I think the British love sandwiches more than anyone else in the world. Walk into any shop, and I do mean any . . . and you are sure to find a variety of them, ready made, wrapped and for sale to anyone who feels in the need for some potable and portable sustenance of the this kind. AND, they come in varities which are suitable for any meal of the day . . . breakfast, lunch, dinner or snack!
I recently treated myself to Nigel Slater's latest cookbook, eat. You all know how I love Nigel and his way of cooking and eating. That man could make anything look and sound tasty and he is the master as creating delicious and fast food out of just about anything you can get your hands on. He has one whole chapter in this book devoted to sandwiches and the like. My kind of guy. My kind of cooking.
One in particular intrigued me and set my tastebuds to tingling. This was a sandwich he created using crusty bread, beef drippings and leftover roast from the sunday dinner. Reading about it . . . made me want one, and reading about it . . . inspired me to create my own version. I got to thinking hash . . . roast beef hash . . . in a bun.
And so that is what I did. I made some hash using chopped potatoes, chopped onions, chopped cabbage and some of the leftover roast from yesterday's pot roast. I seasoned it lightly with some salt and cracked black pepper . . .
Added a touch of herb . . . in the way of summer savoury, and a hint of snap by using some Worcestershire Sauce and a dash of brown sauce. (steak sauce to you North Americans) I cooked that all together until the potatoes and onions and cabbage were gilded with little caramelized edges, all golden brown and sweet . . . and the meat was falling apart once more . . .
And then I stogged it between two halves of a crisp warm ciabatta roll . . . the bottom spread with just a touch of creamed horseradish sauce . . . a slice of Leerdammer Toastie cheese layed on top of the hot hash, so it melted down into all those gilded crevices, and topped by that crisp roll-top . . . all that goodness tucked into a tasty and lightly crisped ciabatta suitcase and just waiting for me to tuck in . . .
Good things happen when Nigel inspires me. Tasty things. Things I want to indluge in again, and again . . . and again. I am never disappointed.
*Roast Beef Hash Buns*
Serves 4a handful of chopped cabbage
1 small clove of garlic, peeled and minced
2 TBS hot beef stock or water
an amount of leftover cooked roast, cubes (an equal to the amount of potatoes)
1 TBS vegetable oilTo serve, slice each ciabatta roll in half. Spread the bottoms with some horseradish sauce (if desired) and then pile an equal amount of the hot hash on top. Top each with a slice of toastie cheese and then the top of the rolls. Serve immediately. Pass the brown sauce or ketchup if desired.
My family loves this kind of sandwich..looks like a fun book Marie!
ReplyDeletewow, thats a winner!!!!
ReplyDeleteThank you Monique and Laurie!
ReplyDeleteMy mouth is watering! What a great idea for leftovers- I'm definitely trying this!!!!!!!!
ReplyDeleteYou will love it cl!
ReplyDeleteHave you tried the ham and greens sandwich he did in Dish of the Day? http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/ham_and_greens_sandwich_52442 It's so good! I made it with bacon which was even better!
ReplyDeleteOh boy Nicola, I don't know how I missed that one! It looks delicious. Don't you just adore Nigel Slater? I do! I could just gobble up everything he makes!
ReplyDeleteI call it delicious insanity. My husband already wants to buy this book; this will only excite him more! ;)
ReplyDeleteThis recipe isn't actually from the book Mrs Numbles, but inspired to a similar one in the book!
ReplyDeleteOh yea, that's what I'm talkin' about.
ReplyDelete