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Bread Sauce - Yay or NAY

Bread sauce - good or evil


  • Total voters
    36
_pH_ said:
No roast chicky for me, but I can do all the trimmings no probs :)

Go for it :cool:

Chestnut bourguignon pie
Roast potatoes
Parmesan parsnips
Yorkshire pudding
Braised red cabbage
Glazed carrots
Stirfried kale (or spinach) with garlic and pinenuts
Red onion/shallot gravy
Bread sauce

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm
 
cesare said:
Go for it :cool:

Chestnut bourguignon pie
Roast potatoes
Parmesan parsnips
Yorkshire pudding
Braised red cabbage
Glazed carrots
Stirfried kale (or spinach) with garlic and pinenuts
Red onion/shallot gravy
Bread sauce

Mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm

Ooh, that sounds luvverly :) Not at home this w/end, but am tempted to cook all that for my lovely lady next time she comes to visit :)
 
_pH_ said:
I have just been to check if I have any packet bread sauce in the cupboard and the cupboard is all bare :(

Well, not bare as such, but the absence of bread sauce is quite disturbing :(

I need a hug!!

Packet bread sauce :eek:

No no no no no

You gotta do it from scratch :cool:
 
_pH_ said:
Ooh, that sounds luvverly :) Not at home this w/end, but am tempted to cook all that for my lovely lady next time she comes to visit :)

I could post up the recipes and derail this thread into a decent, food lovers thread :)
 
_pH_ said:
675px-Bread_sauce.jpg


Just for moomoo :)

That looks like puke.:(

*retches*
 
Yes, yes and thrice yes!

A lovely, savoury ambrosia.

Mind you, I'm common and love the packet stuff. Especially when it's left to cool and used on leftover sarnies.

Tufty's mum and I bonded over it at Christmas. It was a beautiful moment.
 
Detroit City said:
what's bread sauce? :confused:

It's a sauce traditionally served with Christmas Dinner. Breadcrumbs and milk, flavoured with an onion as Cesare mentioned.

Opinion is clearly divided over its absolute, undeniable wonderfulness, but you'll always have nutters.
 
fogbat said:
It's a sauce traditionally served with Christmas Dinner. Breadcrumbs and milk, flavoured with an onion as Cesare mentioned.
never had it but it sounds ok to me :)
 
Chestnut Bourguignon pie

I found some of these in Waitrose just before Christmas, ready cooked vacuum packed chestnuts:

visuel_gms_marronsvide.jpg


If you can find them, it cuts down the cooking time in the recipe by about 40 minutes because they just need heating through for enough time to soak up the wine/stock (I just used one of the two packets in the pack). But here's the full recipe in case you have to cook the chestnuts from scratch:

Preparation time 30 mins to 1 hour
Cooking time 1 to 2 hours
Serves 4

Ingredients

125g/4oz dried chestnuts, soaked for 6-8 hours
2 bay leaves
1 sprig fresh rosemary or 1 tsp/5ml dried rosemary
210ml/7fl oz vegetarian red wine
300ml/10fl oz vegetable stock or water
25g/1oz butter or soya margarine
8 small pickling onions or shallots, peeled
125g/4oz chestnut mushrooms, wiped
125g/4oz button mushrooms, wiped
2 tsp Dijon mustard
2-3 tbsp tamari or soy sauce
freshly ground black pepper
fresh parsley, finely chopped
225g/8oz vegetarian puff pastry, thawed if frozen

Method

1. Preheat the oven to 200C/400F/Gas 6.
2. Place the soaked chestnuts, herbs and 150ml/5fl oz of wine in a saucepan with vegetable stock to cover and cook until just tender - approximately 50-60 minutes. Drain the chestnuts, reserving the liquid.
3.Melt the butter in a frying pan and sauté the onions until slightly browned.
4. Add the mushrooms and cook for a further 4-5 minutes.
5. Add the chestnuts, the remaining red wine and sufficient chestnut cooking liquor to cover.
6. Bring to the boil and simmer for 20-30 minutes to reduce the liquid a little.
7. Stir in the mustard, tamari and black pepper to taste. Cook for a further 5 minutes.
8. Check seasoning and adjust as necessary.
9. Spoon the mixture into a pie dish. Roll out the pastry on a floured surface and place on top of filling.
10. Bake for about 20 minutes until golden.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/food/recipes/database/chestnutbourgignonpi_3042.shtml

I didn't have any puff pastry so I just made some shortcrust, which worked fine. I also used Colmans instead of dijon mustard, just a little bit less cos it's stronger. Oh, and just normal mushrooms. And I didn't have any parsley. It all worked fine though ... it was a delicious rich pie.

I only wish that I'd made some bread sauce to go with it :(
 
_pH_ said:
You may be right

((((moomoo))))

She has gone very quiet on the subject of bread sauce now that we have all decided how nice it is and that, consequently, that makes her a freak ;)


I've flounced hactually. I'm not sticking around on a board full of freaks! :rolleyes:



I only popped back to see if anyone was begging me to return yet. They weren't. Bastards. :mad: :( :(
 
moomoo said:
I've flounced hactually. I'm not sticking around on a board full of freaks! :rolleyes:



I only popped back to see if anyone was begging me to return yet. They weren't. Bastards. :mad: :( :(

No. They're not. 66.67% in favour of bread sauce :p
 
Bread sauce a la St Delia

I do it this way normally:

4 oz (110 g) freshly made white breadcrumbs (a DECENT proper baker loaf) two-day-old white loaf with crusts removed will be hard enough to grate, but the best way to make the crumbs is in a liquidiser, if you have one) (I dry mine out in the oven - thick cut slices - at a very low heat.)
1 large onion
15-18 whole cloves or freshly grated nutmeg
1 bay leaf
8 black peppercorns
1 pint (570 ml) breakfast milk
2 oz (50 g) butter
2 tablespoons double cream
salt and freshly milled black pepper

Cut the onion in half and stick the cloves in it – how many you use is a personal matter; I happen to like a pronounced flavour of clove. If you don't like them at all, you can use some freshly grated nutmeg instead. Place the onion – studded with cloves – plus the bay leaf and the peppercorns, in a saucepan together with the milk. Add some salt then bring everything up to boiling point. Take off the heat, cover the pan and leave in a warm place for the milk to infuse for two hours or more.

When you're ready to make the sauce, remove the onion, bay leaf and peppercorns and keep them on one side. Stir the breadcrumbs into the milk and add 1 oz (25 g) of the butter. Leave the saucepan on a very low heat, stirring now and then, until the crumbs have swollen and thickened the sauce – about 15 minutes. Now replace the clove-studded onion, the bay leaf and the peppercorns and again leave the pan in a warm place until the sauce is needed.

Just before serving, remove the onion and spices. Reheat gently then beat in the remaining butter and the cream and taste to check the seasoning. Pour into a warm serving jug.

St Delia link

Mmmmmm

(my emphases)
 
moomoo said:
Well?

I couldn't think of anything worse tbh but some strange folk round here seem to think it's the dogs bollocks (I think it's made from the spunk out of the dogs bollocks actually).

So, here's your chance to speak up on an important matter for once...........


:cool:

Your language is deteriorating young lady :eek:

Too much time on urban methinks :(
 
madzone said:
Your language is deteriorating young lady :eek:

Too much time on urban methinks :(


Sorry, it's an emotive subject. :o :(

And I didn't swear, just described it as best as I could..................

:p
 
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