Toad in the hole

Tasted better than it looks, served with onion gravy.........
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Added: 2007-07-27 12:23:18 EST
From: btz
32 comments so far.
Over easy is fried, turned once with slightly runny egg whites. I prefer over medium, runny yolks yet firm whites.
Apparently you Americans do something to eggs called 'over easy'??? Whats that, fried, boiled, scrambled or poached??
"------ Now all the rats and dogs and cats will never more be seen,
They'll all be ground to sausages in Dunderbeck's machine."
Lines fom a Scout camp song.
I live in France and one mans off cut is another mans delicacy, I shit you not.
Pork brawn (Fromage de tête) from corsica
INGREDIENTS:
1/2 head of pig, 1 foot of pig, 1 tongue of pig, 2 carrots, 1 large onion, 4 shallots, 1 bouquet furnished (including 2 or 3 cloves of garlic and 2 cloves), 1/2 dry white wine bottle, 2 spoonfuls with vinegar soup, some sheets of blettes, 1 small bunch of parsley, salt, pepper of the mill, fennel-flower.
http://www.cliquecorse.com/recettes/recette18.shtml
RJ, I apologise, but bangers are well renowned for being made of various off cuts that nobody else would want :S
"must be British bangers. Not being anal" - But zeus, that's why british bangers taste so good!! ;p
I can't see how it can be disgusting, its just British bangers and Yorkshire pudding!! Which one don't you like emkay?
Round these parts we learned to make a little go a long way..........[i can hear violins].
Emkay99, any food / ingredients can be disgusting in the wrong hands...........
If there is no cheese in it then there has to be more than one egg.One egg couldn't possibly cover that much area.
Looks yummo, I must try this sometime. I just need to find someplace that sells genuine British Bangers.
Grilled cheese look comes from the oil in the tin being a little bit too hot when I added the batter mix. I like that way .
C H E E S E ! ! ! Why would you want to put cheese in it????? Philistine..... ;-)
Zues is right.........British banger; too much meat in foreign ones.
Banger ingredients below.
Total Pork Cuts 67%, Ingredients: Pork Belly (44%), Water, Pork Shoulder (12%), Pork Fat (11%), Rusk, Potato Starch, Salt. Ingredients less than 1%: Soya Protein Concentrate, Yeast Extract, Dextrose, Flavourings, Stabiliser: Diphosphates, Preservative: Sodium Metabisulphite, Onion Powder, Antioxidants:E300 & E307, Colour: Cochineal.
Just an addition to the excellent recipe, must be British bangers. Not being anal, but its a fact that many other types don't work as well....
You said 6 sausages,i only see 4.Did you eat the other 2 already?
For the onion gravy:
8 oz (225 g) onions, peeled and sliced
2 teaspoons groundnut or other flavourless oil
1 level teaspoon golden caster sugar
1 dessertspoon Worcestershire sauce
1 level teaspoon mustard powder
15 fl oz (425 ml) vegetable stock made from 1½ level teaspoons Marigold Swiss vegetable bouillon powder dissolved in 15 fl oz (425 ml) boiling water
1 rounded dessertspoon plain flour
salt and freshly milled black pepper
Now for the gravy. First add the Worcestershire sauce and mustard powder to the stock, then add the onions from the baking tray to a medium-sized pan. Now add the second teaspoon of oil, then, using a wooden spoon, stir in the plain flour. Stir all this together over a medium heat and then switch to a whisk, then gradually add the stock to the pan, whisking all the time, until it's all in. Then bring it up to simmering point and gently simmer for 5 minutes. Taste to check the seasoning, then pour into a warmed serving jug. When the toad is ready, it should be puffed brown and crisp and the centre should look cooked and not too squidgy. Serve it immediately with the gravy, and it's absolutely wonderful with mashed potato.
Delia Smith
Begin by making the batter, and to do this sieve the flour into a large bowl, holding the sieve up high to give the flour a good airing. Now, with the back of a spoon, make a well in the centre, break the egg into it and add some salt and pepper. Now, measure the milk and 2 fl oz (55 ml) water in a measuring jug, then, using an electric hand whisk on a slow speed, begin to whisk the egg into the flour – as you whisk, the flour around the edges will slowly be incorporated. Then add the liquid gradually, stopping to scrape the flour into the mixture. Whisk until the batter is smooth. Now the batter is ready for use, and although it's been rumoured that batter left to stand is better, I have never found this, so just make it whenever it's convenient.
Now place the sliced onions in a bowl, add 1 teaspoon of the oil and the sugar and toss the onions around to get the lightest coating, then spread them on the baking tray. Next arrange the sausages in the roasting tin, then place the onions on a high shelf in the oven, with the sausages on a lower shelf, and set a timer for 10 minutes. When the timer goes off, remove the sausages from the oven but leave the onions in for a further 4-5 minutes – they need to be nicely blackened round the edges. When they are ready, remove them and leave to one side.
Now place the roasting tin containing the sausages over direct heat turned to medium and, if the sausages haven't released much fat, add the tablespoon of oil. When the tin is really hot and the oil is beginning to shimmer – it must be searing hot – quickly pour the batter in all around the sausages. Immediately return the roasting tin to the oven, this time on the highest shelf, and cook the whole thing for 30 minutes.
Toad in the Hole with Roasted-onion Gravy
I can't give this high enough accolades – it's a simply wonderful creation from the humble origins of British cooking. If only you could order it in a restaurant, though. Can I persuade anyone? It is, after all, a sort of fusion food – a fusion of light, crispy, crunchy batter and plump, meaty pork sausages, all moistened with a generous amount of roasted-onion jus. Here's hoping!
Serves 2-3
Ingredients
6 good-quality pork sausages – about 14 oz (400 g)
1 tablespoon groundnut or other flavourless oil (if necessary)
For the batter:
3 oz (75 g) plain flour
1 large egg
3 fl oz (75 ml) semi-skimmed milk
salt and freshly milled black pepper
Looks like an artery clogger to me.I'm not a big fan of cheese.What else is in it?
Now to find you. Great Britan is kind of a small place, isn't it? :)
Zeus, that looks good! Mind if I just happen to drop by about dinner time??
Yep, we're having toad in the hole for dinner tonight. Make only with the traditional British sausage....
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Turning fried eggs, criminal! Place a pan lid over them and they cook beautifully, still runny yolks, sunny side up!
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