I love English desserts. When I think of English food, it's not blandness that springs to mind (of course, Finnish cuisine is the only one inferior to the English, so my opinion shouldn't count for very much), but an abundance of hearty, unfussy sweets, laden with fruits and especially berries - take a look at summer pudding as a prime example. Not to mention trifles, and fools, and crumbles. (I've even tried to make my own clotted cream, with, erm, interesting results.) Oh, and custards. Homemade custard is so good... In fact, I think I've solved my what about Sunday's dessert problem, or rather, replaced it with its opposite: how to choose from all of those...
With all this love for English desserts, it may be a bit of a surprise that the dish I'm presenting for the English food isn't a joke-event, hosted by Sam of Becks & Posh, is a savory one, and it's not even an English breakfast (mmm, fried tomatoes and rashers and eggs and baked beans). And there's nothing funny about cottage pie other than the name - that the lamb version is a shepherd's pie is quite understandable, if you overlook the fact that it is in fact not the least pie-like, but rather a casserole. A layer-deficient casserole. But what's so cottage-y about beef mince?
Anyway, we all know how I like my casseroles, and the weather is obliging me by being very English (pouring rain and 10°C), so we're going to tuck into this hearty and comforting dish RIGHT NOW.
Cottage Pie
I don't really have a recipe for you: I made a mince sauce out of finely chopped onions, celery and carrots, half a package of bacon and about 800 g of minced beef, a can of crushed tomatoes and a squeeze of tomato puree, a bay leaf, some beef stock, and salt and pepper. (I let the sauce simmer gently for about half an hour, while preparing the mash topping and heating the oven.)
Then made a mash out of four medium-large potatoes and two parsnips by boiling them, peeled and cut into chunks, in salted water and mashing them together with an, ahem, generous amount of butter and some finely grated cheddar (not exactly kosher, but good), seasoning with freshly ground pepper and nutmeg.
Transferred the meat sauce to a large ovenproof casserole (plus some portion-sized ones) and topped with the mashed root veg, dotted the whole thing with butter, and baked at 175°C until it got a nice color, about 45 minutes.
And, erm. If you fill your baking dishes very full, make sure to have a piece of foil or something at the bottom of your oven catching drips.
Just saying.
12 comments:
Yum, yum and yum... After reading your post I'll have to make either one of the two pies again, soon! I've always wondered about the pie in the name; I mean, REALLY, the thing has not one thing common with any pie?! Maybe someone out there can shed a litte light on the etymology of the name of this dish...?
That looks scrummy indeed! I think today it's a bit to warm to bake something like that, but I can't wait to try a (vegetarian) version of cottage pie soon. Mmm.
Hi there - I am popping by to thank you so much for your beautiful entry and for helping me prove English food is not a joke. The village vegan might be interested to note there is a vegetarian version called Red Dragon Pie". I used to make it with aduki beans.
Cheers,
Sam
What an incredible dish and photo! I love your blog. Very well done!
Oliivia, it's always puzzled me, too. But then, as long as it's good I don't suppose it matters very much what it's called.
Village Vegan - definitely a recipe for a cold and rainy day, this. I was just thinking that it might be worth trying with some sort of eggplant concoction. Of course that would be a bit carb-heavy, but probably yummy. Or beans, like Sam suggests.
Sam, thanks for organizing this! I'll look forward to looking through all the entries.
Ivonne - thank you!
I've never understood why they're called pies either, but it doesn't matter because it looks so delicious! Yum!
I wonder if it's called a 'cottage pie' because its meant to evoke images of rural country life on the cottage? I guess it's the kind of food more normal people working in the countryside would have eaten to use up their leftover cooked meat.
Just a guess....
But as a Brit I find it's still hard to get a decent version of this pie even in the UK - the only resort is to make it yourself!
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