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“Scampy” and Chips.

“Scampy” and Chips.

OK these were actually Argentinian Prawns not our native Langoustines, but they worked equally well. We seem to fail at anything simple even “Scampy” and chips has two possibilities – Battered or Breaded. So we did both!

Breaded Coating.

Ingredients:-


Buttermilk
Gluten free Flour
Gluten free Bread, wuzzed into crumbs
Garlic Salt
Onion Salt
Turmeric

Method:-

(1) Remove the shells from the Prawns.
(2) Soak in Buttermilk for an hour.
(3) Mix the Bread crumbs, Garlic & Onion Salt and Turmeric.
(4) Dredge each Prawn in Flour, dip in Buttermilk and then dredge in the Bread crumbs.
(5) Fry in small batches.
(6) Drain on kitchen paper and serve.

Battered Coating.

Ingredients:-


Soda Water
Gluten free Flour
1 Egg
Garlic Salt
Onion Salt
Turmeric

Method:-

(1) Remove the shells from the Prawns.
(2) Soak in Buttermilk for an hour.
(3) Make a thick batter with Flour, Soda Water, the Egg, Garlic & Onion Salt and Turmeric.
(4) Dredge the Prawns in Flour and dunk in the Butter.
(5) Fry in small batches.
(6) Drain on kitchen paper and serve.

Normally these would have broken our budget but intermittently our local supermarket have a 50% “Fish Friday” offer so I scooped up two packs of giant Prawns and a pack of Squid rings for £5. We don’t possess any yellow 1980’s plastic baskets (I wonder if they are still a thing?!) so we just served up in bowls…...

 

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Proper Pasty RecipeOK it's not really a Cornish Pasty as Sue cooked it in York. But it's well worth the effort. Even if you're going to call it a Goole or Wetwang Pasty!
 
Ingredients for the filling:-
 
500g Beef, diced
Swede, Carrots and Parsnips, diced
2 Onions, diced
1 Baking Potato, diced 
1 tbls of fresh Thyme
Salt and ground Black Pepper
Paprika
 
Egg Wash:-
 
1 large beaten egg with 1 tbls of water
 
For the pastry:-
 
500g of bread Flour (Gluten free if required)
120g of Lard
1 tsp od Salt
25g of Margarine
175ml water
1 large Egg
 
Method:-
 
(1) In a large bowl add the flour and salt.
(2) Cut the Lard and Margarine into cubes and rub into the Flour aiming for a breadcrumb texture.
(3) Add the egg and stir in.
(4) Slowly add the water and knead.
(5) Turn out onto a floured surface and continue to knead.
(6) Roll out the pastry.
(7) Form into circles.
(8) Add the filling cold.
(9) Egg wash around the edges.
(10) Form your Pasties.
(11) Cook in the oven for 45 minutes at 180c or until the pastry is golden brown.
 
Few meals have roots as deep as the Cornish pasty. A hand-held meat-and-vegetable pie developed as a lunch for workers in the ancient English tin mines of Cornwall. With its characteristic semicircular shape and an insulating crust that does double duty as a handle. The humble pasty today receives special designation along with Champagne and Parma ham as a protected regional food by the European Union. 
 
The Cornish pasty descends from a broader family of medieval English meat pies. The earliest literary reference to pasties is likely from Chaucer’s “Canterbury Tales.” Legal records from 13th-century Norwich describe pastry-makers accused of reheating three-day-old pasties for sale as fresh. In London, a 1350 regulation barred cooks “On pain of imprisonment” from charging more than a penny for putting a rabbit in a pasty. These pasties were little more than cuts of meat wrapped in pastry dough. By then the Cornish pasty made from diced beef, potatoes, swedes and onions had already taken its place in Cornwall’s regional cuisine.
 
The Cornish pasty was a food for families, fishermen and farmers. But it shone in the darkness of Cornwall’s mines. Tin had been gathered in Cornwall since prehistoric times. Mining continued throughout the Roman and medieval eras and into the early modern period. For Cornish men heading underground, the pasty was a  highly efficient food: self-contained, self-insulated and packed with calories. The thick semicircular edge of the crust could be monogrammed with carved-dough initials or toothpick codes to make sure each man took the right pasty as he headed to the mines. The crust had an additional virtue: miners’ hands were often covered with arsenic-laden dust, so the crust could function as a disposable handle.

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