THE ULTIMATE SUNDAY LUNCH
One of the most iconic British traditions is that of "Sunday Lunch", also known as the "Sunday Roast" or "Sunday Dinner." Its a pretty good reason to look forward to Sundays, and can be great if you have a large family or group of people coming around that you want to sit down and share a meal with.
Typically it will be eaten around 3 in the afternoon, although these days you will find more and more people sitting down to it around supper time, due to their big Sunday breakfast. Its also quite popular these days for people to go "out" to a carvery or a pub for Sunday lunch and give mom a day off.
At one time it typically would have consisted mainly of Roast Beef and all the trimmings, but other meats are now becoming more popular, probably due to the rising cost of Beef.
Historically Roman Catholics and Anglicans abstained from eating meat on certain days of the week. This made having the Sunday roast a bit of a celebration because on Sundays all meat and dairy products could be eaten. It is widely believed that the first Sunday roasts were instigated during King Henry VII's rule in 1485.
In fact Royal Body Guards became known as Beefeaters due to their love of eating Beef and you will still see Beefeaters guarding the Tower of London.
A Sunday roast usually consists of roasted meat of some sort, the most traditional being Beef. It is not uncommon to also see people enjoying roast lamb, pork or chicken. All will be served with roasted potatoes, a variety of fresh vegetables, gravy and Yorkshire puddings, or batter puddings as they are also known.
Interestingly, Yorkshire puddings historically began as a starter dish, served with lots of gravy. I suppose the thought was that once people had filled up on the puddings, they wouldn't have as much room to stuff themselves with the meat, therefore helping it to stretch that much further. These days you will see them served along side of the meal. To the British a roast dinner is not a roast dinner without a crisp and light Yorkshire pudding to enjoy!
Ingredients for Sunday lunch can be picked up locally at any large supermarket, or (best scenario) your local Butchers and farm market.
Saturday mornings will find the local Butcher in most British communities filled with customers and often a line-up of people wanting to pick up their Sunday roast spilling out onto the pavement. There is something quite familial about picking up your meat at your local Butcher, which hearkens back to the days when people knew their neighbors and had a strong sense of community.
Whatever is served, the most important thing is that Sunday lunch remains a wonderful time to gather together around a table, relax, and catch up on the going's on of everyone's week just gone. Its a beautiful tradition that I hope never dies.
Today I am sharing my Sunday Lunch favorites, for both main and side dishes!
THE MAINS
PERFECTLY COOKED ROAST BEEF - This is more of a technique than it is a recipe. There is a lot more to cooking a roast than just banging into an oven. Whilst it is also very simple to cook, there is a proper way to do it and helps and tips that can produce the perfect roast every time. (if you follow them!) You can use this technique for any roasting cut of beef. I used to cook the Prime Ribs for the people at the Manor in this way every time.
ROAST PORK WITH CRISPY CRACKLING - Crispy brown on the outside, the tender meat studded with slivers of garlic, and dusted with plenty of salt and pepper, this is a real favorite Sunday Lunch around here. Served with Crispy Roast Potatoes and all the traditional veg, not to mention a tasty gravy. If you can remember, take it out of it's wrapping the night before and store open to the air in the fridge. This helps to make a nice dry and crisp crackling!
PERFECT ROAST CHICKEN - A perfectly cooked roast chicken, with moist and succulent meat and a crispy skin. This is my favorite way to roast a chicken. It turns out moist and delicious each and every time. There are plenty of tasty drippings to make a lush gravy with as well.
SLOW ROASTED LAMB SHOULDER - This succulent piece of meat melts in the mouth it is so tender. This is my favorite cut of lamb. Tender deliciousness that falls apart at the touch of a fork. Delicious and simple to make.
PERFECT ROASTED BONELESS LEG OF LAMB -These instructions depend on how large your piece of meat is and servings will vary accordingly. You will want approximately 1/2 pound of lamb per person. Mellow and deliciously tender.
APRICOT GLAZED GAMMON - Perfectly glazed . . . nice and sticky . . . tender, perfectly cooked meat. Tender ham with a lovely fruity glaze. Gammon is uncooked ham. Once it is cooked it becomes ham. Or so I am told.
THE SIDES
YORKSHIRE PUDDING - Lets begin with everyone's favorite. Yorkshire Pudding. Crisp and light as air, these are the perfect puddings. Its my late FIL's recipe. He was an army cook so you know they are beautifully delicious! I've been making these for over 40 years now! There is an art to getting nice puffed and tall ones, but I share all my secrets.
