british cuisine, recipes, soup, stew, welsh cuisine, winter

Medieval-Inspired Welsh Soup: Leek Broth

Idea comes from 1000 Foods to Eat Before You Die, pg. 35, recipe is my own

            For some reason, leeks are a Welsh symbol. They are particularly associated with St. David’s Day, dedicated to Wales’s patron saint. Exactly how this happened is unclear, and history doesn’t provide many clues. At some point after 500 BC, Celtic peoples came to dominate the British Isles, including Wales. Starting in 43 AD, the Roman Empire conquered England and Wales, staying until the 5th Century.

            During these centuries, the native population became somewhat Romanized, adopting many Roman customs and, from the 4th Century onward, Christianity. These Romano-Britons spoke a Celtic language similar to Welsh. After the legions left to deal with everything else going on in the 5th Century, Anglo-Saxons from modern Germany began invading the island. The Romano-British chieftains put up a spirited defense, but were gradually pushed west into Wales, which is why the land to the east came to be called “Angle-Land,” later England. Did the proto-Welsh use leeks, which were a favorite of the Romans, to distinguish themselves from the Saxons? It’s possible.

            One of these proto-Welsh chieftains became the basis of the King Arthur legends. In other words, the man behind the myth was Welsh, not English. Perhaps because Wales is hillier and less fertile than England, or perhaps because they were busy fighting first each other and later the Vikings, the Anglo-Saxons mostly left the Welsh alone. After the Norman Conquest in 1066, so did the descendants of William the Conqueror. They were busy fighting rebellious Saxons, building an empire in France larger than what was controlled by the French king, and fighting their relatives over shares in that empire. There were some incursions into Wales, Scotland, and Ireland, but the Anglo-Norman kings of England were mostly occupied elsewhere.

            This changed in the 13th Century, probably because the kings of England lost most of their land in France. With the French kings much stronger than before, reconquest was a difficult proposition. So the English kings turned their energy towards the rest of the British Isles. King Edward I conquered Wales in the 1280s, and from then on heirs to the English throne were called the Prince of Wales. One story goes that the Welsh asked King Edward for a prince that spoke neither English nor French, so he presented them with his infant son, the future Edward II, who did not yet speak any language.

            Unlike Scotland and Ireland, Wales merged into the English monarchy with only a few early rebellions. It remained a culturally distinct backwater, but Welsh longbowmen played an essential role in the Hundred Years’ War. Without them, the English could not have won so many battles against much larger French forces.

            In Wales’s cool, wet climate, raising livestock was more profitable than growing most crops. Oats, barley, rye, and root vegetables grow more easily than wheat. Traditional Welsh dishes tend to be homey and comforting, not spicy and exciting. Not many Welsh specialties are known outside the British Isles, but one of the more famous is leek broth, called cawl cennin in Welsh. It’s a simple mix of leeks, carrots, potatoes, and cabbage, flavored with bacon and thickened with oatmeal.

            Except for the potatoes, this sounds a lot like the thick soups, called pottages, eaten by most medieval Europeans. The ingredients varied by social class and the occasion, but for the common people, vegetable-based soups and bread were the core of the diet. These were supplemented with butter and cheese, some meat and fish (usually salted), fruit in season, and beer, cider, or wine, depending on the region. Leeks and salted pork products like ham or bacon gave pottages more flavor, and vegetables like carrots and cabbages kept reasonably well over the winter. Grains, particularly those like oats and barley that were less useful for making bread, were often added as thickeners.

            Once potatoes became common in the 17th Century, they went into the pot too. Before soup bases and bouillon cubes, water would have been the liquid. Until the 20th Century, chicken was more expensive than beef, mutton, or pork, so there would be no chicken broth in a common, everyday dish. Today, a bit of bouillon or soup base is typical in leek broth, adding extra flavor for just a few cents.

