national food

Strangelight

steak(knife) no more
Jul 3, 2002
7,790
3
38
48
www.strangelight-records.com
Whats your national dish?

spuds.jpg

spuds!


scouse.jpg

Scouse was brought to Liverpool by Northern European sailors, it was originally called Labskause. This was finally shortened to Skause and over time the spelling changed to the more Anglicised version we have today, Scouse.

The people who ate Scouse were all generally sailors and their families and eventually all sailors within Liverpool were referred to as Scousers. Time has now taken its turn and everyone from the region of Liverpool is known as a Scouser.

Scouse holds a place in the heart of most Liverpudlian's as the taste of their hometown and is still regulary eaten today by a great number of families, including my own.

There are records showing that it was also served to the inmates of the Birkenhead workshouse way back in 1864. The recipe was much simpler then than today's refined version but was predominatly the same staple ingredients - meat, vegatables and potatoes.

Scouse can be ready made and kept for up to 2 days. Keep it covered in a refrigerator and reheat in a saucepan. Most people prefer the added depth of flavour that reheating adds.

Blind scouse was a variation on the above recipe and was eaten by the poorer people as it was cheaper to make because it did not contain meat.

INGREDIENTS
Serves 4-6 people

Half a Pound of Stewing Steak
Half a Pound of Lambs Breast
A Large Onion
1lb of Carrots
5lb of Potatoes
2 Oxo Cubes
2 Teaspoons of Vegatable Oil
Worcester Sauce
Salt and Pepper
Water

HOW TO COOK
Takes 4 hours of slow cooking

Cut the meat into large cubes and fry in the vegatable oil until lightly browned all over. You may wish to add some Worcester Sauce at this point for added flavour.

Transfer the meat to a large saucepan and add the onion that should have been chopped into large chunks. Follow this by chopping the carrot into medallions and place this on the meat. Peel and then Finely dice 1lb of the potatoes and place on top of the carrots.

Fill the pan with cold water until it is half full. Break up the Oxo cubes and sprinkle into the water. Add salt and pepper for seasoning. Let the pan simmer gently, stirring occasionally. The large pieces of onion will start to break up and the potato will become soft and will make the final sauce thick.

Simmer for a total of two hours, then add the remaining potatoes that should have been peeled and roughly chopped, along with a few splashes of Worcester Sauce. Then simmer for another two hours.
 
I cant stand scouse ... my mum makes scouse in the couldren and just shoves whatever in whenever she wants and then my dad puts allsorts of spicy stuff in it. It's like a confused stew when the pair of them have finished.
 
Strangelight said:
I suddenly feel sad at all the poor 'blind scouse' eaters :(

Yeah, that bit caught my eye reading your post.

It's like "fake goulash soup", which is the goulash Dora posted minus meat.

But I still think the international pot noodles are the biggest hoax of the universe.
 
Just to add a few to Hungarian cuisine:

Fried goose liver (yummie)

fried_libamaj.jpg



Magyaróvár veal cutlets

magyarovari.jpg



Venison with forest berry relish

ozgerinc.jpg



Paprika chicken

pcsirke.jpg



Stuffed chicken

toltott_csirke.jpg



Stuffed cabbage

tkaposzt.jpg