Traditional Lancashire Hotpot... James Martin When I received the Denby James Martin Medium Covered Casserole from the wonderful folks at Denby, I instantly knew I wanted to make a traditional English peasant dish. So I chose the Lancashire Hotpot. Lancashire Hotpot is a meat and potatoes kind of dish.
Story says the dish originated in the cotton towns of Lancashire County, England. Some accounts say this dish was eaten by shepherds while they tended their sheep on the hills, others say the dish was prepared for mill workers. Nobody knows for sure where the dish originated..., but it was quite possible that it was prepared by the mill worker's wives. It was prepared early in the morning, cooked slowly thoughout the day, and provided a warm and satisfying meal. It was especially welcoming after a hard day's work.
There are other possible origins, but we know this meat stew was prepared with local ingredients. It was a peasant sort of dish as it was simple to prepare, usually with the most economical of ingredients. The dish usually contained the meat readily available to them, either mutton or lamb. Lamb kidneys were often used to bring extra flavor to the dish. Some say even oysters were used, which at that time, was food for the poor in Britain. The meat was layered with some sort of root vegetables mostly onion and potatoes, maybe carrots if you were wealthy enough. Water was added so that the dish wouldn't dry out while it cooked for hours. It provided a flavorful and tasty gravy to the finished product.
The Lancashire Hotpot was often made during the winter months when a warm tasty meal kept the chills away. Pickled red cabbage and/or glazed carrots would often accompany the dish. Whatever the origin, the Lancashire Hotpot has become a well known dish and is often served in many restaurants with all sorts of variations.
If you feel you don't like lamb, try substituting it with beef or veal. You have to like the dish, so choose ingredients that you love. I decided to make it very similar to the "original"...
I so hoped to find some kidneys as well. I searched all over town. I asked my butcher if he had any available lamb kidneys. He answered, " Ma'am, you are living in the wrong part of the world!" Funny, you would think the Montanans would have such a thing...hmmm. Well, I had to do without the kidneys, for now anyway...One other butcher has me on a 2 month waiting list for some lamb kidneys:). I won't make a habit of making this dish with the kidneys. However, I want to try it at least once...to sort of go back in time. I want to set aside the "sophisticated" palate and enjoy a simple and unsophisticated dish.
North and South~ Chapter 42
"I can assure you, the hot dinners the matron turns out are by no means to be despised."
You will need: adapted from James Martin with a few alterations as noted...
Ingredients:
2lb best end/middle neck British lamb, sliced into chops( I used boneless leg of lamb)
1. Pre-heat the oven to 325F.
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