            As far as affordable home cooking goes, leek broth is a great choice. The root vegetables are full of vitamins, and the oats make it taste sort of creamy and surprisingly filling. The soup/stew has a fair amount of starch, but carbohydrates are not the enemy, especially in the form of carrots and whole grains like oats. A chunk of whole grain bread would be a great accompaniment, maybe with a piece of cheese or glass of milk for extra protein. And don’t skip the bacon. Per serving, it does not add that much fat, and a little bit adds a ton of flavor. Which makes a popular New Year’s resolution a bit easier.

Ingredients:

  • About 8 ounces bacon, diced
  • 2 large leeks, halved lengthwise, cleaned, and thinly sliced crosswise
  • 8 ounces carrots, thinly sliced
  • 6 medium-sized red potatoes, cut into roughly ½ inch cubes
  • Half of a small green cabbage, thinly sliced
  • About ½ cup to 1 cup rolled oats (not steel-cut or instant)
  • Chicken broth or water (broth from a soup base is perfectly good here)

Directions:

  1. Place the bacon in a large soup pot over medium heat. Cook until starting to crisp, then add the leeks, carrots, and potatoes. Do not drain the fat. All the other ingredients are healthy, and it is essential for the best flavor.
  2. Cook the root vegetables in the bacon fat with the bacon, stirring occasionally, until the vegetables start to cook down and release their moisture.
  3. Add enough water to cover, about 12 cups. If desired, add 1 teaspoon soup base or bouillon per cup of water.
  4. Bring the soup to a boil, then reduce the heat and simmer, stirring occasionally, until the potatoes are soft.
  5. Stir in the cabbage and oats. Cook on low heat, stirring frequently, until the cabbage softens and the soup begins to thicken.
  6. Ladle the soup into bowls and serve hot. Don’t worry about presentation; leek broth tastes a lot better than it looks.

            For more warming recipes over the next few months, don’t forget to subscribe for free.

One-Time
Monthly
Yearly

Make a one-time donation

Make a monthly donation

Make a yearly donation

Choose an amount

$5.00
$15.00
$100.00
$5.00
$15.00
$100.00
$5.00
$15.00
$100.00

Or enter a custom amount

$

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

DonateDonate monthlyDonate yearly
Standard
british cuisine, food history, recipes, winter

Shepherd’s and Cottage Pie: The Surprising Reason for a Mashed Potato “Crust”

Idea comes from 1000 Foods to Eat Before You Die, pg. 24, recipe is my own

            Strictly speaking, shepherd’s pie involves mutton or lamb. If ground beef is used, as is often the case, it is technically cottage pie. Technicalities aside, the term shepherd’s pie is widely used for either. The important thing is that the ground meat and vegetable filling is baked under a thick layer of mashed potatoes. Whenever it’s dreary, snowing flakes the size of your palm, or 0 degrees outside, either is a great home-cooked dinner.

            The ingredients are simple enough. As for why what is clearly a casserole is called a pie, the answer has to do with grain shortages in 18th Century Britain. Stick with me, I promise the explanation will be brief. At the time, population was rising rapidly. So were agricultural yields, but not as quickly. This meant higher prices for bread and other flour-based products, the essential staple for most of the population.

            Fortunately, residents of the British Isles accepted the potato earlier than most Europeans. They still preferred grain, but potatoes provided some protection from bad harvests and rising food prices, and became increasingly important during the 18th Century. Most sources suggest that shepherd’s and cottage pie originated then. Cooking a meat filling in a pastry crust had long been popular. As a cost-saving measure, Britons began to ditch the pastry, top the filling with mashed potatoes, and call it a pie. These new “pies” were easy to make, stretched pricey meat with the cheapest foodstuff available, and tasted good.

            Then came the 1790s. The grain harvests of 1794 and 1795 were low, leading to widespread hunger and unrest. Nervous because of the recent French Revolution, Britain’s upper classes decided to voluntarily reduce their consumption of flour, particularly refined white flour. While this would have only been a drop on the bucket in terms of actual grain saved, it was an important symbolic gesture. Even the royal family got in on the action. Not wanting to give up their beloved pies, well-off Britons took the shepherd’s/cottage pie idea and fancied it up, baking the meat and potato mix in ceramic dishes designed to look like elaborately molded pie crusts.

