Oddley,
I take exception at being called crazy,I was once given a little green card signed by several psychiatrists that stated I am not crazy
I am however totally bonkers!
It's not so much I don't like the eels,I'll eat almost any fish,I just find eels bland to my taste.
I used to catch them as a kid in the 60's at the warm water outlet at Kingston power station but it was the old man who used to eat them.
They're trying to stop people catching them now,
http://www.fenlandcitizen.co.uk/news/Pe ... 5415080.jp
And looking around some people are charging £18 a kilo.
I live in Hastings now and we have some of the best fresh fish in the country straight off the boat,we have the largest shore based fishing fleet in the country,but the only eels down here are jellied eels.
Somebody opened a Pie & Mash shop down here a few years ago,I tried it once,I might as well have been eating cardboard.
I've tried one of the Manzes shops years ago,another I tried was Maggie Browns in Battersea,another I can't remember the name of but it was in Brixton or Stockwell.
None of them came close to Harringtons.
That doesn't mean they're the best,just the best I've eaten apart from my own,Harringtons pies were always bigger than the other shops too,those pie tins look a little small to me but I'll probably get some.
I had four pie tins the right size but lost them in a move.
My licker I make pretty much the same as yours but without the eel juice and to me it tastes spot on,I've tried fish stock,it doesn't work,nobody try that,you'll destroy a perfectly good meal.
I do add a little milk but not a lot,fresh parsley is essential but I suspect most of the shops now use dried.
My pies I make similarly to yours but as I said I use minced lamb and onion,if I could get mutton or hogget I'd use that.
I do add a little gravy in the pie but not a lot,I use a Knorr lamb cube,milder than Oxo and thicken the pie mix with plain flour or cornflour,I don't use gravy granules.
My pie mix gives me a nice juicy full pie filling that stays together when you crack the pie open,not one of those pies that leaks a huge amount of gravy into the bowl,I don't actually mind that too much,I do like mixing the gravy in with the licker but I prefer my pie with very little gravy,mine gives me the most authentic taste I've had to the one I grew up on.
My pastry I make by hand,it has to be rough puff for me,store bought puff pastry is fine and it's good stuff but mine is closer to the original for me.
Never thought of cooking them in a bain marie in the oven though but I will try that though my pies have always come out fine.
I have fond memories of waiting in the queue while the lady behind the counter cried out "Pies!" and the little bloke from the kitchen downstairs would burst through the door with a huge tray that was dumped unceremoniously on the counter quickly followed by another,they were cooked so fresh that while you ate your meal this would happen about every 3-5 minutes and the cry would go up "Mash!" "Licker!" "Pies!"
My mash okay I do add a little butter to,not a lot,but if I go to a Pie & Mash shop I don't want any butter in it.
I mix it with a fork to get the right texture.
Next time I make Pie & Mash which will be soon I'll post some pics up.
I read through the original thread you posted your recipe in Oddley and it surprised me that some people could be so anal about it.
What is it about regional food that people don't want to understand?
Why do they want to change it and think they can do better?
It still rankles me to this day that years ago I posted a recipe elswhere for my Shepherds Pie.
Some twonk from a former colony said it needed beef,not lamb,and needed not only celery in the mix,but wait for this...baked beans
If it ain't broke don't fix it.
If you don't like it eat something else,I wouldn't even think about telling someone how to cook their local nosh,I would ask them how though.
Funny you mention Marmite,I don't mind it but I prefer Bovril on my toast,and our tastes do change.
There's a lot of stuff I didn't like as a kid,not much and I wasn't a fussy eater,but those things I can't get enough of now.
But at the other end there's stuff I would lap up as a kid that I can't stand now.
John,
When you asked about quantities I'm assuming you meant the doner not the pies.
I don't honestly know the quantities,only how they made it,maybe I should have paid more attention but it was nearly 30 years ago.
That was the way I saw it being made and I can honestly say it's the best doner meat I've ever eaten,this vid from the Two Hairy Bikers is almost identical,and the tail fat is important.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QHvrkqMei4c
Some of the links it leads you to are atrocious,including Delia taking pita straight out of the packet,opening it and filling it without putting it on the grill,and some berk in a doner factory where they destroy it by grinding all the meat,only the trimmings should be ground.
The meat and marinade I've quoted is authentic but marinades will vary,some add garlic,coriander etc but nowadays it just comes from a factory.
They just don't make them like that anymore.
I don't have the kit to replicate it properly.
Even down here in Hastings where we get fresh fish every day I've seen freezer lorrys turn up at chip shops with fish from a processing plant in Grimsby,chip shop batter comes in bags or barrels.
I'm not far from Romney Marsh,probably the best lamb in England,but unless you know where to go you won't find it.
A mate of mine recently spent 6 months in New Zealand,guess what the hardest meat to find is over there and is the most expensive if you can get it?
New Zealand lamb,it goes for export
But back to pies,one of the saddest things I see is few people making them properly anymore,a local butchers wife makes outstanding pies but Sue only makes a few a week and you have to order on the monday to get yours next day,all the meat comes from their farm.
I recently saw a poll for the favourite British foods people would like to see more of.
One was the Fray Bentos steak and kidney pie,much as I admit I love them(and have a small supply stashed away for emergencies),especially the steak and kidney puds(large size),Fray Bentos is a small town in Argentina and that is where they originate from.
I'm not going to complain though,Philistine I'm happy to be accused of when I get them for £1