CLASSIC ROAST POTATOES - Next to the Yorkshire Pudding this is one of the favorite sides in a roast dinner. Also referred to as "Roasties" these potatoes are crisp and golden brown on the outsides and fluffy inside. Parboiled, roughed up, and roasted to the perfect crisp finish in hot goosefat, dripping or hot oil.
CREAMY MASHED POTATOES - Light and fluffy with just the right amount of butter, milk and seasoning. I like to enjoy mine with a pat of butter in the middle, but a pool of gravy is just as nice!
HONEY MUSTARD ROASTED PARSNIPS & CARROTS - Coated in a mix of melted butter, Dijon mustard and sweet honey. These are roasted to perfection, coming out sweetly glazed, beautifully caramelized in places and perfectly crispy tender.
PERFECTLY COOKED CABBAGE - Cabbage really only needs about 3 to 5 minutes of cooking time, just so long as you prepare it properly in the first place. Finely shredded, lightly salted and cooked quickly in boiling water, it comes out perfect every time.
CREAMY PARMESAN BRUSSELS SPROUTS & BACON - Sure you could just boil your sprouts, but why settle for that when you can be enjoying crispy tender brussels sprouts in a creamy garlic sauce. This lovely side dish, topped with bubbling cheese and smoky bacon will be right at home with any roasted meat!
SAUTEED SWEDE (TURNIP/RUTABAGA) - These are quite simply delicious. There is no other word to describe them. Buttery. Slightly sweet. Oh so tasty. I could sit down to a plate of these and nothing else, but they do make the most fantastic side dish with a roast dinner . . . pork, beef or turkey or chicken. Take your pick. These simple old fashioned dishes are my favorite kinds of dishes. They just never get old.
HONEY & DILL GLAZED CARROTS & TURNIPS - These are a little bit more special than just plain boiled vegetables. Being lightly glazed with some butter and honey, then flavoured with dill . . . these arrive at the table glistening like jewels.
MELTING ONIONS -These will be the star of the show! These delicious onions melt in your mouth. Four simple ingredients. One fabulous dish.
ROASTED ONIONS WITH A PARMESAN CREAM - These are delicious and so simple to make. You can have them as a side dish, or a vegetarian main with a grain and a few other vegetables.
SAGE & ONION STUFFING - This is my favorite of all the stuffings. It is Mary Berry's recipe. You can bake it in a flat dish, ready for scooping, or roll it into balls and bake it that way. Why settle for a mix when the real thing is so easy to make and a hundred times more delicious!
PERFECT GRAVY FROM SCRATCH - Why use Bisto when you can make a perfectly delicious gravy from the drippings. No drippings? You don't need them. You can make this gravy easily just using simple ingredients that you probably already have in the house.
People also really enjoy a condiment with their roast dinners. This could be horseradish sauce, apple sauce, English mustard, bread sauce, cranberry sauce, mint sauce, etc. What you choose will largely depend on what meat you have chosen to roast.
It is typical to enjoy horseradish sauce with beef, apple sauce with pork, mustard with gammon, bread sauce or cranberry sauce with poultry and mint sauce with lamb. This is not a die hard rule and you can just have whatever sauce you want to enjoy with whatever meat or no sauce at all!
I could not personally eat a pudding (the British term for dessert) after a Sunday Lunch, well not right away anyways. Maybe a bit later in the day. Many do however. I will do a pudding post at another time.
In the meantime please enjoy my take on Sunday Lunch. I hope that it will inspire you to cook up a roast dinner for your family! They will be over the moon if you do!
Not all of the dishes need to be recipes. Quite often I will only cook a roast and then have boiled new potatoes, peas, carrots, and mashed swede with it along with some gravy. Those are delicious dinners too. The important thing is to enjoy it. Together. As a family!
As Julia would say Bon Appetit!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at: mariealicejoan at aol dot com
Preheat the oven to 190*C/375*F/ gas mark 5. Have ready a large roasting tin.
Prepare all of your vegetables and the apples, and put them into a bowl. Toss them together with the olive oil, 1 TBS each of the parsley and sage, and a dash of salt and pepper. Pour them into the roasting tin and spread them out. Place the pork roast on top. (I like to score the fat first). Pour the cider vinegar over top of the pork and sprinkle with the remaining parsley and sage. Season with some salt and black pepper.
Roast in the preheated oven for approximately 1 1/4 hours until the meat it thoroughly cooked through and the vegetables are tender. Remove from the oven and cover the meat loosely with aluminium foil and allow to rest for 15 minutes prior to carving.

