Showing posts sorted by relevance for query cabbage. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query cabbage. Sort by date Show all posts
There is one thing that the British do very well . . . and that is the good old British Banger! (Sausage to you non-Brits! Of course, it is also something that they do really poorly too . . . but we won't talk about those!) You just can't beat a good old fashioned, meaty, top quality, Butcher's thick sausage banger . . . avoid the cheap ones at all costs. They are just plain nasty and filled with fillers and other ucky stuff that you don't want to be eating.
I don't know about you, but I find that it's getting harder and harder to stretch my food budget these days. Food just seems to be costing more and more and sizes are getting smaller. (Don't get me started on that scam!!) I am always looking for ways to make a little bit go further, but at the same time keeping things to the same standard of deliciousness and nutritiousness that we are used to.
Pasta is a great meal stretcher. I know it's not Todd's favourite thing to eat, but he does like the idea of saving money, and so he tolerates it. Myself . . . I adore pasta, and so these types of meals are my absolute favourites!
Meals which take a little bit of protein, some vegetable and some pasta, combined in a tasteful way. Simple recipes which make good use of simple ingredients in a delicious way.
I have no idea why this is called Irish Supper. I am not even sure if this is actually Irish! Certainly there would be cabbages and sausages in Ireland, but the pasta noodles? Well, I am not too sure about that!!
What I know for sure it that it makes a little bit of meat go a very long way and that it is delicious. Two things that are positives! I do hope you will try it and that you will enjoy it as much as I do!
You want to use a good quality sausage with this. Not those cheap and nasty ones that are all filler and fat. You get what you pay for. Paying a tiny bit more and using a good quality sausage makes sense as you won't be pouring half of it away and they'll also taste a lot better! Choose a nicely flavoured one! I am partial to a peppery Cumberland myself!
*Irish Supper*
Serves 4 to 6but you could use any type, so long as they are wide and flat)
a knob of butter
finely grated cheese to serveWhile the cabbage is cooking, cook your noodles according to the package directions in a pot of lightly salted water. At the end of five minutes remove the lid to skillet and turn up the heat and cook stirring, until the cabbage begins to brown a little. Taste and adjust seasoning as needed.
Turn out the heat and drain the noodles well. Toss the drained noodles into the skillet along with a knob of butter. Toss to combine. Serve immediately without or without cheese as desired to your grateful family which will be sitting at the table drooling in anticipation.
Do you think they might approve?? I like to think they would . . . ☺ to be sure, to be sure . . .
My sister made this recipe that she found on Pinterest a couple of weeks ago and put a picture of it on her facebook page. It looked so good that I immediately wanted to try it myself. We love cabbage and potatoes in this house and the recipe incorporated both of those along with some onions, chicken pieces and bacon! If it's got bacon you just know it's going to be good!
I had some fish that needed using up today, and so I decided to make my husband some fish cakes for his tea. He loves fish cakes, and so he was a very happy man.
I mixed some fresh haddock along with some smoked haddock. I find smoked haddock has a nice flavour, but can be a bit strong on it's own, so mixing it with fresh haddock kind of tempers it a bit.
Don't use the dyed stuff . . . all that dye is nasty and it just doesn't look very good in my opinion.
You could use all fresh haddock if you didn't want to use smoked.

To give them a bit of colour I added some finely shredded savoy cabbage and chopped spring onion. Some low fat mayo and grainy mustard add another depth of flavours.
Bound together with mashed potatoes, shaped into little cakes, rolled in bread crumbs and then cooked until golden brown in some butter, these went down a real treat, with a tasty rocket and tomato salad on the side.
*Colcannon Haddock Fish Cakes*
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
A delicious mixture of fresh haddock, smoked haddock, potato and finely shredded cabbage.
1 pound of baking potatoes, peeled and cut into chunks
salt and black pepper
4 ounces of finely shredded savoy cabbage (1/4 pound) (about 3/4 cup)
8 ounces un-dyed smoked haddock, skinned (1/2 pound)
8 ounces fresh haddock fillets, skinned (1/2 pound)
a squeeze of lemon juice
2 TBS low fat mayonnaise
1 to 2 TBS grainy mustard
2 spring onions, trimmed and chopped
2 TBS chopped fresh dill
2 slices of bread made into crumbs
A knob of butter for cooking
Serves 6
Printable Recipe
A delicious mixture of fresh haddock, smoked haddock, potato and finely shredded cabbage.
