Toad in the Hole

Well after all that roasting, basting and stuffing, I chilled today and made a yummy toad in the hole with some nice fat herby sausages. I’m not sure if I’ve given you my tried and tested batter recipe, but here she blows:

4oz plain flour
Pinch of salt
2 eggs
300ml (10 fl oz) Milk
Fat slice (about half oz) of butter
olive or sunflower oil
Pack of sausages

So - get a deep sided baking tin or lasagne dish or something rectangular but not too big and cover the bottom (generously) with oil. Get it into the oven now as you want it really hot (gas 8 or 230 ish). If the sausages are thin I don’t cook them first, but if they’re fat, you might want to put them in the oil now to start cooking.

Put the milk in a jug, carve a nice fat slice off your block of butter, and microwave it until the butter’s just melted. Sieve the flour and salt into a mixing bowl, bung in the eggs, whisk, and then pour in the cooled milk/butter mixture, whisking so you get a smooth runny batter. You can make the batter beforehand and keep it in the fridge.

Right, so now you can carefully pull the oven shelf out with the hot oil (and sausages if you put them in ten mins early), place your sausages in, then pour over the batter. Take care not to get splashed with the hot oil and drop the whole shooting match like I did on Sunday. The oil should be hot enough that the batter starts to bubble up. It’ll probably take about 20 minutes and will rise up all puffy and lovely round the sausages. Yum!!

For the onion gravy, slice a couple of onions, cook them gently in some butter or oil (heavy based pan, people!) until soft and translucent, then add a pint of beef stock and reduce to thicken. If it’s not thick enough for your taste, you can fish out the onions with a slotted spoon and whisk in some plain flour, bubbling and whisking until it’s all cooked out, then add back the onions. Okay so it’s not New Year calorie-counted but sod that, eh? Enjoy!!

10 Responses

  1. Wee Jen Says:

    Cor. Comfort food par excellence! Love a good Yorkshire pudding (being a Yorkshire lass myself) :-)

  2. englishmuminireland Says:

    Ah Madame, in that case, I love your puddings! I love Nigel Slater but he does insist on putting mustard in the batter - big no no as far as I’m concerned. How’s his book, by the way, I want it! x

  3. Isitjustme? Says:

    Thats dinner sorted for this evening…er do you think I could use some of my post Christmas Cheese mountain in this recipe?….

  4. englishmuminireland Says:

    Isit: oh god, me too. I made mini quiches on New Year’s Eve to try and dispense with some of ourse and even Hubby groaned about eating MORE cheese!

  5. Wee Jen Says:

    Nooooooooooooooo to the mustard! I’m with you on that one! Nigel’s new book is fab - it’s a collection of short pieces (good for my current attention span) about all sorts of things, from the fondly-remembered biscuits of his youth to a couple of lovely, poignant pieces about his great-aunt. If you liked Toast, then I’d say you’d like this too.

  6. englishmuminireland Says:

    Wee one: loved Toast. Read it on holiday in France - I think he’s a great writer. Can’t wait for that one… x

  7. Sandra in Maryland Says:

    EM, this is a serious question, so no laughing! How, how, how do you eat like this and not look like a baby whale (I know you don’t now you’ve posted your pic.)? Maybe a future post for those of us struggling with loving good food and some excess poundage??!??

  8. englishmuminireland Says:

    Sandra - we really do eat healthily, honest! But then I do plenty of walking with the Bertmeister. I’m crap with dieting, I just can’t do it, but I’ll think of some healthy stuff, I promise! x

  9. ENGLISH MUM: never knowingly undercatered » Roast beef with garlic roasted butternut squash Says:

    [...] Cut the squash in half lengthways, scoop out the seeds, pop the garlic into the little scooped out bits, and generously drizzle with oil.  Season well, then when your beef is cooked, remove it to rest covered in foil, whack up the oven to 230 degrees, and cook for about 45 minutes.  This is quite handy because it’s about the same time as your Yorkshire puddings and roasties will take (see batter recipe here). [...]

  10. ENGLISH MUM: never knowingly undercatered » Sunday blowout: Chocolate pudding with gooey chocolate sauce Says:

    [...] ‘So what’s for dinner?’, he says.  I open the oven, where a rather beautiful toad in the hole is puffing up nicely, and wait smugly for the compliment.  It doesn’t come.  [...]

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