
Food and Drink in the United Kingdom and Ireland
It is written to offer information about British food and drink, to think over our preconceptions on the topic and to spread old and modern recipes. At the same time, we can enrich our vocabulary, especially if we are cookery-lovers.
Monday, March 26, 2012
Easter, not only desserts and cakes

The Simnel Cake- at Easter; for Mothers, too.
In the late 17th century, girls brought a rich fruit cake called simnel cake home to their mothers on Easter Sunday. The cake was enriched with marzipan and decorated with 11 marzipan balls representing the 12 apostles minus Judas, who betrayed Jesus at the Last Supper.
The Simnel Cake signifies the end of Lent, a period of fasting and repentance. They are 40 days which come before Easter. It culminates in a feast of seasonal and symbolic foods. The Simnel Cake is rich with fruits, spices and marzipan, all forbidden during the period of Lent.
But, originally the Simnel Cake was made on Mother's Day (Mothering Sunday) in the days when girls in service (maids and cooks) were given the day off to visit their mothers. So this cake is used for both festivities and with different meanings. On both, it's tasty.
Easter Bonnet Parade; one of my first memories when living in London
My first visit to London was at Easter, lots of years ago. My British landlady acted with me as my "British granma" and I accompanied her to excursions, family parties and so on. So I went to her elderly people club, a Catholic club formed by the parish father. They celebrated the Easter Bonnet Parade: a funny party as they didn't have that sense of "this is ridiculous" that most Spaniards feel when doing something quite peculiar, or simply different.
What did they do and prepare? First of all they spent the previous days at home designing and making the biggest and most surprising hats. They had to include Easter eggs, little chickens, hens, chocolate, ... everything that they thought related to the topic. The day of the meeting in the club, they walked along as in the "Fashion Week" wearing their designs to choose the best one; of course, according to the criteria of "big, funny, peculiar, strange, ..."
Why is this related to "Food and Drink"? This was a party, so when they had chosen the First Prize, they were ready for an Afternoon Too, including cakes, Hot Cross Buns, Simnel Cakes, hot chocolate, tea and a lovely chat with the most marvellous old ladies I can remember. It was shocking while they weren't the old widows in black that I have seen in Spain many times.

It was also taken to America, as many otherBritish traditions, so you can also find information in blogs, newspapers, and so on about the Easter Parade and Bonnet Festival in New York.Now, begin to think about your bonnet, prepare your cake for the party according to the ideas shown in other entries and enjoy with your friends.
Monday, March 19, 2012
See you next year on St. Patrick's Day! (19th March, 2012)

There is always a moment to feel oneself like an Irish. This is it, I think. So, go ahead! Dress yourself up with something green (or you'll get pinch)! Look for the nearest Irish Pub! (Be sure there is one in your neighbourhood). Ask for a Guiness if you are over 18 (a coke if you are younger)! And make friends with those lovely people, the Irish!
When you finish your "Pub Crawl", perhaps is the moment for relatives and close friends at home. Try some lovely games and activities for kids and youngsters, write a limerick and sing with your best Irish accent. Finish cooking a typical Irish dinner to celebrate the day, but... that's another chapter.
Enjoy yourselves and have a lovely day!
Saint Patrick's Day - IES BLAS DE OTERO
That's the reason to decorate our hall for a week with information about this nice Irish tradition, which is also celebrated by Irish communities all over the world.
But first I have to thank to the few students who collaborate with their adornments and posters for the hall and their classes. Thank you!!!
Posters and adornments are important, but there are other activities including in this celebration and traditions that must be learnt and loved: IRISH MUSIC is fantastic. It doesn't matter if it is a pop music group like "The Corrs" or the typical music you listen to in pubs.
The selection this week included both of them as follows:
On Monday: The Best of Corrs, 2001
On Tuesday: Pub music
On Wednesday: The Corrs, HOME, 2005
On Thursday: Pub music
On Friday: Pub music
Thursday, December 24, 2009
We wish you a Merry Christmas; We wish you a Merry Christmas;
We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
Good tidings we bring to you and your kin;
Good tidings for Christmas and a Happy New Year.
Oh, bring us a figgy pudding;
Oh, bring us a figgy pudding;
Oh, bring us a figgy pudding and a cup of good cheer: Refrain
We won't go until we get some;
We won't go until we get some;
We won't go until we get some, so bring some out here: Refrain
We wish you a Merry Christmas;
We wish you a Merry Christmas;
We wish you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year.
OTHER COOKERY WEBSITES:
http://homecooking.about.com/od/dessertrecipes/r/bldes108.htm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B8w3kVpGjhA
http://thefoody.com/pudding/figgypudding.html
http://www.wisegeek.com/what-is-figgy-pudding.htm (including information for Diabetics and people on a diet)
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
the Great Irish Famine

The first idea that comes to my mind about this topic is Ireland and potatoes. Why? If you have ever been to any city, town or village in Ireland, you'll discover that potatoes are basic when cooking anything: a steak or a fillet with a side-salad or vegetables and... fried potatoes and boiled potatoes, smashed potatoes and a grilled great potato, ... altogether.
If you think about it, the result is that when potato crops failed in older times, poor families had really "nothing" to eat. Then they decided to migrate to a new place where they thought there would be no problems: America. It happened between 1845 and 1952.
Bad crops were a frequent problem all over Europe. But the catastrophe was worse for Ireland as one third of Irish population was entirely dependent on potatoes for food.
The importance of the Great Irish Famine is so great that the famine became part of folk memory and it produced as a consequence nationalist movements. It is also recognized as the worst human disaster of 19th century, with 8,5 million people dead (al least one million in terrible conditions), one million people as refugees.
The Potato Blight is often considered as the greates wave of Irish immigration to America, when half a million had arrived in America to start a new life. Due to this fact, many families from Irish origin took Catholic religion (St. Patrick's Cathedral in New York) , Irish traditions (St. Patrick's) and well-known names to different aspects of American life (The Kennedys in politics are a good example). You will learn more about the Potato Famine in Ireland and the Irish immigration to America and how Americans accepted the immigrants in the Web and in other entries in my blog.