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Roast Pork Dinner

Roast Pork DinnerLet's dispel a few myths. The idea with beef is that the meat is best the further away from the horns as you can afford it. Shoulder of lamb is a great cut but hideously expensive and needs cooking for hours on a low heat. Pork shoulder was traditionally the cut of choice for making sausages, I've personally run thousands of kilos through a commercial mincer!
 
All that said. If you've not a great deal of money and it's on offer – why not? This joint cost us the frightening sum of £2.14 and in addition to last nights feast we'll be making a stir-fry from the remaining half for tonight. Shoulder pork is also the joint used for Pulled Pork which is effectively well over cooked meat shredded with BBQ sauce added to mask the lack of 'meat' flavour.
 
If it's been frozen (As ours was) Don't expect crackling. The ice created during home freezing breaks the fat / protein boundary structures. Commercially blast frozen joints might work better for crackling but there's nothing like a fresh cut. If you happen to have a Buster equivalent the slightly leathery rind is a free alternative you dog chews and certainly better appreciated!
 
Roasting:-
 
Ingredients:-
 
Pork shoulder
Oil
Salt & Pepper
Oh and an oven!
 
Method:-
 
Heat the oven to 220C
Rub the meat all over with Oil, Salt & Pepper
Place in the oven for 20 minutes
Lower the heat to 200c for a further 30 minutes
Lower the heat to 180c and cook until the meat runs clear. The longer you leave the better. Add a little stock to keep your joint moist if you are cooking for hours.
 
We served ours with veg, Yorkshire Pudding and home made gravy.
 
Enjoy! 

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Food Banks, I mean who needs a Food Bank? EAt well on universal credit

Food Banks, I mean who needs a Food Bank?

Quite a lot of folk, it would seem.

It has been speculated that the The Trussell Trust provide somewhere in the region of 31% of the emergency food provision in the UK. These are their suggested figures and honestly I’d guess that they are inflated. But lets go with it. A but of maths results in the following:-

Provision at 31% = 3 Million


Household provision by other Charities and unofficial Food Banks at 69% (Say) 6 Million

(Under Estimated) Possible number of people needing basic support to feed themselves and / or their families 9 Million

Estimated number of Households in the UK (2021  estimate) = 19.3 Million

Percentage of households potentially using basic food assistance = (9 / 19.3 X 100)  46.6%

Over 46% of our population potentially can’t actually afford to feed themselves? Perhaps I need to check the maths here? No that seems to be correct and is most probably an underestimation. It doesn’t account for family helping out, friends lending a bit of money at the end of the month, people deciding which bills have to be paid so they can put food on the table and worry about the others a following month.

I can only realistically and honestly speak about our local area in York, although I know of other Charities in both Selby and Doncaster who are working in this field. In York we have, to my knowledge 12 independent providers who offer Food Bank services, run Street Kitchens, or offer discreet Free Food Delivery services. I volunteer for one of them and share with several others. There will be many more who I don’t know of.

So to me it seems that as supposedly the 5th most wealth nation we seem to have a bit of a problem? It would seem to me that the figures about our ranking as a supposedly wealthy nation are somewhat biased. There is a small percentage of the population who are incredibly rich, for whom it is beneficial to ensure that those in the greatest need are persistently suppressed and forced into ever greater poverty.  

Perhaps that is the basic cause of the problem which we as a society should address without further delay? Just a thought.

References:-

https://www.theguardian.com/society/2023/apr/26/uk-food-bank-charity-reports-record-take-up-amid-cost-of-living-crisis

https://www.ons.gov.uk/peoplepopulationandcommunity/birthsdeathsandmarriages/families

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_total_wealth




 

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