It was with relief
we got back to a big shop at the supermarket yesterday. It was a relief partly
because it was sign of life getting back to normal, partly because it meant we
had something other than minced beef in all its various forms to eat.
Today we’re going
back to old fashioned tastes. The Fox
has decided to have a go at “Kipper & Egg Filled Jacket Potatoes”.
This takes me back
years. This is a recipe that dates back to our early married years. At the time
we lived at Crag Foot on the edge of Leighton Moss Bird Sanctuary. In many ways
it was an idyllic spot. Crag Foot consists of no more than about a dozen houses
nestled at the foot of Warton Crag. The scar from the quarrying on Warton Crag
can be seen from miles away & is very distinctive. Here we rented a cottage
for the first 18 months of our married life.
This recipe comes
from a cookery book we’d bought on our honeymoon. Along with our world famous
Kipper & Egg Kedgeree is found this recipe for filling jacket potatoes with
a not dissimilar mix of (tinned) kippers, boiled eggs & a bit of mustard.
Some cheese goes on top when the filled potatoes go into the oven to warm up
the fish.
The other half of
the tin of kippers I’m going to use tomorrow for the other intervening recipe.
This is for Aberdeen Eggs. They are rather like Scotch Eggs, only instead of
sausagemeat to enclose the boiled eggs, there is a very thick white sauce with
the broken kippers mixed in.
My present dilemma
is deciding what wine to have with today’s meal. To me, kippers suggests a good
white sauvignon blanc, possibly even a New Zealand one with all its
gooseberriness. However, the baked beans which will accompany the potatoes
suggest a red wine, possibly something Spanish, Italian or even a Côte du
Rhone. I shall have to think about this. At the moment I’m inclined to the idea
of a white wine. In the days when we were at Crag Foot & had this meal
regularly, we didin’t have the money to have wine with a meal. It wasn’t until
some twenty odd years later we really discovered the joy of wine on a more
regular basis.
1 comment:
oh yes, I remember it well - the residence and it's environs.
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