London, barely, plus Yorkshire pudding and my Sunday roast


34 responses to “London, barely, plus Yorkshire pudding and my Sunday roast”

  1. ;But of course, I can’t just serve Yorkshire puddings with a gloat of success, can I?’

    Indeed you can.Traditionally yorkshire puddings were served first with gravy to fill you up and then the meat followed. My (yorkshire) gran always did this although mostly you get them with the main meal now. A couple of yorkshire puddings in a bowl covered with gravy on the sofa on a rainy day is a favourite treat.

    You can add a sprinkle of herbs to them, sage for eg as well although my gran would probably disapprove :)

  2. So happy to see English food getting your magic treatment. Roast Beef & Yorkshire pud is a staple of our cuisine as you no doubt now know! The secret imho is salting it right & hot fat but it sounds like you’ve nailed it.

    Disappointed to see no spuds tho! :)

  3. Borough Market is one of my favorite places on the planet… (Monmouth coffee!) so sorry you weren’t able to fully enjoy it – and the rest of your London visit. Truly, book another visit there as soon as you can. Oh, and this meal looks simply exquisite. I can’t wait to give it a try!

  4. I grew up having Yorkshire pudding with standing rib roast every Christmas! Then for years I made my own menu and skipped it….this year, my parents came to our house and I recreated my childhood Christmas dinner. I made the yorkshire batter the day before and refrigerated it overnight in a jar, then pulled it out to bring to room temp about 2 hrs beforehand and they were the perfect texture and contained a pocket of the delicious rib roast drippings!! Back to the standard here forward!
    **i am super intrigued by the curried yogurt gravy, going to try that this weekend!

  5. So glad you enjoyed London but SO sorry you were ill. The only place you ever want to be ill is Home. In your own Bed. Can’t quite fathom your love of Yorkshire Puddings as I absolutely don’t – never touch the things, apart from a vague nibble every now and again!! Did you know, a lot of people swear by treating them as a dessert ie put jam or yoghurt or something else sweet on them, or cover them with custard. Personally, the latter would be my preferred choice, the better to cover ’em up is (my) best way of eating one, if I have to!!

    • Penny, I can see what you mean because they aren’t the most impressive pastries out there. But I took a liking to the simple comfort of these eggy puffs with dripping-crispened edges. I think it’s one of those things they must be eaten right out of the oven. I also tried it with a smear of jam and it was wonderful.

  6. Mandy, your posts are wonderful. I am a Yorkshire girl to the core (Leeds for the curious) and every attempt at Yorkshire puddings has left me incandescent with rage at my floppy offerings, so I have high hopes for your recipe. Yorkshire Puddings and jam are heavenly, I am glad you tried them, have a go at serving them with Golden Syrup or Maple Syrup too. And do put Yorkshire on your map of places to visit, you would love it.

  7. Oh lordy, yorkshires… I will say, you can make the bloody things every week forever and still have times when it screws up because of all the random factors involved. My mum has been obsessed with trying to perfect them to the point where we have them every week with every single type of roast meat (eh, they go with everything) and we have battles over not opening the oven door (even though the potatoes need turning dammit) because it automatically dooms them. Traditionally you can have them for dessert with jam as well…? I mean, we don’t but… you can.

    London is… drizzly a lot. Today it’s brilliant sunshine, it will likely be torrential rain tomorrow. Visiting in summer does in no way guarantee the weather will be any better, sadly (we had the world’s longest, rainiest summer last year. Weather has been weird recently.)

    I feel your pain about the flu though – the exact same thing happened when I had a couple of days in Sydney. The worst flu in the history of the world kicked in a couple of hours before I got on the plane from where we were visiting in Perth and I spent the whole red-eye flight feeling like I’d swallowed razorblades. And then I got there and it was cold and tipping down with rain (in Australia! In summer!!). Most of the weekend I spent curled up in a hotel room when I wasn’t crawling down to the nearest pharmacy, only to find out that Australia is one of the countries where all decongestants are a controlled substance? Short story, our drugstores in the UK are awesome and I tend to travel anywhere else in the world with lots of decongestants now. (I did make it for breakfast at Bill’s, which was the one restaurant I wanted to visit, yay.)

    • Also is that… raclette I spy in one of the photos? From Kappakasein in Borough Market? Please tell me you tried the toasted sourdough cheese sandwich as well, it’s the stuff of legends (which it has to be really, considering how long the queue is generally).

      Funny story, the guy who runs that makes his own cheese, and once he got caught up in Borough Market Politics and got… kicked out for a little while? (they had to come back, it turned out they were so popular). I was a little bit heartbroken at that point, and I literally spent my whole lunchtime one day walking down to Bermondsey to where he was camped out in the cheese workshop under the railway arches to go buy the cheese sandwich he was selling out of there. It was a boiling hot day and so not good weather for a toasted cheese sandwich, but hey. Totally worth it.