This is a lovely roast that I cooked a month or so ago and am just getting to show you now. I figured now that temperatures are cooling down a bit the timing would be better.

Red meat isn't something we eat a lot of in this house, and so when we do I make sure its really good, like this delicious Roast Pork with Sage and potatoes.

The pork gets rubbed with a mix of sage and garlic before roasting that really gives it a nice flavour.

Oh boy are they some delicious . . . nothing I love better than potatoes which have been roasted to perfection.

SOOOO, sooooo good. Thinking back on just how good makes me want to lick the screen.

The meat ends up succulent and tender and so wonderfully flavoured . . .

The fat on the edge . . . beautiful golden and crisp . . . and if you use a bone in rib loin roast, you get the finger licking tasty spare-rib parts, also beautifully flavoured.






Tune in tomorrow to see what I did with the leftovers! Bon Appetit!
This content (written and photography) is the sole property of The English Kitchen. Any reposting or misuse is not permitted. If you are reading this elsewhere, please know that it is stolen content and you may report it to me at mariealicejoan at aol dot com.
I hardly ever cook a roast dinner on Sundays. By the time we get back from church and I call my mom, I am too tired.
This is my late Father In Law's recipe. It is an excellent recipe which turns out light and crisp yorkshire puddings every time.
He was a cook in the Canadian Military and a darn good one at that. He knew how to make killer Yorkshire puddings.
Make sure all of your ingredients are at room temperature before you begin. Not sure why this works but it does.
The oil/dripping/fat in your baking tin has to be VERY hot. So hot that the puddings begin to cook as soon as you pour the batter into the pan.
Really hot oil makes sure that your batters don't stick to the pan and ensures a really crisp finish.
Just look at that crisp tall finish! It's the best! I start them in a very hot oven and then I slowly decrease the temperature for 10 degrees ever 5 minutes of the cooking time.
A tall, light and crisp Yorkshire pudding is a thing of beauty. They're not hard to make or complicated . . . they just take time and these few extra little steps.
*Yorkshire Puddings*
Makes 12
Printable Recipe
I wonder who it was that discovered that with just a little flour, milk and eggs you could create something that is so crispy, light and delicious! Sunday lunch just wouldn't be Sunday lunch without a couple of these on the plate. These turn out perfect every time, as long as you follow the directions to a "T." Not hard to do really as they are very simple.
2 large free range eggs, at room temperature
1 tsp salt
1 1/3 cups milk, at room temperature (308ml)
1 cup flour (140g)
a little oil or dripping
Make sure all your ingredients are at room temperature before beginning. Beat your eggs together in a large measuring jug until very light. Whisk in the milk. Sift the flour into a bowl along with the salt. Make a well in the middle and add the wet ingredients all at once, pouring them into the well, and then whisk them in, slowly incorporating the dry mixture from the sides until you have a smooth batter. Now, this is the important bit . . . COVER IT AND LET IT SIT ON THE SIDEBOARD FOR ONE HOUR.
Preheat your oven to 230*C/450*F. Place a small amount of oil or dripping into each cup of a 12 cup muffin tin. Place the tin into the hot oven to heat up until the fat is hot and sizzling. remove from the oven and quickly divide the batter amongst each muffin cup, filling them about 2/3 full. Return to the oven and bake for 20 minutes, until well risen, browned and crispy, reducing the oven temperature by 10 degrees every five minutes. Serve hot with plenty of gravy!!
Now that's a tunnel of love, perfect for cradling some delicious gravy. Mmm mmm mmm . . . now that's what I call genius!
Bon Appetit!















Social Icons