British Hunger Pangs Eased by Eel Pie, Jugged Hare, Syllabubs
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LONDON — Here’s a glossary of British grub:
Afters--Dessert or cheese after main course.
Anchovy Eclair--Pastry puffs of anchovy and Parmesan cheese.
Apple Hedgehog--Applesauce with meringue covering.
Bovril--Essence of bouillon.
Bubble and Squeak--Audrey Gorton’s cookbook describes it as “an unappetising rechauffe of cabbage, potatoes and greens.”
Cuppa Char--Cup of tea.
Eel Pie--Clean and skin the critters first.
Elevenses--Morning tea break.
Gammon--Smoked ham.
Gooseberry Fool--Puree of baked gooseberries in thick double cream.
Jugged Hare--Hare stew with a gravy of onions, mushrooms, carrots, port wine and hare’s own blood.
Kedgeree--White fish cooked with rice.
Lancashire Hot Pot--Neck of mutton and oyster casserole.
Pie--Pastry filled with meat, game or fish.
Savoury--Hot hors d’oeuvre served AFTER dinner.
Scotch Eggs--Hard-boiled eggs with a coating of bread crumbs and sausage, fried in hot fat.
Silversides--Corned beef.
Steak and Kidney Pudding--A stew of steak and kidney in a suet pastry.
Swedes--Turnips.
Syllabub--Dessert made of whipped cream and sherry.
Tart--What Americans call a pie: pastry with fruit filling.
Toad-in-the-Hole--Sausage baked in a batter.
Trifle--Sponge cake with custard, jam and sherry, covered with whipped cream.
Welsh Rabbit--Originally “rarebit.” Cheddar melted in beer over buttered toast.
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