Read The Unofficial Downton Abbey Cookbook Online
Authors: Emily Ansara Baines
1 lime, sliced, for garnish
1 lemon, sliced, for garnish
Tabasco, for garnish
As readily available as seafood was for those with money to spend, poorer families in Edwardian England would only eat seafood once a week, and usually the cheapest seafood at that, such as kipper. These poor families were lucky to get one solid meal a day, and would not complain at the lack of protein (much less taste) in their diet.
This dish — consisting of meat smothered in Yorkshire Pudding batter — would have been a diet staple of most of Downton Abbey’s servants, as it was both cost-effective and easy to make. While not the healthiest of dishes, even cranky O’Brien would stop complaining once this moist delicacy was placed before her.
8 links pork sausage
1
⁄
2
cup onion, cooked and chopped
1
1
⁄
2
tablespoons vegetable oil
2 cups all-purpose flour
4 large eggs, room temperature
1 cup milk
1 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce
1
⁄
2
teaspoon mustard powder
1
⁄
4
teaspoon garlic powder
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1
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2
teaspoon freshly ground black powder
Toad in the Hole is commonly served with a heaping helping of onion gravy and a small side of vegetables. Cookbooks in the late 1800s recommended making this dish with “pieces of any kind of meat, which are to be cheapest at night when the day’s sale is over,” rather than with the sausage listed above. In Hannah Glasse’s 1747 cookbook
The Art of Cookery
, she included a variation of this dish called “Pigeons in a Hole,” which used pigeons as the meat. No wonder past English cooks found it necessary to smother this dish in gravy!
It’s not surprising that the male servants at Downton Abbey such as Thomas or William might require a day away to air their troubles, and it’s quite likely that they would get hungry while doing so. Luckily, this filling traditional meat-and-potato casserole was available at almost any pub at the time, so the servants wouldn’t have to worry about filling their gullets if Mrs. Patmore wasn’t around to cook for them.
1
⁄
2
cup unsalted butter, softened
1
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2
cup unsalted butter, melted
2 pounds stewing lamb, cut into large chunks
2 medium onions, chopped
4 carrots, chopped
3 tablespoons all-purpose flour
2 teaspoons Worcestershire sauce
2 cups lamb stock
2 cups chicken stock
2 bay leaves
Kosher salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste
2
1
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2
pounds potatoes, peeled and thinly sliced
While this recipe might include what seems like a lot of lamb for one dish, it is nothing compared to what Victorian royalty might have been served. At Buckingham Palace, in fact, there were daily deliveries of 200 necks of mutton and 250 shoulders of lamb, among other groceries. It seems that next to ruling, the most important part of the day for the royals was eating!
A convenient use for leftover Christmas food, Bubble and Squeak is often served on Boxing Day (usually the day after Christmas, a holiday celebrated by the Commonwealth of Nations countries), though this dish can be made any day of the year. While Mrs. Patmore would never dream of serving this downstairs dish to her superiors, it’s likely that at some point or another the staff enjoyed this recipe. The Boxing Day holiday tradition began in the United Kingdom, when the wealthy would give a box containing a gift to their servants.
1 medium head cabbage, chopped
8 slices bacon, diced
2 teaspoons extra-virgin olive oil
1 yellow onion, thinly sliced
2 large carrots, diced
1
⁄
4
cup peas
2 tablespoons unsalted butter
4 cups baked Russet potatoes, cooled and thinly sliced
1
⁄
2
teaspoon paprika
2 teaspoons kosher salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
The first mention of this dish can be found in Thomas Bridges’s 1770
A Burlesque Translation of Homer
: “We therefore cooked him up a dish/Of lean bull beef with cabbage fried,/And a full pot of beer beside:/Bubble, they called this dish, and squeak.…” Collaborator Francis Grose goes on to define the dish in his 1785
A Classical Dictionary of the Vulgar Tongue
: “Bubble and squeak, beef and cabbage fried together. It is so called from its bubbling up and squeaking whilst over the fire.” While this dish traditionally calls for meat, due to rationing during World War II, meat came off the ingredients list.