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According to the cookery writer Jane Grigson, the first published recipe to include kidney with the steak in a suet pudding was in 1859 in Mrs Beeton's Household Management. [ 5 ] [ n 1 ] Beeton had been sent the recipe by a correspondent in Sussex in south-east England, and Grigson speculates that it was until then a regional dish, unfamiliar ...
Faggots are meatballs made from minced off-cuts and offal (especially pork, and traditionally pig's heart, liver, and fatty belly meat or bacon) mixed with herbs and sometimes bread crumbs. [1] It is a traditional dish in the United Kingdom , [ 2 ] [ 3 ] especially South and Mid Wales and the English Midlands .
A steamed pudding, filled with mince and onions. Red pudding: Scotland A battered sausage served in fish and chip shops. It is similar to the saveloy. Scrapple: United States A breakfast pudding made from pork and bread scraps, often with mushrooms or onion. Spoonbread: United States A savoury soufflé-like dish based on cornmeal rather than ...
In some parts of England, (especially the Midlands) the Yorkshire pudding can be eaten as a dessert, with a sweet sauce. The 18th-century cookery writer Hannah Glasse was the first to use the term "Yorkshire pudding" in print. Yorkshire puddings are similar to Dutch baby pancakes, [2] and to popovers, an American light roll made from an egg ...
Traditional mincemeat recipes contain meat, notably beef or venison, as this was a way of preserving meat prior to modern preservation methods. [1] Modern recipes often replace the suet with vegetable shortening or other oils (e.g., coconut oil) and/or omit the meat. However, many people continue to prepare and serve the traditional meat-based ...
Rag pudding is a savoury dish consisting of minced meat and onions wrapped in a suet pastry, which is then cooked in a cheesecloth. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] [ 3 ] Invented in Oldham , the dish is also popular in Bury and Rochdale , and is eaten across the Lancashire area.
Cookery writer Jennifer Stead has drawn attention to a description of a recipe identical to toad in the hole from the middle of the century. [ 4 ] Dishes like toad in the hole appeared in print as early as 1762, when it was described as a "vulgar" name for a "small piece of beef baked in a large pudding". [ 5 ]
The clanger is an elongated suet crust dumpling, sometimes described as a savoury type of roly-poly pudding. [5] [6] Its name may refer to its dense consistency: Wright's 19th-century English Dialect Dictionary recorded the phrase "clung dumplings" from Bedfordshire, citing "clungy" and "clangy" as adjectives meaning heavy or close-textured.