Apparently, some once-common British dishes are disappearing from our menus. Here are some of them; see if you can figure out why this should be:
Bath Chaps (nothing to do with pool lifeguards or cowboys' trousers) - this West Country dish consists of pickled pigs' cheeks soaked in water, boiled and rolled in breadcrumbs to be eaten cold, like ham.
Bedfordshire Clanger - originally for farmworkers, made from a roll of suet pastry filled with cheap cuts of meat at one end and fruit at the other. Sounds similar to a Cornish Pasty which these days just consists of meat & potato but for the now almost extinct Cornish tin-miners would also have a sweet filling at one end.
Jugged Hare - made from a sauce featuring port and hare's blood.
Squirrel Casserole - speaks for itself, really.
Brawn - no not this sort! - but a jellied pigs' head.
Calf's foot jelly - chop the feet off of baby cows, boil them up to extract the natural gelatin and there you have it - a once polular food for invalids.
Up in Scotland there was Crappit heids - boiled haddock heads stuffed with oatmeal, suet & onions.
And for the Welsh Griwel blawd ceirch - oatmeal mixed with gruel.
After all of these delicious and nutritious savoury dishes you could delight your palate with:
Junket a dish of sweetened milk with rennet, served with sugar & cream.
Sussex Pond Pudding - (looks very scrummy), a whole lemon in golden buttery sugar syrup encased in a suet crust. Mmmmmm.........
Kentish Pudding Pie - sweet rice pudding with a pastry top
Dorset dumplings - apples served with suet.
I'm off now to make my jam sandwich.
3 comments:
Uh, Chris. I think it's pretty obvious why these dishes are rapidly disappearing from menus. Same reason pickled pigs feet and chit'lins aren't on many menus over here. Yes, life is bland . . .
I was in Madrid on business last week and, at lunch, one of my colleagues tried to translate one of the items on the menu. He thought a bit and frowned a bit and rubbed his tummy saying "it's this bit - bowels". I went for the spaghetti bolognese instead... (Turns out, by the way, that it was tripe. Spaghetti was the right choice!)
Well, there's only one word to describe that and it's:
grugzsv!!
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