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Thread: Stir Up Sunday

  1. #11
    Senior Member IshbelRobertson's Avatar
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    My family all know how to make the traditional cakes, but assure me that mine are the best... They think I don't see through that ruse!

    A lot of people still bake here. All my close relatives do, apart from my sister in Australia. She hates cooking!

    The house smells wonderful and, for me, this is the real start of the season. When the cakes and black buns are baked, I store them in airtight containers and once a week, I 'feed' them with brandy or malt whisky. The cakes get marzipanned and iced in the week leading up to Christmas.

    I try to alternate the bird for Christmas, Norfolk bronze turkey or goose. I serve it with all the usual sides, bread sauce, kilted sausages, honey glazed carrots, roast parsnips and potatoes, home made pork and sage stuffing balls and cranberry sauce and a port reduction gravy.
    Last edited by IshbelRobertson; 11-20-16 at 7:34am. Reason: Typo

  2. #12
    Senior Member catherine's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by IshbelRobertson View Post
    My family all know how to make the traditional cakes, but assure me that mine are the best... They think I don't see through that ruse!

    A lot of people still bake here. All my close relatives do, apart from my sister in Australia. She hates cooking!

    The house smells wonderful and, for me, this is the real start of the season. When the cakes and black buns are baked, I store them in airtight containers and once a week, I 'feed' them with brandy or malt whisky. The cakes get marzipanned and iced in the week leading up to Christmas.

    I try to alternate the bird for Christmas, Norfolk bronze turkey or goose. I serve it with all the usual sides, bread sauce, kilted sausages, honey glazed carrots, roast parsnips and potatoes, home made pork and sage stuffing balls and cranberry sauce and a port reduction gravy.
    Really sounds delicious! Remind me what kilted sausages are? I don't remember my MIL making those.
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  3. #13
    Senior Member razz's Avatar
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    Pork and sage stuffing sounds wonderful. May i ask for your recipe please as well as the port reduced gravy as that is new to me. Makes cooking fun when I try something totally new.
    As Cicero said, “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all the others.”

  4. #14
    Senior Member IshbelRobertson's Avatar
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    Kilted sausages are two chipolata pork sausages wrapped in the middle with streaky bacon.

    My recipe for sage and onion stuffing.

    A small amt of pork sausagemeat, handful of home dried breadcrumbs, half a finely diced onion, three or four sage leaves, sliced thinly. Roll into small balls and cook for about thirty minutes before serving. Crispy on the outside, soft in the middle. Can you tell I do it by eye?!

    Port wine reduction gravy. Drain off all the fat leaving only the meat juices and the sliced onion and carrots I used as a bed for the bird. Mash the veg into meat juices. Sprinkle flour onto residue and stir until amalgamated. Slowly add a large glass of port or red wine. Allow to thicken.bring to a boil. If too thick, add some water from the cooked veggies. Simmer until required.

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by sweetana3 View Post
    Scones are wonderful. I even found dried buttermilk powder works just as well as fresh. So I always have a supply to throw together a batch. I like being able to control what is in the product and limit the sugar.
    dried eggs work well too also Truvia instead of sugar. One year I looked through many recipe books and obtained a variety of wonderful scones.

  6. #16
    Senior Member razz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by IshbelRobertson View Post
    Kilted sausages are two chipolata pork sausages wrapped in the middle with streaky bacon.

    My recipe for sage and onion stuffing.

    A small amt of pork sausagemeat, handful of home dried breadcrumbs, half a finely diced onion, three or four sage leaves, sliced thinly. Roll into small balls and cook for about thirty minutes before serving. Crispy on the outside, soft in the middle. Can you tell I do it by eye?!

    Port wine reduction gravy. Drain off all the fat leaving only the meat juices and the sliced onion and carrots I used as a bed for the bird. Mash the veg into meat juices. Sprinkle flour onto residue and stir until amalgamated. Slowly add a large glass of port or red wine. Allow to thicken.bring to a boil. If too thick, add some water from the cooked veggies. Simmer until required.
    Thank you Ishbel. I have never thought of making a bed for the bird and then using the roasted veggies. That is on my to-do list for sure added to the gravy is a brilliant idea for wonderful flavour.

    My usual stuffing is about a cup+ of diced onions and celery sautéed in butter until tender added to 6 cups of diced (1/2") bread cubes, sprinkle on two packets of chicken bouillon mix, 2 eggs and enough poultry seasoning with extra sage to taste. I add water slowly just til moistened but not wet and roast for 1/2 hr in the oven with the bird. I don't stuff the bird anymore. I just clean and dry the bird and add an onion and an apple along with the usual outer glazing.

    I must try using the sausage meat mix as an alternative for one who doesn't enjoy the bread stuffing which is usually gone with the turkey but I never had an alternative to offer.
    As Cicero said, “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all the others.”

  7. #17
    Senior Member IshbelRobertson's Avatar
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    If I make bread sauce as an accompaniment, I use a sausagemeat stuffing.

  8. #18
    Senior Member razz's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by IshbelRobertson View Post
    If I make bread sauce as an accompaniment, I use a sausagemeat stuffing.
    I just looked up the recipe for a bread sauce as that is a new term for me. It seems to be a flavoured white sauce.
    Is the bread sauce used to drizzle over the meat or the veggies in place of the wine reduction gravy? I am finding it quite fascinating to see the variations on celebration meals so hope you don't mind the queries?
    As Cicero said, “Gratitude is not only the greatest of virtues, but the parent of all the others.”

  9. #19
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    I just realized I started another thread but could add to this one.

    I am trying new vinebred fillings (danish pastry). I want to do pumpkin cream cheese and blueberry cream cheese. I will make traditional prune and apple ones as well.

    For regular food I make a vegan gravy, it makes a lot more gravy than you can from turkey drippings. Also a stuffing that goes in a baked squash and has brown rice, lentils, sunflower seeds, broccoli, and more. The green bean casserole is off the package but I will add some garlic. And my potatoes are in the crockpot with lots of garlic as well.

  10. #20
    Senior Member IshbelRobertson's Avatar
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    The bread sauce is added to the plate, like cranberry sauce for example. It's an 'as well as', not an 'instead of' the gravy.

    Personally, I can't stand it, but family would be outraged if it wasn't on the table!

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