Britain get their milk from their first milk factory with heaps of cows!!
Condensed milk isn't grown anywhere, it's made from regular milk.
In Britain, it is the milkman (or milkwoman) that delivers the milk to our doorsteps early in the morning.
bread, milk everything essential
Cadburys dairy milk products are made in Britain.
The British usually add milk and sugar to their tea
a pint of milk cost £250,000,000 back in 1955
In Britain the term whole milk is used to describe milk which has not had its composition altered from the cow. In other EU contries the term may be used to refer to 4% minimum fat milk. Full cream milk is not a term approved by the milk marketing board in the UK. The description is open to interpritation and could mean whole milk or cream. However, the term is used coloquially to refer to whole milk as is the term full fat milk.
Simple answer - go look. Many markets (supermarkets in Britain), have websites, so you can see what they have before you go, or buy online. And no - the simple answer is not "cow milk" - other kinds are available.
its usually sugar, but some people have it just plain. Milk, or milk and sugar. Very few Britons drink 'black' tea, i.e. without milk (but my two daughters do drink it black).
Adding milk to tea is quite popular worldwide, especially in the UK and India. Though real tea appreciation today is about drinking teas pure, there's nothing wrong with adding milk. In fact, the Tibetans enjoy their yak tea with milk since hundreds of years.
* Wensleydale - Wensleydale can be either a white cheese or a blue. Either one is a cow's milk semi-hard cheese. * Stilton - Probably one of the most well known English cheeses. An non skimmed cow's milk cheese. * Dorsey Blue Vinney - Cow's milk cheese.
When I was a little girl in Ontario Canada, I was sent to the local dairy to buy a quart of milk - cost 19 cents. That was also the cost of a loaf of bread sliced or unsliced. In Britain it was about 1/6d (7 or 8 new pence).