Wednesday 31 July 2013

Yorkshire Pudding Round Up

roast turkey dinner
We've long said on this blog that Yorkshire puddings aren't just for eating with roast beef dinners. We eat them all the time with other roasts and meats, even Christmas dinners wouldn't be the same without Yorkshires on the plate alongside turkey.
If you click on the following link you will find a very eggy Yorkshire pudding recipe with strange looking results made for a Thanksgiving dinner.

Yorkshire Pudding Recipe--a Divine (and EASY) Holiday Dish ...

"Sure, Yorkshire pudding is more traditionally served with beef than turkey. But I, for one, never pass up a good excuse for Yorkshire pudding. What is it, you ask?tikkido.com/node/755" http://tikkido.com/node/755
Probably tastes great even though at least twice too much eggs were used. The last link offers a recipe that uses one less egg and shouldn't be as heavy as the last recipe. But first of all check out this video recipe using an old English leg of mutton.

Traditional Yorkshire Pudding Recipe Meat & Wild Game Cooking ...

"Yorkshire pudding is really just the British version of pop-overs. They're incredibly easy to make and add a traditional touch to a holiday Prime rib roast ...meatandwildgame.about.com/od/Side.../Yorkshire-Pudding.ht..." http://meatandwildgame.about.com/od/Side_Dishes/r/Yorkshire-Pudding.htm
Next week we'll take a look at some Christmas recipes.

Tuesday 30 July 2013

A few weeks ago we had the family over for Sunday lunch, nine adults, four grandkids. My wife as usual turned out a cracking meal, Roast beef and lamb – The grandkids prefer lamb – roast potatoes, roast parsnip, cauliflower, small boiled potatoes, carrots and of course Yorkshire puddings with gravy and mint sauce for the lamb. All prepared and cooked by my long suffering wife, the only exception being the Yorkshire puddings which were precooked by “Aunty Bessie” and only needed to be heated in the oven. If you haven’t tried “Auntie Bessie’s” Yorkshire puddings, try them, they taste so good and are so reasonably priced that it isn’t worth the time and effort of making your own.

Anyway after singing the praises of “Aunty Bessie,” I am blithering on as usual and need to get to the point. Well, after overindulging, also as usual, I sat with the two great grandmothers; my mum and my mother-in- law and we began to reminisce about Sunday teatime in those far off days when I was a lad. Everything then seemed to be home made and I might be wrong, but to my mind, while the purse wasn’t deep, the table always seemed to be laden with goodies.

In those far off days no one, as far as I can remember, was on a diet and everyone wasn’t obese, in fact there seemed to be less people of goodly proportions about then. Now that I think about it, the lack of hygiene regulations in the grocer’s – bacon and hams hanging from the ceiling, butter in wooden barrels, great round cart wheels of cheese, loose tea, sugar, flour and a vast variety of dried goods, all packaged or cut and wrapped by hand, with nary a rubber glove in sight – didn’t do us any harm and none of us ever seemed to suffered from food poisoning. Yet in today’s modern world preoccupied with hygiene, health, sell by dates, and warnings on food preparation, people do come down with it.

There you are, I’ve had my bit to say about modern versus the old days, not that I’m against the modern day in general, we have better housing, better medical care, shorter working hours and better wages, but do we have better food? Maybe it’s my rose tinted specs, but I like to think not.

So back to the spread on a typical Sunday teatime when I was a lad living at home. Home baked bread buns, with butter and jam. At least two plate pies, such as bacon and egg, mince and onion, cheese and onion, corned beef and potato, steak and kidney, all baked on enamel plates used solely for that purpose. Pickles, beetroot and sauce to go with them, and of course the sweet stuff. There was always one large sweet pie or tart and a variety of smaller cakes or tarts. As to the larger variety, the selection might be Apple Pie, Blackberry and apple pie, a custard tart or a treacle tart and the smaller, jam tarts, sweet mince tarts, coconut hay stacks, teacakes, currant scones, biscuits and little cakes with icing on the top.

Mum said my favourite was bacon and egg, and I had to agree, even though I remember being partial to cheese and onion. Come to think of it, I liked all of the rest too. The only thing I can ever remember not liking as a lad was butter beans and I still had to eat them, because I wasn’t allowed to leave the table until my plate was empty.

