>>708629>It's quite affordable, actually. Maybe ¥300 (2 GBP) or less for a morning meal? And the quality and selection from Japanese convenience store (konbini) is of pretty good quality. At any time there will be at least twenty to thirty different things you can have for breakfast, and if you aren't happy with the selection you can go to another convenience storeFair enough. That's interesting. Didn't know that about Japan. As I say, over here it's much more usual to get stuff from the convenience store for lunch. It's also more usual here for people to skip breakfast, but personally I don't, because I fucking hate being starving in the morning.
>About lunch, I agree with having a buddy, you can grab lunch together and feel energised when going back to work.Indeed. I usually go by myself though - there's only one person my age where I work (small office, about 8 people). Sometimes I go with him, sometimes he brings in food from home though, so I just go by myself, buy food, bring it back, eat it at my desk. I play table football with him though at lunchtimes, so it's not all bad.
>>708717>in Russia many old traditions were lost or drastically changed in USSR. But with UK though, I see that nice continuity, a line that connects your present with your history through the ages.I guess that's true, but Britain has changed a lot in the last 50 years, a lot of modernisation, a lot of immigration, a liberal economy and liberal social attitudes. Lots of traditions getting overturned. Chicken Tikka Masala, an Indian curry, became one of the country's favourite dishes in the 90s/00s. We really are a multicultural society these days, like America.
Whether that's a good or bad thing, people disagree, but it's a fact of our country now.
>Convenience of food is importantDefinitely, and that is definitely shaping what Brits eat, very much so. Convenience food is what most of us life off.