Author Topic: SPAM  (Read 13989 times)

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elmagnifico

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Reply #90 on: April 22, 2012, 04:06:22 am
Thoughts on Pudding by Patrick O'Brian

(From the Patrick O'Brian Newsletter
September 1994; Volume 3: Issue 2)

The genus may be divided into three species, the first being the almost-obsolete dish called ball, or herb-pudding, a solid object made of flour and suet, with thyme, rosemary, marjoram and the like sprinkled through its substance, the whole being wrapped in a cloth and boiled for some hours before being brought to the table earlier than anything else, since its function was to take the edge off extreme appetite before the appearance of better and more costly things.

The second is made up of those which form the main substance of the meal, haggis, Burns's great chieftain of the pudding race, being a good example -- though there is also a great deal to be said for steak and kidney pudding, in which the obvious ingredients (and occasionally larks) are enclosed in an envelope of paste or dough made of flour, water and suet and then boiled, wrapped in a pudding-cloth, for a great while.

But the third, and for many the most delightful, is that which appears when the meat has been taken away -- the end and the crown of a dinner, reaching its apotheosis at Christmas, when the plum-pudding, a wonderful mixture of dried currants, raisins, rum, candied peel, spices, small silver charms and of course the essential suet, comes to the table, blazing with brandy and topped with holly.

Second only to that of Christmas we find a series of others, all founded upon that happy marriage of flour (two parts), suet (one part) and sugar consummated in a cloth or basin surrounded by boiling water. In spotted dog, for example, the dough is liberally sprinkled with fine bold currants and the cloth is tied tight, so that when the pudding is turned out on the dish its exterior is firm and relatively dry; in the version known as drowned baby, on the other hand, the cloth is somewhat looser, so that the resultant surface is agreeably glutinous. Plum duff is much the same, but prunes, sultanas or even dates take the place of currants (when it is made with raisins it is knows as figgy-dowdy in the West of England). Then there is roly-poly, in which the dough or paste is rolled out, spread with jam and rolled up again before being put into its cloth and boiled; and to this day a square in Lisbon is called after it, because the elegant paving has much the same pattern.

Other sweet dishes sometimes reach the table at the end of the meal, and by extension they too are called puddings; but although there are respectable tarts, pies and preparations based on rice, most of the custards, sillabubs, flummeries and other kickshaws do not deserve the name at all, which should be reserved for nobler objects altogether, the true heroes' delight.
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Arizoni

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Reply #91 on: April 22, 2012, 06:08:10 am
During the holiday season, a lot of people in America have heard the name many times and never take the name to be describing what it is.

They instantly think of a highly seasoned raisin pie.
When one is around they say, "Give me another slice of that Mince Meet Pie!" little suspecting that it actually is a Minced Meat  pie.

Often these Minced Meat pies contain a rather large amount of either beef or venison (and a few shots of whiskey).
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Desi Bike

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Reply #92 on: April 22, 2012, 02:50:27 pm
The holiday season is incomplete in the desi bike household if we don't get our 'clootie dumpling'  for dessert.

میں نہیں چاہتا کہ ایک اچار
میں صرف اپنی موٹر سائیکل پر سوار کرنا چاہتے ہیں


Lwt Big Cheese

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Reply #93 on: April 22, 2012, 04:46:47 pm
For goodness sake, real life stops me getting on here for a couple of days and the place goes mad!

Where do I start.?

Pork pies. They're good. But a Melton Mowbray pie is slightly different. It's not baked in a tin so has slightly curved sides. Very nice, they don't colour the pork so the meat goes a cooked gray rather than bright pink with colourings.

The town has applied to the European Commission to recognise the Melton Mowbray Pork Pie as a "Protected Geographical Indication". Like Palma ham, or Champagne must come from a certain specific regions.

Mince pies are usually eaten at Christmas. Small tarts containing Minced Meat. However there is no meat in them! Used to be years ago - like centuries ago. Now they are filled with :
suet, Bramley apples, peeled, cored and chopped;  candied peel, chopped; sultanas; raisins; currants; demerara sugar; mixed spice;1 orange, zest and juice; brandy.

Steak and kidney puddings are the food of the gods. Suet pudding containing the above. The pudding encloses the meat and gravy completely and is steamed in a basin to cook it.

In the Royal Navy individual ones are served up on a plate and are known as Babies Heads, because of what they look like when you take a piece out.
« Last Edit: April 22, 2012, 04:50:42 pm by Lwt Big Cheese »
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Lwt Big Cheese

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Reply #94 on: April 22, 2012, 04:49:54 pm
And some pics:

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GreenMachine

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Reply #95 on: April 22, 2012, 07:44:56 pm
The Princes round ham is only 94P..Their u go..A good cheap nutritious treat for you..Bon Apetit ..
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barenekd

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Reply #96 on: April 23, 2012, 03:34:14 am
All this reminds of watching Two Fat Ladies doing their thing on the Food Channel. they cook up interesting stuff and it's all old school!
And their sidehacked Triumph was cool!
I went to the local Stator Bros grocery store and checked out their Brit section.They didn't have any suet, but they did have some Spotted Dick and some mix for Steak and Kidney pie. Genuine English Heinz Beans. They even had some Black Pudding. And an assortment of other fine fixins. I've still gotta make the trip to the Brit Grocer.
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« Last Edit: April 23, 2012, 03:43:02 am by barenekd »
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