire cheese Much like the legendary, four engine plane from ww2 this packs a punch! Made with a strong Lancashire cheese flavour this comes with both the tang and creamy flavour combination that will delight your taste buds as they celebrate the victory of flavour. This is one that the whole family will love to take home.
The economic requirements of World War Two (1939 to 1945) decimated the number of cheesemakers. At the start of the war, by wartime law, anyone making cheese in Britain was compelled to make a single, uniform cheddar-style cheese called “Government Cheddar.” Rationing allowed everyone 2 oz (50g) of it a week. By the end of the war in 1945, less than 100 independent British cheesemakers had survived. But they weren’t out of the woods yet: the law stayed in effect until 1954. British Cheeses
Someone in export is doing a good job because those are fairly readily available here. There are other British cheeses I can obtain but I would have to go to a specialty cheese shop if I wanted, for instance, some Cheshire. My introduction to Monty Python was a fellow child at school doing a talk on cheese which she introduced with the Cheese Shop sketch.