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Faggot (food) Faggots are meatballs made from minced off-cuts and offal (especially pork, and traditionally pig's heart, liver, and fatty belly meat or bacon) mixed with herbs and sometimes bread crumbs. [1] It is a traditional dish in the United Kingdom, [2] [3] especially South and Mid Wales and the English Midlands.
Pease pudding, also known as pease porridge, is a savoury pudding dish made of boiled legumes, [1] typically split yellow peas, with water, salt and spices, and often cooked with a bacon or ham joint. A common dish in the north-east of England, it is consumed to a lesser extent in the rest of Britain. In Newfoundland, it retains its traditional ...
A & G Williams of Felinfoel produce traditional Welsh faggots and other savoury products. Brawn is a traditional Carmarthenshire dish, and one Carmarthenshire recipe includes pig's head and trotters which are rubbed well with salt and then placed in a crock and left for 2 or 3 days. The meat is then washed in cold water, placed in a boiler pan ...
The cuisine of the Vale of Glamorgan ( Welsh: Bro Morgannwg ), Wales, is noted for its high-quality food produced from the fertile farmland, river valleys and coast that make up the region. The area has a long history of agriculture that has developed from the Roman era . The Vale is not a valley in the geographical sense, but a plateau.
12. Avocado Egg Salad. Anti-mayo people take note: You can use mashed avocado in place of mayonnaise in many salad recipes. Smash it up with lemon juice and salt, then mix in chopped hardboiled ...
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Toast the bread, place some lettuce on two slices, top with the egg salad, and then top with the remaining two slices of bread. Serve immediately. Recipe courtesy of The Fresh Egg Cookbook: From Chicken to Kitchen, Recipes for Using Eggs from Farmer’s Markets, Local Farms, and Your Own Backyard by Jennifer Trainer Thompson/Storey, 2012.
Bubble and Squeak. – Mash four potatoes, chop a plateful of cold greens, season with a small saltspoonful of salt and the same of pepper; mix well together, and fry in dissolved dripping or butter (three ounces), stirring all the time. Cut about three-quarters of a pound of cold, boiled beef into neat, thin slices.