            The popularity of the mashed potato pies continued long after the grain shortage was over. During the Victorian Era, recipes were widespread in the cookbooks targeted toward comfortably off but not wealthy women. At the time, it was common to buy a large piece of meat for a big Sunday roast dinner, then use the leftovers in other dishes for the rest of the week. Since raw meat could not safely be stored in the days before refrigeration, and daily trips to the butcher were a hassle, these recipes utilized leftover cooked meat, typically mutton or beef.

            As one poem put it, “hot on Sunday, cold on Monday, hashed on Tuesday, minced on Wednesday, curried Thursday, broth on Friday, cottage pie Saturday,” was a way to reuse and repurpose leftovers. This seems like an extreme example for several reasons, including the size of a roast needed to last for an entire week, and more importantly, keeping it edible without refrigeration FOR SIX DAYS. Even when cooked, that seems like a tall order, especially during the summer. Why not visit the butcher twice a week, and have more variety with beef for 3 – 4 days, and mutton for the other 3 – 4?

            Today beef is more common for shepherd’s pie, and the meat usually starts out raw. While I enjoy repurposing leftovers, using raw meat allows the beef or lamb fat to flavor the gravy, which is why I don’t drain it in this recipe. This can be made right in the skillet with the meat and vegetables. Just add a bit of flour to form a roux with the fat, then some broth to make a gravy.

            Like many popular British dishes, shepherd’s pie falls firmly in the comfort food category. It can even be assembled ahead of time and refrigerated, though this will mean a longer baking time. Leftovers are equally delicious. Just don’t store them for days at room temperature.

Ingredients:

  • About 1.5 pounds ground chuck (or lamb/mutton)
  • 8 ounces carrots (about 3 large ones), sliced, with larger pieces halved
  • 1 onion, halved and thinly sliced
  • Several sprigs parsley, minced
  • Worcestershire sauce and black pepper to taste
  • Several dried mushrooms, broken into small pieces (optional)
  • 8 oz frozen peas (optional)
  • ¼ cup flour
  • About 2 cups beef broth (I use reduced sodium broth from a carton. It’s convenient, and regular often makes dishes too salty)
  • About 3 pounds potatoes, peeled if desired (I typically peel russets but not red or yellow potatoes)
  • Milk and butter for mashing potatoes
  • Cheddar cheese

Directions:

  1. Cut the potatoes into large chunks and bring to a boil in salted water. Cook until easily pierced with a fork, about 10 – 15 minutes. Drain, return to pot, and mash with butter, milk, and salt to taste. Set aside.
  2. Meanwhile, place the ground meat in a large skillet over medium heat, leaving in one chunk at first. This allows for better browning.
  3. Once the meat is browned on the one side, break it up with a spatula or a potato masher and cook, stirring occasionally, until only a little pink remains. Don’t drain the fat, because it flavors the gravy.
  4. Add the onions, carrots, parsley, and, if desired, peas and mushrooms to the skillet. Season with several dashes or Worcestershire sauce and plenty of freshly-ground black pepper. Cook until vegetables have softened and begun to cook down.
  5. Sprinkle flour over meat and vegetable mix and stir to combine. Add the broth, a little at a time, until a gravy forms. Taste for salt, pepper, and Worcestershire, adding more if desired.
  6. Preheat the oven to 350 (degrees Fahrenheit) if eating right away. Spread the meat mixture evenly over the bottom of a 13 x 9 baking pan. Top with the mashed potatoes, smoothing to the edges with a spatula. Top with the cheese.
  7. Bake for about 20 minutes, until the cheese is melted and bubbly. If made ahead and chilled, this will take 40 – 50 minutes.
  8. Let the shepherd’s pie rest for a few minutes before enjoying.