      • Jen, Hannaha I think my husband felt exactly the same way in past couple weeks, “Yorkshire puddings again!?” And thanks for this funny and informative comment on Sydney and the cheese guy. I didn’t have the sandwich, but I had the melted cheese on potato-thingy. It was great in the first 30 seconds then it got destroyed (cooled and hardened into a frisbee) by the British winter chill. Summer, note to self, next time, summer.

        • Summer in London is lovely, I was lucky enough to venture their a couple summers back during a grand tour of Europe. Definitely would visit again, and try not to injure myself so I can properly enjoy the sights.

          The raclette sammie is worth the visit alone. If you do go back, there’s a little pub called “The Sheaf” built under the arched building supports about a block south of the Borough Market – great drinks and atmosphere down there. The hubby and I popped in there thinking we were lost and would never find the market. After a pint we discovered just how close we’d been.

          Now I need to go find a good short rib roast… darn you Mandy! My husband never tires of your recipes, but they are a bit of an effort some days when all I want is instant ramen.

  8. I love everything about this meal! The flavors you used on the short ribs and in the gravy sound amazing, and yorkshire puddings are definitely on my “to make” list!

  9. Hey Mandy. Long time reader, but first time to comment. This looks awesome. Just a question. What other kind of meat can I use for this recipe? I am from Germany and short ribs isn’t a cut we have here. Really dying to try this one. Helpppp!!

    • HeikoS, can you find any cuts with the rib-bones still attached? It’s just for dramatic effect, you can also use any cuts that are well-marbled for braising purposes :) You can see that we are roasting the meats till tender, so not the typical “medium-rare” roast beef. I haven’t tried using this recipe to make a medium-rare roast beef, if you ever tried, let me know :)

  10. Mandy– thank you for posting this just in time for my birthday! My husband made this for me today and it was the best birthday dinner ever. Thank you!!

  11. I was hoping to get to the UK part of your trip soon. I love Yorkshire pudding, it’s so delicious. You most definitely have to rest the batter, when I make them for dinner parties or planned meals I make the batter overnight and I use the batter straight from the fridge, you just need to adjust the cooking time to allow for the centres to be done.

    I also usually use the dripping from the beef just like you, I’m not a big fan of toad in the hole I prefer my Yorkshire pudding with nothing in it apart from gravy and I don’t really like them as a sweet option either.

    The only thing I take issue with is your English :-) I’ve never seen the words ‘bag ‘o shite’, written down, or really heard it used, but obviously you’ve been hanging round some real reprobates in that there London :-)

    The sauce with this looks great, I shall have to try it out.

  12. Love reading you Mandy. Sorry you were too ill to enjoy London fully. I regret to inform you though that summer may not be much different from winter… the two years I lived there, it seems that summer took place in March or May instead. By the way, I just recently saw a video of how to make these airy Yorkshire puddings from Jaime Oliver. I’ve tried recreating them in my early Paleo days only to end up with a muffin. ;) But I’ll try it again some day.. now that I’m more familiar with different flours. Thanks for the lovely photos and humorous post. xx Debra

  13. a doh moment – never made the connection before, ‘toad in the hole’ i laughed and laughed
    and yeah spot on, resting the batter is everything (my mother in law , mixed in the morning, to roast in the evening) x

  14. Beautiful looking Yorkshires! And oh dear, I’m so sorry that you didn’t have the most fruitful trip in December (it was odd weather then, too – usually a lot drier and colder!) My tip for a return trip is to schedule not for summer but late spring, when we usually have our sunniest, loveliest weather and all the flowers come out. Real summer is typically a washout in England *shakes fist* x

  15. Looks amazing! I love all these complete meals and party plans/menus. All your recipes are so creative and delicious-looking. Your blog is my favorite food blog ever!!

  16. I had a very memorable RB and Yorkshire pudding at the Connaught Hotel last year. Oh, was that good. I had foie gras on a bed of lettuce and tomatoes as a starter, then bread and butter pudding for dessert. I’m glad you posted a recipe here. Will surely have it on my to-cook-list.

  17. Your experience of London was my experience of Hong Kong. Sick as a dog, throat so raw I could hardly taste anything, struggling to put one foot in front of another. I WILL go back one day and eat the heck out of everything.

  18. Wow, these are gorgeous and well worth the wait! =D Chocolate and cherry has to be one of my favorite combinations – hoping Whole Foods has organic cherries this afternoon!

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