I know, I’m waffling again, so I’ll come to the point, after two hours listening while the matriarchs discussed the finer points of cookery, I managed to get the recipe for the bacon and egg pie. As a male with no skill in the culinary arts, other than to consume the finished product, I have reproduced said recipe below and since my mother is always right, it will be my fault if it turns out wrong.

Bacon And Egg Pie

Serves 4

Ingredients for short crust pastry

8 oz plain white flour ¼ teaspoon salt 2 oz lard 2oz hard margarine 2 tablespoons cold water

Mix flour and salt in a bowl, cut lard and margarine into small pieces, add them to the bowl and rub between the fingers until mixture is like fine bread crumbs. Add water; stir until mixture begins to bind. Then use your hands to knead lightly until the dough is formed.

Roll out on floured board, grease 8- inch pie tin and line with pastry, leaving enough pastry for a lid.

Filling ingredients

8 oz bacon

2 large eggs

A shake of pepper

Half pint milk

Cut bacon rashers in half, fry on gentle heat for five minutes, do not crisp, drain off fat.

Place eggs in basin add pepper to taste, add milk and whisk gently together.

Cover base of pie with bacon, pour on egg mixture.

Cover with pastry lid, crimp edges, cut two small slits in top and brush with milk.

Bake in moderate oven, Gas mark 6 / 400° F / 200° C for 30 minutes.

Copyright Fred Watson 2007
Fred Watson published his first book, a fantasy adventure novel aimed at the 8-12 age group, in November 2006. A grandfather of four, he loves to write for all age groups, has an abiding interest in history and continues on a regular basis to add new stories etc to his website. http://www.footprintpublishing.co.uk

Article from articlesbase.com

   

A cooking tip from the Tesco kitchens - helping you get the best from your groceries. For more info go to www.tesco.com/grocery

Monday 29 July 2013

A Yorkshire Pudding Eating Contest In Thailand

Yorkshire pudding

Yorkshire puddings are not just popular in England, they are cooked and eaten all over the world and there was even a Yorkshire pudding eating contest in Thailand. You can read more about the contest if you click on the link.

Yorkshire Pudding Eating Contest | Bert in Chiang Mai

"Last night was the 9th Annual Yorkshire Pudding Eating Contest at The Pub on Huay Kaew Road. The winner this year was Tom who ate 37 Yorkshire Puddings ...gbboden.com/blog/yorkshire-pudding-eating-contest" http://gbboden.com/blog/yorkshire-pudding-eating-contest
I would imagine that they were muffin tin size and not giant Yorkshires. You can see how Yorkshire puddings are made in the video below.
Check out our traditional Yorkshire pudding recipe

Sunday 28 July 2013

Roast Beef & Yorkshire Pudding Recipe

 







Roast Beef & Yorkshire Pudding Recipe by Nigel Smith for Kleeneze 

2lb Sirloin of Beef
Vegetable Oil
Salt & Pepper
Potatoes Peeled
Thyme & Rosemary

Place the Kleeneze Roaster / Baking Sheet onto a high heat and pour in some vegetable oil from the Kleeneze store and pour box set. When oil is hot add beef using nylon tongs and seal golden brown. Add potatoes and season. Sprinkle with Thyme and Rosemary taken fom Kleeneze green bags. Roast for I hour gas mark 6, 175 degrees. Remove from oven and leave to rest fro 5-10 mins. Carve and serve.

Yorkshire Puddings

4 oz of Flour
2 eggs
8 fluid oz Milk
Salt & Pepper

Sieve flour into a bowl. Make a well in the centre and add eggs from the egg tray and a little of the milk taken from the Kleeneze store and pour range. Whisk together to make a thick batter then gradually whisk in remaining milk. Season with Salt & pepper. Using Kleeneze Yorkshire Pudding tray pour in hot oil and then batter. Bake in a hot oven gas mark 6, 175 degrees for 30 mins until risen and golden brown. Serve with Roast Beef. Product prices correct at time of production. Video Rating: 5 / 5

 
My recipes: www.youtube.com Video Rating: 4 / 5

Olympic Yorkshire Pudding Recipes

Yorkshire puddings are being talked about quite a lot this week alongside other traditional British fare. That's because of the other big item in the news, the Olympic games. Apart from the focus on the UK worldwide we are welcoming thousands of visitors from overseas who are here to take part in the games, contestants and officials. Also those who are looking forward to watching the athletes compete.

