Anywhere that rolls up its sausage into a circle that it can't even fit in a hot dog cob has no right to complain about pies,in fact I've never even seen a bottomless pie,how do you get it out of the glass heater to the tray in the chippy?
Shoo Chalky.
I’m fed up with being served up with summat that has pastry only on the top described as a pie. It fucking isn’t. A pie is fully encased in pastry, short-crust or puff it really doesn’t matter, so a bottomless concoction is just a covered stew. And don’t get me started on stuff covered in mashed spud. A ‘shepherd’s pie’ is just mince and tatties done vertically instead of horizontally. I tell you, chefs need a good talking to.
Anywhere that rolls up its sausage into a circle that it can't even fit in a hot dog cob has no right to complain about pies,in fact I've never even seen a bottomless pie,how do you get it out of the glass heater to the tray in the chippy?
I wish I could say it was a North American thing, but they used to do it in South Yorkshire as well.
Here they call it a "pot pie", ****ing philistines, but at least you have a clue. Sheffield's national dish is meat and potato pie with Henderson's relish soaked into the top - and it's a pie with no sides. It's like trying to be a concert pianist with no hands.
It's basically a stew in a pot with a pasty lid on.
It's cultural genocide, don't deny me my ****ing pastry you *******s.
A true Cumberland sausage isn’t a circle, Chalky, though a lot of our black puddings are. A true Cumberland sausage is as long as its maker wants and without links; I saw one a quarter of a mile long on display in Keswick when I was a callow youth. Imagine the bun you’d need for that.
Our butchers in Cockermouth make really good sausage though the longest I’ve seen was just a few feet.
Black puddings are a marvel and every country has their own version, although I have not seen it in the USA where they don't eat offal. I tried getting a haggis thru customs one time ... I thought I would end up sectioned such was the kerfuffle "Its what!??!".
In Uruguay it is very sweet.
Most recipes use lamb mince for shepherds pie and beef mince for cottage. Youse can chop up left-overs and use that but it’s still effectively minced meat. I love a good scotch pie, Graham’s in Aspatria used to sell them along with the best brown bread you’ve ever tasted.