1 pound of baking potatoes, peeled and cut into chunks
salt and black pepper
4 ounces of finely shredded savoy cabbage (1/4 pound) (about 3/4 cup)
8 ounces un-dyed smoked haddock, skinned (1/2 pound)
8 ounces fresh haddock fillets, skinned (1/2 pound)
a squeeze of lemon juice
2 TBS low fat mayonnaise
1 to 2 TBS grainy mustard
2 spring onions, trimmed and chopped
2 TBS chopped fresh dill
2 slices of bread made into crumbs
A knob of butter for cooking
Boil the potatoes in a pan of lightly salted water to cover until nearly tender, 15 minutes or so. Add the shredded cabbage and cook for a further 3 minutes. Drain very well. Return to the pot and shake over the residual heat of the burner to dry further, then mash. Season to taste with some salt and black pepper. Set aside.
Preheat the oven to 220*C/425*F/ gas mark 7. Butter a large piece of foil. Place on a baking sheet and then arrange the fish on top of the foil. Season with pepper and lemon juice. Wrap the foil tightly around the fish so that none of the juice will excape and then pop into the oven. Bake for 7 to 10 minutes, until the fish is just cooked.
Remove the fish from the foil, reserving the juices. Break into large chunks in a mixing bowl, discarding any bones. Leave to cool. Stir the cooled fish, along with any juices, the mayonnaise, mustard, chopped onions and dill, and a touch of salt and pepper into the mashed potato mixture. Set aside until cool enough to handle.
Place the bread crumbs onto a shallow plate. Divide the mixture and shape into 12 small cakes. Pat the cakes all over in the bread crumbs.
Heat the butter in a nonstick frying pan, just until it begins to foam, over medium heat. Add the fish cakes and cook until golden on the bottom. Flip over and continue to cook until they are heated through and golden on the other side. Serve immediately with some salad.
Corned Beef with Parsley Sauce. This is the meal I have been waiting for 21 years to enjoy! Its true. Corned beef was not something which was readily available in the UK.
Oh you could get salt beef, which is similar, but not the same. You could also get corned beef in the tin, which is nothing like this at all. And all of that came from South America. Nice in a sandwich or hash, but not for dinner on Saint Patricks' Day!
My appetite for Corned Beef was whetted when I first saw the movie Meet Me in Saint Louis with Judy Garland. In those first few scenes of the film they were sitting down to dinner and the cook brought in a large platter with corned beef on it.
It looked delicious, even in black and white.
It is something which I used to cook occasionally for my family when the children were growing up. Generally speaking I glazed the corned beef with a glaze after cooking. This is really easy to do if you wish to do the same.
Simply trim off the fatty layer, leaving only a thin layer of fat. Mix together 4 tablespoons of brown sugar with a tablespoon of mustard and a tablespoon of sweet pickle liquid. Spread this mixture over the fatty top of the beef and pop it into a hot oven.
Roast for about 8 to 10 minutes until glazed and sticky. Delicious!
I did not bother to do this today as I was serving the meat with a lush and creamy parsley sauce. A sticky glaze would have been well out of place.
This is such a simple meal to make, but I know very pricey these days. I paid $16 for this small piece of corned beef. But I was longing for it so much I couldn't resist.
If you have a large family and are still wanting something similar for Saint Patrick's day can I suggest the following:
BOILED DINNER - You can use ham or beef. With cabbage, carrots, turnips and potatoes. This also boasted a parsley sauce.
BACON AND CABBAGE WITH MUSTARD SAUCE - cured pork simmered until tender and then roasted with a delicious buttery bread crumb topping. This is served with a lush and cream mustard sauce, cabbage and buttered boiled potatoes. Delicious.
Or you can do just a plain old boiled corned beef and cabbage. There are many ways to celebrate Saint Patrick's Day with a delicious meal.
