Side Dish
St Patricks Day Recipe: Colcannon
Thursday, March 15th, 2012
The ever versatile traditional Irish mash – as served at my wedding!
In speaking of this most celebrated of Irish potato dishes, the musician Mick Bolger—whose Denver-based contemporary Celtic band is called Colcannon—notes that it has a “wonderful affinity” for corned beef and cabbage. And he confesses that he has also eaten it “with fillet mignon and port sauce; with rashers [bacon], tomatoes, and kidneys-in-their-jackets at 4 am; and — God forgive me — wrapped in a tortilla, microwaved, and eaten, over the sink, with salsa.” It is, in other words, a versatile creation.
It is also one that exists in numerous variations, depending on the season, the region of the country, and of course personal taste. It is often made with just butter, milk, and kale, but the scholar PW Joyce defines “caulcannon” as “potatoes mashed with butter and milk, with chopped up cabbage and pot-herbs.” Mary Ward, when she makes colcannon at her house in Nenagh, County Tipperary, starts with a trip to the kitchen garden, armed with a basket and a pair of shears. This is her recipe.
Serves 4 to 8.
2 to 2½ lb / 1kg to 1.25kg russet or other floury potatoes (5 or 6)
6 to 8 tbsp butter
2 to 3 lightly packed cups / 400 to 800g chopped kale or assorted chopped greens, such as kale, parsley, sorrel, spinach, and / or broccoli or cauliflower leaves)
1⅓ cups / 320ml milk
4 scallions, green part only, minced
Salt and pepper
Put the potatoes into a large pot, with the larger ones on the bottom, and add water to come halfway up the potatoes. Cover the pot and bring to a boil over high heat. When the water begins to boil, carefully drain off about half of it, then return the pot to the heat, cover it again, reduce the heat to low, and let the potatoes steam for about 40 minutes. Turn off the heat; cover the potatoes with a clean, damp tea towel; and let sit for 5 minutes more.
Melt 4 tbsp of the butter in a large skillet over medium-high heat. Add the kale or assorted greens and cook until just wilted, about 5 minutes.
Combine the milk, scallions, and remaining butter in a medium pot and bring to a simmer over medium heat. Cook for about 2 minutes, then add the greens and stir in well. Remove the pot from the heat, cover, and set aside.
Drain and carefully peel the potatoes, then return them to the pot. Add the greens and their liquid and mash until smooth, leaving a few small lumps in the potatoes. Season to taste with salt and pepper.
To serve in the traditional Irish manner, push the back of a large soup spoon down in the middle of each portion to make a crater, then put a large pat of room-temperature butter into each one to make a “lake.” Diners dip each forkful of colcannon into the butter until its walls are breached.
• This recipe is taken from The Country Cooking of Ireland by Colman Andrews
Tags: curly kale, potato, spring onion
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St Patrick’s Day recipe: pan boxty
Thursday, March 15th, 2012
Whereas Leitrim and the Drumlin area seem to be the home of boxty, it crops up in many other places around Ireland under various names
In Co. Wexford and Co. Tipperary I was given recipes for “grated cakes in the pan”, both of which were essentially pan boxty. Granny Toye from Clones, Co. Monaghan, now 88 years of age, gave this recipe to me. Granny Toye says that pan boxty may be eaten hot or cold and may be reheated. A tablespoon of fresh herbs provides a delicious, if untraditional, flavouring to the dish.
Serves 4
6 medium potatoes
a handful of white flour
salt
butter, for frying
Scrub the potatoes well, but don’t peel. Line a bowl with a cloth. Grate the potatoes into the cloth, then squeeze out the liquid into the bowl and allow it to sit for about 20 minutes until the starch settles. Set the potatoes aside.
Drain off the water and leave the starch in the bottom of the bowl. Add the grated
potato, a handful of white flour and some salt.
Melt a nice bit of butter on a heavy iron pan and pour in the potato mixture. It should be 2–2.5cm (¾–1in) thick. Cook on a medium heat. Let it brown nicely on one side before turning over and then on the other side, about 30 minutes in all, depending on the heat.
It’s much better to cook it too slowly rather than too fast. It should be crisp and golden on the outside. Cut the boxty into four farls and serve.
• This recipe is taken from Irish Traditional Cooking by Darina Allen (Kyle Cathie, £25)
Tags: potato
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Traditional Irish Colcannon
Thursday, October 20th, 2011
Ingredients
Serves: 5
500g kale
500g potatoes
2 leeks
250ml milk
salt and pepper to taste
pinch ground mace
125g butter
Preparation method
Prep: 10 mins | Cook: 20 mins
1. In a large saucepan, boil cabbage until tender; remove and chop or blend well. Set aside and keep warm. Boil potatoes until tender. Remove from heat and drain.
2. Chop leeks, green parts as well as white, and simmer in just enough milk to cover, until they are soft.
3. Season and mash potatoes well. Stir in cooked leeks and milk. Blend in the kale or cabbage and heat until the whole is a pale green fluff. Make a well in the centre and pour in the melted butter. Mix well.
Tip: Cabbage can be substituted for kale.
Tags: curly kale, leeks, potatoes
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Creamy Parsnip & Squash Bake
Wednesday, October 12th, 2011
Ingredients
284ml pot and a 142ml pot double cream
1 small onion or shallot, finely chopped
2 thyme sprigs, 1 stripped of leaves
butter , for greasing
500g parsnips (about 4 large)
1⁄2 500g butternut squash (about 1⁄2 a large one)
25g Gruyère , grated
Method
1. Place the cream, onion or shallot and the thyme sprig into a small pan. Slowly heat to just below boiling point, then remove from the heat and leave to cool. Strain, discarding the onion and thyme.
2. Heat oven to 160C/fan 140C/gas 4. Rub the bottom and sides of a gratin dish measuring about 20 x 30cm with butter. Peel the parsnips and trim the ends. Peel and scoop the seeds out of the squash. Thinly slice the vegetables.
3. Layer the parsnip and squash in the dish, pour over the infused cream, then scatter with the thyme leaves and Gruyère. Bake for 1 hr until golden and a fork slides easily into the veg.
Tags: butternut squash, onion, parsnip, shallot, thyme
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Chicory & gruyère gratin
Tuesday, February 22nd, 2011
A no-nonsense but totally delicious side dish that’s perfect for a roast. Ready in 20 Mins
Ingredients
* 6 heads chicory
* 284ml double cream
* 1 tbsp wholegrain mustard
* 1 bunch parsley
* 50g Gruyère cheese, grated
Method
1. Halve the chicory and steam for 6-8 minutes until tender. Arrange cut-side up in a shallow baking dish. Whisk the double cream, wholegrain mustard, a handful of chopped parsley and some salt and pepper together. Pour the mixture over the chicory and scatter over the grated gruyère cheese.
2. Put the chicory under a medium grill and cook until it’s golden and bubbling. Keep warm under a very low grill.
Tags: Chicory, Gruyère cheese, parsley, Whole grain mustard
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