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Scarborough Fair crusted Pork Shoulder

Scarborough Fair crusted Pork Shoulder

An odd name for a recipe? It refers to the very old Simon and Garfunkel song  “Scarborough Fair” which has Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme in the lyrics – Which were all in this crusting!

Ingredients:-

2 Slices of (Gluten free in our case) Bread, crumbed
Parsley, Sage, Rosemary and Thyme – Fresh if you have it, or dried
1 Shallot, chopped
1 Egg beaten
Salt & Pepper
Oil

Method:-

(1) Lightly fry the Shallot until it has softened and set aside.
(2) Whisk the Egg.
(3) In a large bowl combine all the ingredients to form a stuffing sort of texture
(4) Press the crust onto the top of a Pork Shoulder joint and cover with foil.
(5) Roast at 180c for about 45 minutes.
(6) Remove the foil and roast for a further 10 minutes.

We served this with Sprout Bhaji in a bit (Gluten free ) Yorkshire Pudding, Carrots and Peas, Roast Spuds and lots of Onion Gravy.

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Braised Rib Bao Buns

Traditionally these would have both Wheat Flour and Milk as part of the ingredients list. So making them both Gluten and Lactose free sounded like a challenged. Sue was really impressed with the result. The ingredients quantities are a bit vague, but if you’re made a bread dough before you’ll know by the feel of the mix and can adjust the quantities as required.

Ingredients:-

100g of Cornflour
100g of Rice Flour
Yeast
2 Tbsp of Castor Sugar
½ Tsp of Salt
½ Tsp of Xanthan Gum
Lactose free Milk (Maybe Soya Milk?)
Oil

Method:-

(1) Add the Yeast to a little warm Water and mix in a little Castor Suggest, to activate the feast.
(2) In a bowl mix the Cornflour, Rice Flour, Sugar, Xanthan Gum, Oil and Salt.
(3) Add enough Milk to form a dough.
(4) Add the Yeast once it has started bubbling.
(5) Knead the dough into a ball, adding more Cornflour if the dough seems too moist.
(6) Cover and set aside to prove for an hour, or until the dough ball has doubled in size.
(7) On a floured board roll the dough out into a sausage shape.
(8) Cut into slices about 2 ½ cm thick and roll these out individually to for discs.
(9) Add your filling of choice. We had loads of Hoisin Beef Rib meat from the previous evening in the fridge.
(10) Pinch fold in the outside of the disc and then work your way around pinching as you go and adding a touch of water.
(11) When the top of each bun is sealed add water to steamer.
(12) Sit each bun on a pad of greaseproof paper in the steamer.
(13) When the water is boiling steam the buns for 15 to 20 minutes.

As they are steamed they do look a bit pale so we drizzled a bit of DIY Hoisin sauce over them. They were remarkably good, if perhaps a bit on the filling side. This was the second meal from the Meaty bones gig and we still had 4 to freeze for portable snacks or work pack-ups. We served ours of a bed of salad, with Tokneneng and a bowl of  DIY Hoisin sauce to dip.

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