WHAT YOU NEED TO MAKE CORNED BEEF WITH PARSLEY SAUCE
Simple ingredients. Nothing outrageous here.
- 2 lb. (1 KG) corned beef, preferably bottom round or brisket
- 2 carrots peeled and chopped
- 1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
- 2 TBS butter
- 2 TBS white flour
- 3/4 cup (75ml) milk
- 2 tsp minced fresh parsley
- 1 tsp dry mustard powder
- pinch nutmeg
- salt and ground white pepper
HOW TO MAKE CORNED BEEF WITH PARSLEY SAUCE
It might take a bit of time to cook the beef until tender, but you can just walk away and leave it to simmer so its not very labor intensive at all.
If you can make a cream sauce then you can very easily make this simple parsley sauce and I highly recommend making it as it is delicious with the beef.
Place the carrots and most of the onion (reserve 1 TBS) into a saucepan large enough to hold the beef. Rinse the beef and place into the saucepan. Cover with cold water. Bring to the boil over high heat. Reduce to a simmer. Skim off and discard any scum which rises to the top.
Cover tightly and simmer over low heat for 2 1/2 hours until the meat is tender. Remove the meat to a plate and cover with foil. Remove 3/4 cup (75ml) of the cooking liquid and discard the rest.
Melt the butter in a saucepan. Once it begins to foam add the onion. Cook for a minute. Whisk in the flour and mustard powder. Cook for a minute longer.
Slowly Whisk in the milk, parsley, and cooking liquor. Cook whisking constantly until the mixture bubbles and thickens. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
Cook for several minutes to cook out any flour taste. Serve the corned beef thinly sliced with the sauce spooned over top.
I served this very simply with some Irish Champ on the side, mashed carrots/parsnips and buttered broccoli.
You can find my traditional Irish Champ recipe here. Its fabulous.
To make the mashed carrots and parsnips, combine 4 carrots, peeled and sliced with 2 parsnips, peeled and sliced in a saucepan. Cover with water to which you have added a pinch of sugar and some salt.
Boil until very tender. (about 15 minutes) Drain well and mash together with a knob of butter, salt, pepper and a pinch of nutmeg. Delicious!
This was a really delicious meal. Well worth waiting 21 years for. I am really looking forward to enjoying some tasty corned beef hash with the leftovers!
And after that it is back to chicken and fish for me. I hardly ever eat red meat and rarely processed so I reckon I have really outdone myself this week! Happy Saint Patrick's Day tomorrow everyone!
Corned Beef With Parsley Sauce
Yield: 4
Author: Marie Rayner
Prep time: 10 MinCook time: 2 H & 30 MTotal time: 2 H & 40 M
The meal I waited 21 years to enjoy. Tender pieces of corned beef with a delicate parsley sauce. Delicious.
Ingredients
- 2 lb. (1 KG) corned beef, preferably bottom round or brisket
- 2 carrots peeled and chopped
- 1 medium onion, peeled and chopped
- 2 TBS butter
- 2 TBS white flour
- 3/4 cup (75ml) milk
- 2 tsp minced fresh parsley
- 1 tsp dry mustard powder
- pinch nutmeg
- salt and ground white pepper
Instructions
- Place the carrots and most of the onion (reserve 1 TBS) into a saucepan large enough to hold the beef. Rinse the beef and place into the saucepan. Cover with cold water.
- Bring to the boil over high heat. Reduce to a simmer. Skim off and discard any scum which rises to the top. Cover tightly and simmer over low heat for 2 1/2 hours until the meat is tender.
- Remove the meat to a plate and cover with foil.
- Remove 3/4 cup (75ml) of the cooking liquid and discard the rest.
- Melt the butter in a saucepan. Once it begins to foam add the onion. Cook for a minute. Whisk in the flour and mustard powder. Cook for a minute longer.
- Slowly Whisk in the milk, parsley, and cooking liquor. Cook whisking constantly until the mixture bubbles and thickens. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Cook for several minutes to cook out any flour taste.
- Serve the corned beef thinly sliced with the sauce spooned over top.
Thanks so much for visiting. Do come again!

