Thelonious Monk wrote: » What even is this stew you all speak of? Is it like a curry but with no flavour?
Gregor Samsa wrote: » This is a coddle I made for my family a few weeks ago. Some fundamentalists would argue that it's not pure because it has orange carrots, and everything should be pale, but I disagree. It was absolutely delicious. Really easy to make. Chop up some potatoes, carrots, rashers, sausages and onions. Parsnips are acceptable too. Add them to a pot of chicken stock. Throw in some barley and black pepper. Bring to the boil and simmer for for an hour. If you look up recipes online, all you get is abominations. You do not cook it in an oven, and you do not brown the sausages or rashers first. This is the way. Serve piping hot with some soda bread and more black pepper, washed down with a pint of mik. They don't call it "mickey stew" for nothing.
CelticRambler wrote: » Not if you have it in my house! Carrots fresh from the garden that taste like carrots; herbs fresh from the garden that taste like real herbs. The one in the freezer at the moment has added pulped tomatoes (fresh from the garden) and jalapeño chillis (fresh from the garden) to give it a bit of excitement. And no shop-bought stock of any kind. :cool:
mikemac2 wrote: » Not a farm anyway Dinner at 12 noon
El_Duderino 09 wrote: » It can be nice but normal cooking sense should be applied. It needs good flavoursome sausages and obviously brown the meat and veg before cooking. Roasting could add flavour too if you allow some bits to get crispy and browned.
Kylta wrote: » Do people still do a sunday dinner, consisting of ham, roast, potatoes, cabbage? Do people still do stews? Do people still do coddles? These days with most children, especially teenagers, not wanting this and only eating that, and people becoming vegans and vegetarians, people cutting down of different foods due to medical conditions etc. So what's your opinion, if you refuse to answer, you'll get yesterdays leftover cabbage and potatoes for your dinner.
Gregor Samsa wrote: » No. Cook it properly and taste it. It has plenty of flavour and a sublime texture. Perfection in a pot. It's not coddle if it's got brown or crispy bits. Croddle, maybe. Cruddle? Codawful?
Glurrl wrote: » Yes, Slow cookers stews casseroles etc. We sit down every evening at the table and chat over dinner
Gregor Samsa wrote: » I cook a dinner for the 5 of us every day (2 adults, 3 kids). We all sit down at the dining room table together around 6.30pm. I generally don't do anything special on a Sunday, but sometimes we'd have a roast, but it could be anything. Friday night is currently pizza night. One of my kids (7yo) is very adventurous with food and try absolutely anything. The other two are a bit more cautious, and have individual things they don't like, but they aren't too bad. None of them are teens yet, so it's easy enough to have them all in one place, eating a common meal. That will probably change over the next few years.
El Tarangu wrote: » ...Stews are pleasant enough - a bit boring, and not really worth the effort, either.......?
Gregor Samsa wrote: » Some fundamentalists would argue that it's not pure because it has orange carrots, and everything should be pale, but I disagree.
46 Long wrote: » So cool. So edgy.
Thelonious Monk wrote: » I'm edgy? I honestly don't know what people mean when they say stew. I don't think I've ever had Irish Stew, which they sell in Irish pubs in USA etc. I've never had coddle either but knew it contained uncooked sausages. My mother grew up in England so I may have been spared this delicacy as a child.
IAMAMORON wrote: » A dirty great big phucking grease riddled fry up .... baked beans and all, black puddin, white puddin, sausies , rashers , about 2-3 fried eggs and wiped down with almost hard burnt toast smothered in butter. Washed down with scalding hot tae.