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By French Tart on March 04, 2008
Photo by MarraMamba
Photo by MarraMamba
"This is a delightful pudding, normally eaten at supper time, and it is suitable for vegetarians. It has its origins in Northallerton (North of England) and would have been made from wild herbs, gathered from the hedgerows and fields, and eaten with 'mushy' peas. I found this recipe in a small English regional cookery book - Yorkshire Recipes, and have made it regularly as an alternative to Yorkshire Pudding. Preparation time includes the standing time for the batter."
No Notes
Serving Size: 1 (158 g)
Servings Per Recipe: 4
"This was a wonderful twist on regular yorkshire pudding. I thoroughly enjoyed having a lunch of it that was vegetarian. Delicious! I found some hedgehog mushrooms and couldn't resist putting them in the batter with the sage. I used a pan that was to big for it, so it did not rise as it should have, that was my fault."
"Well! What can I say, I'm married to a Yorkshireman who is VERY fussy about his 'Yorkshires'. As I was making this I kept saying - this will never work, to thick, ovens not hot enough! But I was wrong - it turned out differently to a normal Yorkshire and the boiled onion made a real taste difference. Worth the effort - we ate this as a vegetarian dinner accompanied by several steamed veggies and gravy."
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