We have famous chefs who are renowned for their delicious food - even if nowadays some of it looks as if it would be more at home in a science lab that on a dinner table. No matter how many famous chefs we have when it comes down to food we Brits are known for our traditional fare like fish and chips, haggis, eccles cakes, scouse and last but not least good old roast beef and Yorkshire pudding. Yorkshire puddings can be eaten with many things besides beef, but there are also several cuts of beef and ways of cooking the meat. Following you will find the link to a recipe for Shoulder roast in peppercorns with Yorkshire pudding. The Yorkshire pudding recipe is one of those alien ones with too many eggs, for our traditional recipe click here.

Shoulder Roast in Peppercorns with Yorkshire Pudding | Recipe of ...

"Shoulder bolo is a very lean, boneless solid piece of meat. It is used in most delicatessens as their rare roast beef cut and because it is sliced very thin we can get away with dry roasting it rather than having to braise or stew it.t..." http://www.joyofkosher.com/recipe/shoulder-roast-in-peppercorn-jacket-and-yorkshire-pudding/
A member of the copykat forum posted the following delicious sounding recipe.

Deliscious Chicken Pot Pie in Yorkshire Pudding

"Yorkshire Pudding: 2 eggs 1 c flour 1 c milk ½ t salt Mix all together in small bowl and set aside while making filling. Chicken Pot Pie Filling: 2 c.www.copykatchat.com/tried-true/55783.htm" http://www.copykatchat.com/tried-true/55783.htm
Another recipe using too many eggs. Our friends from across the Atlantic like to change the English language and now they are changing our traditional Yorkshire pudding recipe.. the nerve of it! Finally we have a video showing you how to make mini toad in the hole, enjoy.


Friday 26 July 2013

Cooking Recipe For British Cuisine

British cuisine has always suffered from bad press. The simple homespun fare and plain preparation of most traditional British foods pales when compared to French haute cuisine, and it's not uncommon for food critics to sound almost apologetic when writing about traditional British dishes as if there were something shameful in enjoying a good, thick joint of beef with an accompaniment of Yorkshire pudding. If they speak in glowing terms of anything at all, it is a nod to the clever naming of British foods, where dishes like bubble and squeak and spotted dick appear on restaurant menus.
 
And yet, for all the snickering and apologetic references, British cuisine at its best is hearty, delicious, simple fare on which to fuel the nation that influenced the entire world. There is no other nation in the world that does a roast of beef to such perfection, nor any better accompaniment to the succulent meat than a puffed, piping hot Yorkshire pudding prepared in its drippings, and few cuisines have a dessert that can compare with the pure heaven that is a well made trifle or treacle tart.

British cuisine is a blending of the practical with the nutritious. If it is, as some say, unimaginative, that may be because the food itself needs little imagination to fancy it up and make it palatable. It is certainly not because the British mind lacks imagination when it comes to food - the common names for everyday meals sometimes require a translator just so you'll know what's on your plate. A walk through a restaurant take-away menu offers such dishes as 'mushy peas', steak and kidney pie, fish and chips and bangers and mash.

There are well-known British dishes for eating at each meal. Some of the most popular include:

Breakfast: 

A full English country breakfast includes meat, eggs, pancakes or toast and side dishes like hash and bangers and mash. It's hearty fare, the sort that is set on the table for dinner in most other cultures. It often includes leftovers from last night's dinner, diced and fried together with seasonings and butter, sometimes called country hash.

Tea:

The tradition of mid-afternoon tea is one that's been observed by the British for centuries. Among the most common dishes served at mid-afternoon tea are finger-foods like crumpets with jam and clotted cream, dainty watercress sandwiches and scones with raisins or dried fruits.

