Bacon and cabbage
Course | Main |
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Place of origin | Ireland |
Main ingredients | Cabbage and bacon |
Cookbook: Bacon and cabbage Media: Bacon and cabbage |
Bacon and cabbage is a dish traditionally associated with Ireland.[1] The dish consists of unsliced back bacon boiled with cabbage and potatoes. Sometimes other vegetables such as turnips, onions and carrots are also added. Smoked bacon is sometimes used.
The dish is served with the bacon sliced, and with some of the boiling juices added. Another common accompaniment to the dish is white sauce which generally consists of flour, butter, milk and a herb of some sort (often parsley).
Bacon use
The bacon used for the meal can vary somewhat depending on individual preference. Usually back bacon is used for the recipe, but other cuts of bacon are sometimes preferred. However, the bacon used is almost always cured. The traditional curing process is a long process which involves storing the bacon in salt, however, in modern times, mass-produced bacon is cured using brine which is less frequently injected into the meat to speed-up the process. The bacon can also be smoked which adds a depth of flavour which many people prefer. In Ireland, one can also purchase what is known as home-cured or hard-cured which is bacon cured over a long period and then stored for another long spell, wrapped in paper. This makes the bacon very salty, hard in texture and yellowish in colour.
History
Historically, this dish was common fare in Irish homes as the ingredients were readily available as many families grew their own vegetables and reared their own pigs. It was considered nourishing and satisfying. The dish continues to be a very common meal in Ireland.[2]
Descendants
Corned beef and cabbage (USA)
In the mid-to-late 19th century, Irish immigrants to the United States began substituting corned beef for bacon when making the dish, hence creating corned beef and cabbage.[3] Like the original, it sometimes includes additional vegetables (especially carrots and potatoes); this also gives it a certain similarity to the New England boiled dinner, which almost invariably contains a mixture of root vegetables along with boiled meat and cabbage.
Corned beef and cabbage remains a popular food in some areas of the United States, and is often the dish of choice on St. Patrick's Day.
Jiggs dinner (Newfoundland and Labrador)
On the island of Newfoundland, where the Irish and the English made up a large proportion of the founding settlers, this, and the similar English boiled beef gave rise to a boiled dinner featuring salted beef called Jiggs dinner.[4]
Similar dishes
Another similar meal, with a breaded pork chop on mashed potatoes and cabbage, is popular in some countries.
See also
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Bacon and cabbage. |
References
- ↑ Sheehan, Seán; Levy, Pat (2003). Dublin (2nd ed.). Footprint Travel Guides. p. 134. ISBN 1-903471-66-4.
that most traditional of Irish workaday meals: bacon and cabbage
- ↑ Nolan, Katherine. "Bacon and Cabbage". Dochara.com. Retrieved 16 May 2012.
- ↑ "St. Patrick’s Day Traditions". History.com. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- ↑ "Jiggs Dinner". Parks Canada.
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