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The Big Breakfast
10/07/2021 @ 8:00 am - 12:00 pm
We are bring home the bacon, eggs, soda bread and all you need to have the Big Breakfast at home this year. Whether it is the Twelfth Morning or any day of the week we look at ways to make the traditional and a health alternative to the much loved Ulster fry. Each year before the Twelfth the ladies serve up much more than just an amazing breakfast, but as part of the annual Twelfth Festival there is a great line up of entertainment and crack.
So as the sausages are sizzling and the bacon crisping you can enjoy some of the acts from previous years. Who could forget the mights ‘Hounds of Ulster’ as they listed the roof and got us all on our feet.
The tables are set for the next Big Breakfast when we are able to safely meet and enjoy it so until then we hope that you will make do with the sights and sounds of previous years and your own home cooking.
Origins of the Ulster Fry
Nothing new
The fry is very much a Victorian invention. One of the most famous Victorian cookbooks, Mrs Beeton’s Book of Household Management, listed a selection of the best cooked breakfast foods. Cooked breakfast was less common before the Victorian era than it is today, but we have Mrs Beeton to thank for adding bacon and eggs to the world’s breakfast repertoire. What we think of as the traditional fried breakfast came into its own after World War II. As well as being known as the ‘Full English’, the phrase ‘Full Monty’ is sometimes used instead, owing to the fact general Bernard ‘Monty’ Montgomery supposedly started every day with a hearty English breakfast.
Making Your Own
Ingredients:
2 eggs
1 slice of potato bread
1 slice of soda bread
2 pork sausages
2 back bacon rashers
2 slices of black and white pudding
1 red tomato
Instructions:
1. Place a small amount of rapeseed oil in the pan over a low heat which produces a light sizzle not a spitting oil.
2. When hot, place the sausages in the pan turning occasionally to colour evely all the way round. This should take approximately 8 minutes.
3. Add the bacon rashers to the pan. Don’t turn your bacon too early – wait for the colour to appear on the edges. For a healthier option you can grill the bacon. Either way, cook the bacon until crispy but not brown and burnt.
4. Place the potato and soda bread in pan. The soda will soak up all the delicious flavours and the potato bread will brown on the outside and soften wonderfully in the middle.
5. Use tomatoes on the vine as they retain their firmness and flavour for longer. Tomatoes should always be a little crispy. Cook the tomatoes for several minutes alongside your breads.
6. Put the slices of black and white pudding in the pan and continue to cook everything for a couple of more minutes – after 2-3 minutes flip everything over. After a further 2 minutes cooking move all the ingredients into a warmed oven and clean your pan.
7. In a little fresh oil, crack 2 large free range eggs, place a lid over the pan to cook the top of the eggs for perfect runny eggs.
Details
- Date:
- 10/07/2021
- Time:
-
8:00 am - 12:00 pm
- Event Categories:
- Breakfast, Virtual Twelfth Event
Venue
- Virtual Twelfth Website
- Website:
- www.iloi.org
Organiser
- Virtual Twelfth Team