Episode Notes for the Share Your Secrets Podcast Season 3, including useful links to resources.
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Serves |
4 |
Prep time |
1 hour |
Cook time |
2 hours |
There’s certainly no prizes for guessing where the Lancashire hotpot originates from! However, did you know that this warming comfort food was particularly popular during the Industrial Revolution, it was also affordable, because it used up all the unwanted, tougher pieces of meat.
1 tbsp oil
600g lamb shoulder, cut into chunks of about 4cm
1/2 tsp dried thyme
Half a teaspoon each of salt and pepper, to season
2 onions, sliced
4 carrots, sliced
2 tbsps plain flour
300ml chicken stock
800g potatoes, cut into thin slices of about 3mm
150g chestnut mushrooms, quartered
3 tbsp butter
2 tsp Worcestershire sauce (or Henderson’s Relish if, like me, you’re from Sheffield!)
Add in 2 tablespoons of butter and 2 tablespoons of flour. Fry for 3 minutes longer.
Slowly stir in the stock and the Worcestershire sauce. Turn up the heat and keep cooking until it thickens.
Begin to construct the hotpot, layering it up like you would do with a lasagne. Begin with a single layer of thinly sliced potatoes on the bottom. Then add half of the lamb that you cooked earlier. Pour half of the vegetable and stock mixture over this. Add half of the mushrooms. Then, repeat! Finish by layering the rest of the potatoes neatly over the top. Do this top layer of potatoes with tiny cubes of butter that will melt and make the top all crispy!
If your casserole dish has a lid, great, put it on. If not, don’t worry, just cover the top in tin foil that has been greased a bit with butter, so that it doesn’t stick to the potatoes. Cook for an hour and a half.
Take it out of the oven, but only so that you can remove the lid/tin foil. Put it back in the oven, and cook for another 30 minutes.
Take it out of the oven for good this time! Leave it to rest on the side for about five minutes, and then serve.
Dish up some cauliflower and peas as a healthy accompaniment!
Though it’s traditionally made with lamb, you could certainly substitute this for beef to make a cheaper meal. If you’re doing this, though, I’d also use a beef stock rather than a chicken one.
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