This is a quick and simple dish I have been wanting to make for quite some time now. I originally saw it on Pinterest, attributed to a blog called South In Your Mouth, who got it from someone else, who got it from someone else and so on and so on. You know how it goes. I adapted it to our own tastes and we were both very happy with the end result! This is the perfect quick and simple supper for those nights when you just can't be asked to cook!

Back in my younger years when my children were growing up I used to make a ton of pickles every year to satisfy the family. I used to can about 52 quarts of Dill Pickles a year alone, along with pickled beets, relishes, chows, chutneys etc. And jams and jellies too. It all got eaten. It's not practical anymore for me to do any of that stuff with just the two of us in the house. It would never ever get eaten. i get a magazine every couple of month from the heart association and there are always some recipes in it that are quite healthy. These pickles came from the latest issue. They are more like small pickled vegetable salads, feeding just two people, but they're great! There are four different versions!
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.
We had company for dinner the other night. I did a Roasted Ham with a honey/mustard glaze, some Potatoes Dauphinoise and a variety of vegetables. I also made this delicious coleslaw. I love coleslaw and in my opinion, you gotta have coleslaw when you have ham!
Coleslaw is one of those salads that comes in very handy during the holiday season when we are doing a lot of entertaining. It is easy to make ahead and goes perfectly on any buffet table!
Perfect for Tree Trimming Parties and Pot Lucks!
My mother always made great coleslaw! I can remember watching her stand at the counter making it. She always shredded her cabbage by hand with a knife, and that is the way I like to do my cabbage also, with a knife. I do grate the other vegetables, with the exception of the onion. That I chop by hand as well.
This version is prettied up a bit for the holidays with the addition of chopped dried cranberries. Dried Cranberries are sweet without being overly so and add an almost jewel-like quality!
The dressing is a simple one with sour cream, mayo and Greek yogurt. I have never used the lower fat version in this, but I can't see why they wouldn't work.
There is also dry mustard powder for a bit of a punch, some lemon juice, white wine vinegar, seasoning and a bit of honey for some sweet. The vegetables used are white cabbage, carrots, celeriac and spring onions.
Its just a really, really nice salad!
Yield: Serves 4 to 5Author: Marie Rayner
Christmas Coleslaw
Delicious and colourful. A great addition to the holiday buffet table.
ingredients:
1/4 pound celeriac (celery root) peeled and coarsely grated
1/4 pound carrots, peeled and coarsely grated
1/4 pound white cabbage, finely shredded by hand
3 spring onions, finely chopped
75g dried cranberries, coarsely chopped (1/2 cup
60g toasted chopped walnuts (1/2 cup)
poppy seeds to garnish
For the dressing:
40g sour cream (1/3 cup)
2 heaped TBS mayonnaise
2 heaped TBS plain Greek yogurt
1/2 tsp dried mustard powder
1 TBS white wine vinegar
1 TBS lemon juice
2 tsp liquid honey
salt and black pepper to tasteinstructions:
Prepare all of your vegetables. Put them into a bowl along with
the cranberries and walnuts. Whisk together all of the dressing
ingredients until smooth and well combined. Pour over the vegetables
and toss well together to coat evenly. Cover and chill. Stir in the
toasted nuts and sprinkle with the poppy seeds just prior to serving.
the cranberries and walnuts. Whisk together all of the dressing
ingredients until smooth and well combined. Pour over the vegetables
and toss well together to coat evenly. Cover and chill. Stir in the
toasted nuts and sprinkle with the poppy seeds just prior to serving.
Created using The Recipes Generator
You can store any leftovers in the refrigerator, covered, but I don't recommend keeping it for any longer than a day!
Have you seen these? They are called Fruit Savers and I got them from MyKtchn. They are the most fabulous fruit saver/covers. Easy to use and fabulous for all sorts!
Handy Fruit Savers is a 4 piece set of these flexible rubber lids that serve to help to prevent your favourite foods from spoiling. They are reusable covers and will work with almost any round fruit or vegetable, helping to keep them fresh for use the next day.
You can store sensitive foods safe from oxygen, reducing the risk of discolouration, which in turn helps me to reduce food waste and save me money. I just love them! I don't think I would be without them now. You can find out more about them here.
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