Sunday Dinner:

The Sunday dinner has a long tradition as being a family occasion - the one meal of the week at which all family members gathered. A roast joint of meat - beef, lamb, pork or chicken - is nearly a requirement, and it is served with a potato and vegetable, and very often accompanied by Yorkshire pudding.

Puddings and custards feature prominently in British cuisine. Baked, boiled or steamed, puddings are usually made with suet and breading, and studded with dried fruits and nuts. One of the most popular and delightful British desserts is the trifle, and there are nearly as many variations as there are cooks. The base is a sponge cake, often left over from another meal. Soaked in Madeira or port, it is layered in a dish with custard, jam, fruits and Jell-O and topped with whipped cream. The end result is a delicious mélange that is features all that is good about British cookery - plain, practical cooking that is meant to fill the belly and satisfy the taste buds.

Find tips about mimolette cheese and cottage cheese diet at the Cheese Facts website. Article from articlesbase.com
 
 

www.mahalo.com Yorkshire puddings, affectionately known as Yorkies, are an integral part of the classic English "Roast Beef and Yorkshire Pudding" dinner. They are notoriously difficult to make well, many have struggled to get them to rise, and traditionally people will look to their mother or grandmother for tips on how to make Yorkshire pudding. Remember those flat hard lumps of batter that you have pulled from the oven at the last minute? Too late then to make any more, dinner was served!

Wednesday 24 July 2013

Valentines Day Pancakes Made From A Yorkshire Pudding Recipe

Being a Yorkshire lass I've used a Yorkshire pudding recipe many times over the years, but that's been mostly to make them the traditional way and to be eaten with the Sunday roast whether it be beef, pork, lamb, chicken or turkey. Of course they are associated with roast beef mainly but they taste just as good with other types of roast dinners and they can be quite flexible.

Originally they were dished up as a starter to fill you up before the main course so that you didn't want as much expensive meat. Nowadays they are usually part of the main course alongside meat, potatoes, vegetables and gravy, but they have been known to appear as a dessert too!

One of my favourites is Toad in the Hole. Sausages baked in Yorkshire pudding batter mix and served with vegetables and a thick, tasty onion gravy. Or another variation of that can be found in many a cafe or pub dining area and that's giant Yorkshires filled with sausages and onion gravy. Or giant Yorkshires filled with roast beef, onions and gravy, though I'm sure that other types of meat would be just as good, depending upon your tastes.

Another variation came as a total shock to me. There I was in a Chinese restaurant in Castleford checking out the buffet and next to the spring rolls and wontons I saw a strange sight of small Yorkshire puddings filled with a chicken and vegetable sauce. Of course I had to try them but to be honest I found them a bit bland and wondered if a curry sauce would have excited the taste buds a bit more.

I've heard that they can be found in restaurants, but I've only ever found them in M & S. That is steak and mushroom baked in a pie made with the Yorkshire pudding batter mix. They are gorgeous and I would love to be able to make them but I can't figure out how to bake them with a top on and still get them crispy on the outside.

However, I'm a dab hand with the normal uses and experimenting with Yorkshire pudding desserts has been interesting and tasty. Mini Yorkshires baked in tart or muffin tins served cold with mandarin oranges inside them and topped with a dollop of lemon ice cream is delicious. Raspberries and either chocolate sauce or ice cream are an alternative filling, or kiwi fruit, strawberries and fresh cream. Almost anything goes really.

For Valentines day you can round your meal off with heart shaped pancakes made with Yorkshire pudding batter which also happens to be the same recipe as pancake batter mix.

Valentines Pancakes Recipe

Ingredients:
* Yorkshire pudding batter or pancake mix
* red food coloring
* Sliced fresh fruit including melon, passion fruit, strawberries and banana
* Lemon flavoured ice cream or squirty cream for the more adventurous!

Directions:
Mix a couple of drops of red colouring into your favorite Yorkshire pudding recipe/pancake batter recipe, then spoon the pink batter into a heated skillet to form a heart shape. This method can also be used to form other fun shapes.

When cooked cool and top with slices of mixed fresh fruit and lemon ice cream. To make it more festive you can top with chocolate chips or cherries.

