T W A U ... The Chase...from...
Film, Media & TV0 min ago
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Jings, crivens, help ma boab! - whits a stovie??
Recipe idea: http://www.scottishrecipes.co.uk/stovies.htm or see: http://www.rampantscotland.com/recipes/blrecipe_stovies.htm or also: http://thefoody.com/meat/stovies.html an' they e'en have their ain wee website hen: http://www.stovies.com/
Everyone makes their own version - diced bacon is good, or corned beef. Quality of the tattie is important, and make sure a good dripping is used - this will bump up the meaty flavours. Shouldn't be too wet, and always serve with oat cakes.
This English version is a mystery though: http://www.aboutfood.co.uk/articles/recipes/recipe-164.html
If you haven't tried them they arer real comfort food, but dead easy to make. Not sure you get them down south, but certainly are available from good delis and a few s/markets as well in Scotland.
I am trying to eat low fat so I have changed the recipe a bit. I take a good oil such as rapeseed (omega3) and soften onions, add left over roast beef (all fat removed) and slices of raw potato with water to cover. I cook this for a good 40 mins (or in the pressure cooker which works wonderfully well) and then I add an oxo cube (this helps with colour and taste) I then assess the thickness and add instant potato to get the desired consistency. Some parsley finishes this off nicely.
I am a very good cook and much respected no one knows that I add mash & oxo and they all rave that my stovies are the best! It is something about using the very best of ingredients - i.e left over roast beef (or lamb or pork) and then cheating at the end. Fools them every time and goves a super meal for pennies.