
Giving thanks for ham and turkey eggs
Ah, turkey eggs. Not quite as rare as hen's teeth, but still…
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Miss South
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Miss South2010-04-18 09:32:522022-01-05 16:07:53Make Whoopie…
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Miss South
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Miss South2010-04-14 15:36:222010-04-14 15:36:22Rhubarb and quince
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Miss South2010-04-13 13:20:522010-04-14 19:45:29Jack Sprat…
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Miss South2010-04-11 13:41:202010-04-11 13:41:20Home grown goodness
Woodcocks provide pleasure for two?
Back in the gamebird season Miss South visited the depths…
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Mister North
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Mister North2010-04-06 12:08:242014-11-05 09:13:19Buckfast sorbet…
Morcilla and chocolate rabbit with a fluffy mash tail
A recipe for rabbit with black pudding and chocolate, or Conejo En Salsa De Chocolate Con Morcilla, by Felipe Rojas-Lombardi
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Miss South2010-04-02 10:00:462015-03-09 02:22:10Hot Cross Buns
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Miss South2010-03-26 14:48:332010-03-26 14:48:33Oxtail stew
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Mister North2010-03-26 07:30:312014-11-05 09:14:58(Coffee) bean-age kicks…
It’s my party and I’ll fry if I want to…
The Ulster Fry is the national dish of Northern Ireland.…

Tongue ‘n’ cheek: a hot, steamy, sticky pudding
/in Good value, Northern, Recipes, Savoury/by Mister NorthRegular readers have no doubt picked up on our growing love affair with offal. Over the last three years we’ve embraced cooking and eating the more esoteric, wobbly and less-eaten parts of various animals… mostly successfully. In part this has been driven by our curiosity; in part interest in rediscovering traditional dishes (thanks to championing chefs like Fergus Henderson and Robert Owen Brown), and in part because it’s a cheap and healthy foodstuff. Oh, and we’ve laid a few demons to rest in the process too…
When we were young, our mum used to serve us tongue sandwiches, and I loved them. Despite being a reasonably smart kid, I never made the connection between the name ‘tongue’ and the actual muscle inside an animal’s head; I just assumed it was another odd quirk of the English language. My illusions were shattered when I walked into the kitchen one day to find mum making pressed tongue: setting a boiled ox tongue in jelly, then pressing a plate down with an old-fashioned iron. Suddenly I put two and two together and realised why the slices were round, and curled. Although I was fascinated by the size, texture and feel of the ox tongue, I was also pretty creeped out. Both familiar and alien, one glimpse of the tongue was enough to change my attitude to it as a foodstuff. No longer was it a welcome morsel to find in my packed lunch, now it was a giant freaky cow tongue. I didn’t eat tongue again for over twenty years.
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