This is a nice light dessert to end a Valentines day or any other romantic meal.

Monday 22 July 2013

Tips For Making Delicious Yorkshire Puddings

Once an obscure peasants' food, Yorkshire pudding has risen to the rank of a traditional Sunday dinner dish. These days it's even something of a gourmet item, as presented by chefs like Delia Smith and James Martin. Not too shabby for a simple savoury dish made from nothing but the most basic ingredients. Its popularity speaks for its tastes, but there's more to making a great Yorkshire than you might realise.

The Ideal Yorkshire Pudding?

As with any common, traditional dish, opinions vary on what makes the best Yorkshire pudding. Most fans can agree on a few essential qualities, though. While it should puff a bit, it shouldn't be quite as high or light as, say, a popover. The inside should be soft, but not soggy, and the underside nice and crisp.
Originally Yorkshire pudding was served before the roast in the hope that people would fill up on that first, so the meat would go a bit further. But there's an even better reason to eat it first, while it's still piping hot. Straight out of the oven, the pudding is light and puffy, and the bottom is still satisfyingly crisp. As it cools, though, it tends to fall and get soggy on the bottom.

Popular Variations

Yorkshire pudding batter consists of flour, eggs, and milk, and is traditionally baked in the drippings from roast beef. Some cooks, however, enhance the flavor with herbs like parsley, sage, thyme, and rosemary. If you decide to experiment with herbs, use a light hand at first to avoid overpowering the flavor of the pudding and drippings.

While you can spice up your pudding with different ingredients, it's the cooking technique that really makes the difference. These days you can buy pudding mix and even frozen Yorkshire puddings, but making it from scratch gives you more control over the process, so the outcome is usually better.

Yorkshire Pudding Cooking Tips

If there's one thing that's critical to making a delicious Yorkshire pudding, it's temperature. This is not a delicate souffle that's going to burn if it gets a degree too hot. High temperatures are a must. First of all, the cooking fat and the pan for the pudding must be hot before you add the batter. The fat should be smoking slightly and the batter should sizzle as it hits the fat in the pan.

What's more, the pudding needs an oven temperature of about 225 C to cook properly. The trouble with this is that it's too hot for the roast beef, so you don't want them in the oven at the same time. One way around this is to remove the roast when it's partially cooked and turn up the oven heat to cook the pudding. The pudding won't take long and the roast will stay hot and continue to cook if covered.

Getting Yorkshire pudding to turn out just right takes a bit of practice, but there's nothing complicated about it. Whether you're planning on roast beef for your next Sunday dinner or you're just in the mood for some old-fashioned comfort food, try making this pudding from scratch and you might be surprised how well it turns out.

Click on the link to find a traditional Yorkshire pudding recipe and many worldwide recipes at http://yorkshirepuddingrecipe.co.uk Yorkshire is the largest county in England and a great place to visit. The UK Smart Guide offers masses of information for travelers in the UK including places in Yorkshire.

Science Of A Yorkshire Pudding


roastbeef and York

Many many people ask me about “yorkies”, as a lad I always had them bathed in thick gravy before my Sunday dinner.  As well having a couple with the dinner, my starter was baked in a loaf tin. Now I use them either in a loaf tin or a flan tin, and fill them with a thick lamb stew or hot pot.

But so many people have problems with them, even with packet mixes too.  What about these problems many people have making them . . . why do they not rise? Why do they fall flat? Should they be crisp or soft? The latter for me is a totally personal issue, some like them soft, some crisp on the outside and soft in the middle.

When you lash them with a gravy does it make any real difference? But to answer the main problems people have with them, rising and falling flat. One must think and understand about why and how this happens to answer it. They rise mainly because of the egg content in the mixture . . . NEVER add baking powder!

For this rising to occur the mixture needs instant heat, this creates steam and they puff up and rise - so the oven, etc must all be pre-heated, a slow gentle heat or cold oven will not work.  They will fall flat if they are removed from the oven too soon. If they do not slightly crispen on the outside the structure of the egg and flour mixture does not fully 'dextrinise' meaning its structure will not hold its own weight . . . think of building a sky scraper out of wood, eventually it will buckle and collapse under its own weight.

