Feb-25-2015 08:22 AM
"THE FULL IRISH" BREAKFAST
There is an old motto that says “Eat breakfast like a King, lunch like a prince and dine like a pauper” meaning it is wise to start the day with a large cooked breakfast. Such a motto could very much be applied to the traditional full Irish Breakfast.
A large cooked breakfast of meat (bacon, sausages and black and white puddings), eggs, vegetables and potato all fried in creamery butter, it is served with a generous helping of homemade Irish soda or brown bread for soakage and washed down with a strong cup of breakfast tea such as Barry or Lyons tea (depending where you are) and a glass of orange juice.
It is a meal that was traditionally concocted to prepare one for a full days heavy duty work on the farm on a cold winter morning and was comprised of the best local and homemade farm produce all cooked in butter in a frying pan.
While today it is not possible to be eaten on most work mornings, the traditional full Irish serves as a staple treat for most households to indulge in on a lazy Sunday morning whilst reading the Sunday papers. And it is not just confined to mornings, it is a meal that can be eaten at any hour of the day depending on your liking.
While opinion may be divided on what constitutes an Irish breakfast from household to household the main ingredients remain the same, with the very best of Irish local ingredients comprising of meats such as good loin bacon or rashers, best of local sausages, black and white puddings (which are a type of sausage made up of pork meat, oats and spices and pork blood (in the black pudding)) eggs, mushrooms, tomatoes and cold cooked potato or potato bread (optional) all being used. These ingredients are then fried in a little knob of Irish butter in a frying pan and served with a helping of homemade bread, butter and jam at the side and finished off with a cup of tea or orange juice.
For visitors to the country a stay in Ireland wouldn’t be complete without first sampling the Irish breakfast whether it be the full version or a mini half portion. It is a meal that will fill you up and enable you to have the energy to make the most of a full days travel around the countryside.
For the adventurous types who wish to sample the local produce here is a simple recipe for the traditional Irish fry-up
Recipe
Serves 4
Pack of Irish bacon or rashers
Pack of Irish local Sausages
Black and white Pudding
400g of baked Beans
4 Eggs
Mushrooms
4 medium Tomatoes halved
Potato Farl or boxty or some cold cooked potato leftovers from yesterdays dinner (traditionalists only)
Served with a side of
Thick slices of soda or traditional Irish brown bread.
Irish creamery butter
Jam (optional)
Breakfast tea
Orange juice
Instructions
Place a frying pan (skillet) over a medium heat and melt a knob of good Irish creamery butter. Add the rashers and fry them until they are cooked to your liking (irish style cooked but not crispy). Set aside on a warmed plate in the oven to keep warm and fry the sausages in the frying pan. Once cooked add them to the rashers on the warmed plate.
Meanwhile slice the puddings, half the tomatoes and chop up the mushrooms and add to the frying pan, frying until they are browned on all sides. Again, once finished add to a warmed plate in the oven.
While you are frying the puddings, mushrooms and tomatoes, on a separate saucepan on another hob you can heat the baked beans if using.
If going the traditional route and using potato bread or indeed using cold cooked potatoes add it to the frying pan and cook as to your preference.
After finishing with the vegetables and puddings one can next fry the eggs in the same frying pan. Once finished with the eggs, one can now add all the cooked ingredients together and serve on 4 plates.
To serve
Serve with some thick slices of homemade Irish bread loaf be it soda or brown bread. For an extra touch have a little side dish of homemade jam and Irish creamery butter for a choice of a sweet topping to the bread to eat afterwards with your tea.
Wash down with a strong cup of Breakfast tea be it Barrys or Lyons tea depending on your local ties. A healthy side glass of orange juice is optional.
http://www.discoveringireland.com/the-full-irish-breakfast/
Mar-01-2015 02:40 AM
skrams wrote:obgraham wrote:
That menu might lead to a short life, but it certainly would be an enjoyable one!
FYI, we don't eat like that every day!
Feb-27-2015 03:25 PM
obgraham wrote:
That menu might lead to a short life, but it certainly would be an enjoyable one!
Feb-27-2015 01:15 PM
Feb-27-2015 12:11 PM
W4RLR wrote:
Southern men may die young from the Southern diet, but in the words of Lewis Gizzard, they die HAPPY!.
Feb-27-2015 12:01 PM
magnusfide wrote:True. My family is Scots-Irish and has been in Northeast Alabama for several generations. I've traced the lineage back to the late 1700's. Lots of Scots-Irish influences in Southern cooking. Southern men may die young from the Southern diet, but in the words of Lewis Gizzard, they die HAPPY!.W4RLR wrote:
I miss the Southern style breakfasts my dear departed father used to prepare when we were camping when I was a kid. Lots of eggs prepared anyway you liked them, grits, bacon, sausage, and Alabama ho-cake (fried pan bread). Coffee, milk, and juice to drink. It smelled so good in the morning neighboring campers would come by for a cup of coffee. Dad wound up feeding them, too.
Herself is from the South and she tells me that not just her own ancestors but many indigenous Southern families have Irish blood. Apparently there was a huge immigration of the Irish to the South to leave impoverished Ireland. Foodists postulate that Southern cooking style came from the Scottish and Irish immigrant families. And that is your food factoid for the day.:C
Whatever it is I'll vote for it. :B
Feb-27-2015 04:42 AM
W4RLR wrote:
I miss the Southern style breakfasts my dear departed father used to prepare when we were camping when I was a kid. Lots of eggs prepared anyway you liked them, grits, bacon, sausage, and Alabama ho-cake (fried pan bread). Coffee, milk, and juice to drink. It smelled so good in the morning neighboring campers would come by for a cup of coffee. Dad wound up feeding them, too.
Feb-26-2015 05:38 PM
Feb-26-2015 02:54 PM
After finishing with the vegetables and puddings one can next fry the eggs in the same frying pan. Once finished with the eggs, one can now add all the cooked ingredients together and serve on 4 plates.
Feb-25-2015 06:23 PM
Feb-25-2015 03:41 PM
obgraham wrote:
That menu might lead to a short life, but it certainly would be an enjoyable one!
Feb-25-2015 02:24 PM
Feb-25-2015 01:20 PM
Feb-25-2015 08:58 AM