Cottage Pie

Restaurants, food, beverage, hawkers, and local markets and suppliers. This is the place for discussion on Hua Hin's culinary options.
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JW
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by JW »

Our Cottage Pie in Johnnie Walkers goes down well! Cant see teh extra gravy in the pic and cheese can be added :)
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by migrant »

pharvey wrote:
caller wrote:
Arcadian wrote:Like many national dishes it is a way of using up leftover food.
I'm sure you're absolutely right, but as a kid, on Monday's we'd have the meat cold with the left over veg done as bubble and squeak. I'd have that with home made pickled onions and sweet pickle - yummy!
Bubble and Squeak!! The only way I could handle bl**dy sprouts!!! What a great dish - with a little HP sauce of course...

:cheers: :cheers:
OK, I give up, what is Bubble and Squeak?? Sounds like a couple of circus clowns! :cheers:
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by caller »

Here you go Migrant!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_and_squeak

I know mine is cooked when I can flip it like a pancake ! :thumb:

Nigel Slater explains how its done, although I use a little olive oil rather than butter.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/ ... eak-recipe
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by migrant »

caller wrote:Here you go Migrant!

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bubble_and_squeak

I know mine is cooked when I can flip it like a pancake ! :thumb:

Nigel Slater explains how its done, although I use a little olive oil rather than butter.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/lifeandstyle/ ... eak-recipe
Thanks! :cheers:
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by Takiap »

pharvey wrote:
caller wrote:
Arcadian wrote:Like many national dishes it is a way of using up leftover food.
I'm sure you're absolutely right, but as a kid, on Monday's we'd have the meat cold with the left over veg done as bubble and squeak. I'd have that with home made pickled onions and sweet pickle - yummy!
Bubble and Squeak!! The only way I could handle bl**dy sprouts!!! What a great dish - with a little HP sauce of course...

:cheers: :cheers:

You're a brave man. Not even the Thai can disguise the taste enough enough to allow me to eat them. The only thing worse is cucumber, which has the ability to contaminate an entire plate of food. :cuss:



:cheers:
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by Arcadian »

[quote="migrant".


OK, I give up, what is Bubble and Squeak?? Sounds like a couple of circus clowns! :cheers:[/quote]

Would you be equally confused by "toad in the hole" or "baby`s head"?
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by migrant »

Arcadian wrote:[quote="migrant".


OK, I give up, what is Bubble and Squeak?? Sounds like a couple of circus clowns! :cheers:
Would you be equally confused by "toad in the hole" or "baby`s head"?[/quote]

Toad in the hole I know, but not baby's head??
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by Arcadian »

migrant wrote:
Arcadian wrote:[quote="migrant".


OK, I give up, what is Bubble and Squeak?? Sounds like a couple of circus clowns! :cheers:
Would you be equally confused by "toad in the hole" or "baby`s head"?
Toad in the hole I know, but not baby's head??[/quote]


Tender beef and onions encased in a suet pastry ball tied in a cloth and steamed for several hours.
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by migrant »

Arcadian wrote:
migrant wrote:
Arcadian wrote:[quote="migrant".


OK, I give up, what is Bubble and Squeak?? Sounds like a couple of circus clowns! :cheers:
Would you be equally confused by "toad in the hole" or "baby`s head"?
Toad in the hole I know, but not baby's head??

Tender beef and onions encased in a suet pastry ball tied in a cloth and steamed for several hours.[/quote]

Sounds good! :cheers:
The proper function of man is to live, not to exist. I shall not waste my days in trying to prolong them. I shall use my time.
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uncle tom
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by uncle tom »

Gosh - there's some nostalgia coming out here..

Shepherd's pie (we never called it Cottage pie) - minced lamb (leftovers from a sunday joint) in a thick gravy, dumped in a pyrex dish, with the boiled spuds that were also leftover, well mashed and put on top - and then grilled.

Bubble and squeak - leftover cabbage or sprouts, roughly chopped up with leftover spuds, and dumped in the frying pan.

Toad in the hole - sausages (always Wall's) immersed in a Yorkshire pudding.

And somewhere through the week there would usually be a macaroni cheese and a casserole on the menu..

Although my family wasn't poor, my parents grew up with wartime rationing, and got used to a diet that had relatively little meat in it. Today, living on my own, I probably consume more meat each week than our family of four did forty years ago..
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by Arcadian »

Living between the sea and the country we always had good food in the 50`s. Fresh fish and crab and rabbit at least once a week caught by ferret. Anyone remember junket?
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PeteC
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by PeteC »

Arcadian wrote:...... Anyone remember junket?
For sure, and it's not just a British thing. My Mom used to serve it as a dessert in the 50's and 60's. I guess you can still find it on grocery shelves if you look hard enough. Pete :cheers:
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by Big Boy »

Arcadian wrote:Anyone remember junket?
I remember my parents talking about it. Don't know if I've ever tried it. What is it?
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by PeteC »

Big Boy wrote:
Arcadian wrote:Anyone remember junket?
I remember my parents talking about it. Don't know if I've ever tried it. What is it?
"Junket is a milk-based dessert, made with sweetened milk and rennet, the digestive enzyme which curdles milk. It might best be described as a custard or a very soft, sweetened cheese......."

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Junket_%28dessert%29
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Re: Cottage Pie

Post by chaspul »

Made it myself as a kid.
Sweetened milk with vanilla. rennet added to set, in effect curdle the milk. Sets like a custard, served with nutmeg on top.

On the nostalgia side anyone old enough to remember "Bread and scrape"?
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