Cooking times will always vary, as everyone's oven is slightly different and because we tend to open and close the door to remove the meat, the potatoes, etc. So the 12 minutes I have given here is approximate only, one will need to judge and modify accordingly.

Yorkshire Pudding:
The secrets To get a good rise one must fill the mix with as much egg as possible using only a drizzle of milk. Unfortunately the recipe here then is not 'foolproof' in amounts, as I cannot guarantee the size of eggs that you use and they do differ in amount by as much as 20gm per egg, so it is best to adjust the flour rather than the egg.

The trick is to pack the mixture with eggs!

Use deep sided muffin trays and heat these trays up prior to use  Put in a good measure of hot oil into each mould. If the oil is really hot, until it just starts to give of a slight haze but not quite smoking (approximately 180°C) the moment the batter is poured in, it will sizzle, begin to cook and rise at the sides immediately.
This gives that 'hollowed' centre look that can be filled and will hold the gravy Do not worry about the oil content too much: if you want perfect 'Yorkies' you have to live with it and most of it will still be there when they are cooked and can be poured away for re-use when you remove the final, cooked product

With experience one will be able to judge when they can be removed and not fall flat / deflate. If you notice that they are beginning to, pop them straight back in for a few more minutes, this allows the correct amount of hardening / crispening of the outer walls to develop and holds the shape and size.

About the author: Spud Larkin is an up and coming food writer and critic, already renowned throughout the north-east of England for his honest and open reviews that come straight from the heart and tongue.
read more of his reviews at Only good food
Article Source: Science of a Yorkshire Pudding

Recipe And History Of The UK's Favourite Sunday Roast

A ritual that dates back to the industrial revolution, the Sunday roast is one of the United Kingdom’s most storied and delicious of traditions. Consisting of a joint of roasted meat, roasted vegetables, and Yorkshire pudding, the Sunday roast is practice observed by almost every household in Britain and Ireland.

It is believed by many that this tradition began because a roast could be placed in the oven Sunday morning and would be finished cooking by the time the family returned home from church in the afternoon. This meal is usually enjoyed in the afternoon and is sometimes alternately referred to as Sunday Lunch and Sunday Joint (referring to a joint of meat).

Along with their choice of roast beef, lamb, or turkey; a variety of roast seasonal vegetables are also customarily served during a Sunday roast. Potatoes, carrots, peas, turnips, parsnips, cabbage, and broccoli are among many of the vegetables that are served either roasted or boiled.

Below is a recipe for a traditional Sunday roast, complete with roast beef, vegetables, and Yorkshire pudding. First you will need the following cookware and ingredients.

The Roast:

2 ½  pounds beef round roast
salt and pepper to taste
1 tablespoon butter
¼  cup water
¼  teaspoon dried sage
Dutch oven

First preheat the oven to 175 degrees C.  Next season the roast with salt and pepper. Melt 2 tablespoons butter in a Dutch oven over medium heat. Brown the outside of the roast on all sides in the butter. Once browned, add ¼ cup of water to the pan, and sprinkle ¼ teaspoon of sage onto the roast. Place onion and garlic into the pan if you like and season with seasoning salt.

Next cover the pot, and place the roast in the oven for 1 to 2 hours, depending on how well done you prefer your meat. 1 hour will cook the roast rare and 2 hours will be well done. Remove the cooked roast from the oven and place it in a pan and keep it warm.

The Vegetables:

If you want roasted vegetables with your roast, cut peeled potatoes, carrots, onions, parsnips, and turnips into quarters, toss with a little vegetable oil, and add salt and pepper. After the roast has cooked for about 45 minutes, arrange the vegetables in a separate pan and let them cook until tender. They should be done about the same time as the roast.

Yorkshire Pudding:

1 ½ tablespoons butter
1 ½ tablespoons flour
¼ cup cold water
¼ teaspoon sage
Drippings from the Roast
Frying pan

Melt 1 ½ tablespoons of butter in a frying pan. Whisk flour with melted butter until its smooth. Remove the pan from the stovetop and stir in ¼ cup cold water. Mix the ingredients until you have a paste. Return the pan to medium heat and season with sage. Mix in the drippings from the roasting pan and stir constantly until the gravy is thick. Lastly, pour the mix over the roast and vegetables.

