Citations:fakeaway

Noun: "a homemade meal intended to replicate takeaway food ordered from a restaurant"

 * 2008 — "Workers opting for home-made lunches", Birmingham Post, 28 July 2008:
 * Shoppers trying to survive the credit crunch are also spending less on takeaways and making home-made "fakeaways" of their favourite dishes, according to Sainsbury's.
 * 2008 — Ann Evans, "Make your own tasty fakeaways", Coventry Telegraph, 16 August 2008:
 * If economy and health concerns put you off high street sandwiches, you could find inspiration for making your own tasty fakeaways in new book Sandwiches, Panini and Wraps (Apple Press, £8.99).
 * 2008 — Jasper Gerard, "Cooking: the Great British 'fakeaway'", The Telegraph, 13 November 2008:
 * We are inviting friends round not for an over-salted, over-priced takeaway but a fresh and frugal "fakeaway".
 * 2009 — Jasper Gerard, "Eating out in 2009: the highs and the lows", The Telegraph, 5 January 2009:
 * Forget fine dining: even fairly foul dining courtesy of the humble takeaway will seem extravagant. Hence the arrival of the fakeaway.