Order and deliver food from your takeaway, find local takeaways online in Cannock


1st Choice Pizza, 1 Walsall Road, Cannock WS11 3HG

Broadway Spice Balti, 50b Broadway, Pye Green, Cannock WS12 4HP

 

Fezzis Kebab House, 01543 467910, 45 Mill Street, Cannock WS11 3DR

 

Food Paradise, 01543 428688, 76 Market Street, Cannock WS12 5AG

 

Heath Hayes Balti, 01543 276709, 102 Hednesford Road, Heath Hayes, Cannock WS12 

 

Jade Garden, 01543 462069, 151 Longford Road, Cannock WS11 3LG

 

Jean’s Pantry, 01543 275575, 160 Walsall Road, Norton Canes, Cannock WS11 3RB

 

Lee’s Garden, 01543 574542, 25 North Street, Cannock WS11 3BB

 

Little Pantry, 01543 500023, 37 North Street, Cannock WS11 3BB

 

Man Kwan Kitchen, 01543 572513, 256 Cannock Road, Cannock WS11 2DB

 

Mr Tang’s, 01543 503049, 12 Mill Street, Cannock WS11 3DL

 

Oriental Chinese, 01543 502328, 116 Mill Street, Cannock WS11 3DR

 

Pearl City, 01543 424472, 98 Belt Road, Cannock WS12 4JJ

 

Phoenix Chinese Takeaway, 01543 275924, 70a John Street, Wimblebury, Cannock WS12 5RJ

Plaza Tandoori Restaurant, 4 Mill Street, Cannock WS11 0DLL

 

Redfort Tandoori, 01543 422123, 532 Littleworth Road, Cannock WS12 5JD

 

Rimni Pizza, 01543 879977, 60 Market Street, Cannock WS12 5AG

 

Sammys Kitchen, 01543 271577, 100 Hednesford Road, Cannock WS11 2LB


Oregano

Often confused with sweet marjoram, but herbalists believe that oregano is better medicinally. The generic name is said by some to be an amalgam of the two Greek words, óros and gános, meaning ‘mountain brightness’ or ‘shining mountain’.

An eastern Mediterranean native, the plant has a long history of use in medicine and it was used by the ancient Greeks in poultices for sores, aching muscles and rheumatic pains in limb joints. The herb was taken to the New World by the early colonists largely for the same medicinal uses. They also used it, infused, as a tea to treat bronchitis and asthma and its digestive properties were employed in treating gastro-intestinal disorders. The dried herb is very popular in Italian cooking.

Chinese
Indian Curry

What is Dal?

Dal is a preparation of pulses (dried lentils, peas or beans) which have been stripped of their outer hulls and split.

It also refers to the thick stew prepared from these, an important part of Indian, Nepali, Pakistani, Sri Lankan, and Bangladeshi cuisine.
It is regularly eaten with rice and vegetables in Southern India, and with both rice and roti (wheat-based flat bread) throughout Northern India & Pakistan.

Dal is a ready source of proteins for a balanced diet containing little or no meat. Sri Lankan cooking of dal resembles that of southern Indian dishes.


Mint Sauce

Mint sauce is a sauce made from finely chopped mint leaves, soaked in vinegar, and a small amount of sugar. Occasionally, the juice from a squeezed lime is added. The sauce should have the consistency of double cream. In UK and Irish cuisine it is traditionally used as a complement to roast lamb (but usually not other roast meats) or, in some areas, mushy peas.

Mint sauce can sometimes be used in recipes in place of fresh mint. Also you could try it on toast or bread. Mint sauce can be added to yoghurt to make a mint raita. "Sweet and sour" sauces such as Mint sauce were common throughout Medieval Europe, (with the use of mint being more common in French and Italian cuisine of the period than that of the English), however they became less common and mostly died out as Europe entered the Modern Era.

Pizza


Indian Curry


BASIL

Basil (ocimum sanctum) is the only member of the mint family which is native to India, where it was called arjaka in the ancient language, Sanskrit. Its Latin botanical names are derived from the Greek okimon, ‘fragrant lipped’ and basilikan, ‘Royal’.

Feelings about Basil have mixed throughout history, the herb having been variously associated with death, religious ritual, medicine, fertility, erotica and even as being responsible for the breeding of scorpions. It is probably for this reason, following a homeopathic logic that it was recommended at one time for the treatment of scorpion stings and snakebites. The ancients, although holding mixed feelings about the herbs, even swore oaths on it in courts of law.


In association with Just Eat. The online takeaway ordering service at www.just-eat.co.uk