John Corso is an author who writes recipes and articles for Cookware Essentials.co.uk.
Article Source: Recipe and History of the UK Sunday Roast

Saturday 20 July 2013

Easy Recipes: Yorkshire Pudding Filling & Scone Topping

When you think about it Yorkshire Pudding batter mix is quite versatile and can be used in lots of savoury and sweet recipes. Pancakes are a firm favourite come Shrove Tuesday and they can be turned into a savoury pancakes quite easily if you add fish, cooked meat, vegetables or chicken mixed with white sauce.
I've got a pretty tasty recipe for Fruit Batter Pudding and I love Toad in the Hole. One of my favourite warming winter meals is a giant Yorkshire Pudding filled with onion gravy and I've even had Yorkshire puddings in a Chinese restaurant but that's another story.

I have had mince and onions in giant Yorkshire puds in cafes but I've never been very keen on mince finding it tasteless unless you add flavourings. What I do like is Yorkshires filled with savoury mince and following you will find the recipe that I use, plus a scone topping recipe:

Savoury Mince Recipe

Before you start prepare and place giant Yorkshires in oven unless you are using the frozen kind.

Ingredients: (Serves 4)


3 large carrots
1 large onion or leek
1 lb (½ kg) minced beef
400g can of chopped tomatoes
60z (150g) garden peas
small can sweetcorn drained
4 oz (100g) mushrooms sliced
½ pint beef stock
pinch of mixed herbs (optional)
2 tablespoons Worcester Sauce (optional)
Cooking oil or lard

Method:

Dice the carrots and slice the onions then fry them together in a saucepan until lightly browned. Take out of pan and drain well. Fry the mince until evenly browned and drain the fat out before adding the carrots, onions, tomatoes and juice, peas, sweetcorn, sliced mushrooms, beef stock and herbs if you are using them.
Bring to the boil and then simmer for 20-25 minutes. When cooked I usually stir in a couple of tablespoons of Worcester sauce for added flavour but it still tastes good without.

To Serve:

Ladle savoury mince into Giant Yorkshire Puddings which should have been cooking at the same time as your savoury mince. Or you can use this recipe as a delicious jacket potato filler and grate a little cheese for the topping.

Cooking Alternatives:

I've made this recipe in a slow cooker or crockpot, pressure cooker, microwave and in the oven and it's been delicious every time. For different meal choices I've topped this dish with dumplings, scalloped potatoes, mashed potatoes and the following tasty scone topping which can be used for this dish, beef or sausage casseroles.

Scone Topping

Prepare savoury mince, beef or sausage casserole and place in a casserole dish.

Ingredients:
6 oz (175g) plain flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
20z (50g) margarine
Approx 1 tablespoon milk

Optional:

20z (50g) grated cheese
and/or 1 oz (25g) dried onions

Method:

Mix flour with baking powder and rub the margarine in until the mixture is like fine breadcrumbs. If using mix in the grated cheese and/or the dried onions at this point. Add enough milk to make a soft dough and roll out on a lightly floured surface until about ½ inch thick.

Cut into rounds with a pastry cutter and place on top of your prepared dish, brush with a little milk and bake for 15 minutes at 200° C, 400° F or Gas Mark 6.

Alternatively you can cut the scone mix into one large round and use as if it's a pie topping and scatter the grated cheese on top instead of using it in the scone mix. This way would require adding at least another 10 minutes onto the baking time.

There you have it a delicious savoury mince recipe to go with your Yorkshire Puddings or baked potatoes and a tasty topping as an alternative, enjoy your meal!

Just click on the link for a wide range of Yorkshire Pudding Tins

Yorkshire Puddings That Mother Made

Many years ago when I was a young child we used to watch in fascination whenever my mother cooked or baked. She could make just about anything taste good and it was an added bonus when my brothers and I got to lick the spoon or bowl when she was baking cakes.