            More baked and stewed comfort will be coming over the next few months, so be sure to subscribe.

One-Time
Monthly
Yearly

Make a one-time donation

Make a monthly donation

Make a yearly donation

Choose an amount

$5.00
$15.00
$100.00
$5.00
$15.00
$100.00
$5.00
$15.00
$100.00

Or enter a custom amount

$

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

Your contribution is appreciated.

DonateDonate monthlyDonate yearly
Standard
food history, french cuisine, recipes

French Pork and Beans: Cassoulet

1000 Foods (pgs. 70 – 71)

            As mentioned previously, despite its stuffy reputation, French cuisine has many unfussy, homestyle dishes. At one point, many of these were regional, country-style fare. Writers like Elizabeth David and especially Julia Child helped popularize them worldwide and make them “respectable.” Today, the likes of quiche, coq au vin, and cassoulet can be found at Michelin-starred restaurants alongside more traditional haute cuisine. Naturally, this means haute cuisine prices for dishes with often affordable ingredients.

            Often, cassoulet does contain pricier ingredients like mutton, game birds, or duck confit, but it doesn’t have to. The only necessities are pork, beans, a heavy vessel for a long, slow bake, and a topping of breadcrumbs to form a “crust.” Native to southern France, cassoulet was originally a peasant dish. The cook would toss in whatever meats were available, with white beans to add filler and soak up the flavor. The cassoulet would be taken to the baker, who, in the days before modern kitchens, often had the only oven in town. For a small fee, the baker would bake the mixture for a few hours. Typically, when the cook returned to pick it up, they would buy a loaf of bread to go with it.

            The exact recipe for cassoulet varied, no doubt based on personal preferences, what was available, and the economic resources to the family eating it. There are three main variations, all named after towns in southern France: Castelnaudry, Carcassonne, and Toulousain. Often Castelnaudry is pork-based, Carcassonne focuses on mutton and game fowl, and Toulousain on duck confit, or duck preserved in its own fat, but these are not hard and fast rules. If the last sounds strange for a peasant dish, preserving duck and other fowl like goose in its own fat was once a necessity, widespread in the region. More recently, it became trendy.

            To stay in the spirit of what was once a humble dish, I stuck with pork, partly because of cost, partly because I didn’t want to search high and low for mutton and duck confit. And getting up early to hunt game birds just wasn’t going to happen. For the meats, I thawed out some pork butt from the freezer, brushed the extra salt off a few slices of homemade pancetta/salt pork, and picked up a pack of smoked ham shanks and hot Italian sausage meat from the grocery. To distribute it more evenly but keep it distinct, I formed loose sausage meat into meatballs rather than using whole sausages.

Ready for the oven

            Part of the reason for making cassoulet was to try out my new toy from Christmas – a Dutch oven. What’s great about it is that, because it can go directly from the stove to the oven, the contents don’t need to be transferred from one pan to another. After browning the meat, being careful not to break the meatballs, I added a chopped onion, six minced garlic cloves, three bay leaves, three actual cloves, some pepper, a pound of soaked navy beans, a cup of water, and a quart of low-sodium beef broth. Everything got a topping of plain bread crumbs, then went into the oven at 325 for about three hours.

My new toy, being put to good use

            The cassoulet was definitely good, but I still need to perfect the recipe. The only real issue was that it was very salty, even though I didn’t add any extra. The only reason I can think of is the homemade pancetta that I used in place of salt pork. Does it need to be rinsed or even soaked before use? I’m not sure, but with the pork butt and sausage there is plenty of fat, and from the smoked ham shanks the cured pork flavor, making the pancetta unnecessary. A minor problem was that the breadcrumbs tended to sink, thickening the liquid rather than forming a crust. The cassoulet was still nice and crispy on top, but there is work to be done before I have a postable recipe. But with two and a half months of winter ahead, there is plenty of time to experiment. To hear about those experiments, remember to subscribe for free.

Do I deserve a Michelin star? I think I do.
Standard