Sundays were pretty special. I got to shell the peas while she mixed the Yorkshires. Her Yorkshire pudding recipe was in her head, she never measured ingredients, just seemed to have a sense of the perfect amounts. On Sundays we always had a roast and whether that roast was beef, lamb, pork, chicken or even turkey she always made Yorkshire puddings. What else would a Yorkshire lady make to compliment the Sunday roast?

Although mum never measured ingredients everything that she made always turned out delicious and perfect. A real skill when you think about it that not many of us can emulate.

Her Yorkshire puddings always rose just right, crispy around the edges and leaving a hollow to collect the gravy in and they were always that lovely golden colour that we associate with Yorkshire puddings.

Traditionally Yorkshire puddings were a filler dish served with onion gravy before the main roast course in households that could not afford a lot of meat, but as far back as I can remember Yorkshires have been an integral part of the main course.

Although originating in Yorkshire they are popular all over the country, indeed the world. There are few places that you can go that you will not find the legend ‘Traditional British Sunday Dinner’ or indeed lunch on offer. The traditional British Sunday dinner always includes Yorkshire pudding as an integral part of the meal.

Yorkshires are a popular choice in most places that cater for others, including restaurants, pubs, cafes and works canteens and not just with roast dinners. You can also be served Toad in the Hole, giant Yorkshire puddings filled with gravy and I've even had Yorkshires filled with a chicken savoury sauce at a Chinese restaurant.

Although I prefer to make my own Yorkshire puddings, frozen cooked or uncooked versions are easily available and they taste almost but not quite as good. You can also get powdered batter mix where you just need to add milk or water, not as good in my opinion, but better than never having them.

My First Yorkshire Puddings

I should perhaps have used ready-made versions the first time that I attempted to make Yorkshire puddings. Newly married I was trying to impress my husband with a lovely Sunday lunch complete with Yorkshires. I did not have a recipe and tried to emulate my mother’s non-measuring method. An hour passed and my Yorkshire pudding still was not cooked. We ate the dinner but had to pass on the Yorkshires because I had added twice as much milk as necessary. I made sure that I used a recipe after that!

Click here to see my mother's recipe

Below you will see a slight variation of the recipe and certainly a cute helper!!


Yorkshire Pudding Recipe

Yorkshire Pudding Recipe

This is the recipe that I use, a traditional pouring batter recipe that can be used for sweet pancakes as well as savoury Yorkshire pudding. It's surprising just how versatile this simple recipe is and how many different meals you can make from it. I enjoy my Yorkshire puddings alongside roast beef with lashings of thick beef gravy but I am also partial to savoury pancakes made from the same basic recipe.

4 oz (100g) Plain Flour
1 medium sized egg
pinch of salt
½ pint (280ml) of milk (or mixture of milk and water)
2oz (50g) lard/fat or 2 tablespoons of oil – as an healthier alternative I use vegetable or sunflower oil, or you can use fat from the meat.

Mix the flour and salt in a basin and make a hollow in middle. Drop the egg into the hollow and stir in with a wooden spoon. Add the milk (milk and water) gradually, stirring all of the time until the flour is worked in.

Add rest of liquid and beat well. The end result should have a similar consistency to single cream.

Melt the fat in cooking tin until spitting hot. Can be one large tin square, rectangular, round or small tins or a bun tin. When the fat is hot enough pour in the batter just half filling small tins, patty tins or bun tins. Cook at 450F, 230C or gas mark 8. Large tins for about 30 minutes, small tins or bun tins 15 - 20 minutes.

Yorkshire PuddingsWhen cooked they should turn out puffy, golden and crispy on the outside and sunken in the middle. Some people let the fat from the meat drip on to the Yorkshire puddings while cooking.

A popular addition to menus in recent years in restaurants, cafes and bars is a king size or giant Yorkshire pudding filled with onion gravy or different meat, vegetable and gravy concoctions. This dish is served as a separate course emulating the original filler course.

You can even buy delicious smaller Yorkshire puddings filled with steak in one large chain store, rather like traditional steak and kidney puddings but made with batter mix.

Another popular meal made with Yorkshire pudding batter is Toad in the Hole. This is a tasty low cost meal with sausages cooked in the batter. An alternative there is to use lamb chops.