Alan Eardley
One Too Many
- Messages
- 1,500
- Location
- Midlands, UK
I regard myself as a connoisseur of the noble porridge, and I'm sure there must be others in the Lounge. Usually regarded as a Scottish delicacy, there are equivalent oaten gruels from various parts of the world and numerous ways of making it.
My preference is this recipe:
Ingredients (sufficient for two people):
One pint (half litre) water; some people use half water and half milk
3 ounces (3 rounded tablespoons) of ground oats, soaked in advance
A pinch of salt (optional)
Method:
Bring the water (or water and milk) to a good rolling boil. Slowly pour the oatmeal into the boiling liquid, stirring vigorously with a wooden spoon all the time. Keep stirring until it has returned to the boil again, reduce the heat, cover the pan and simmer very gently for 30 minutes, stirring frequently. Add the salt at this point and simmer and stir for a further 5/10 minutes (time depends on the quality of the oats). It should be a thick but pourable consistency. Serve hot in wooden bowls if you have them.
You can pour good porridge onto a plate, let it cool and then slice it like bread. It should never, ever have sugar or any other sweetener put on it. Also, never use rolled outs. The rougher the oats, the better the porridge.
It is traditionally eaten standing up for breakfast and taken into the hills when cold (it can be wrapped up in a cloth). Just the thing for a day in the Trossachs!
So, what's your favourite porridge? Let's have your recipes.
Alan
My preference is this recipe:
Ingredients (sufficient for two people):
One pint (half litre) water; some people use half water and half milk
3 ounces (3 rounded tablespoons) of ground oats, soaked in advance
A pinch of salt (optional)
Method:
Bring the water (or water and milk) to a good rolling boil. Slowly pour the oatmeal into the boiling liquid, stirring vigorously with a wooden spoon all the time. Keep stirring until it has returned to the boil again, reduce the heat, cover the pan and simmer very gently for 30 minutes, stirring frequently. Add the salt at this point and simmer and stir for a further 5/10 minutes (time depends on the quality of the oats). It should be a thick but pourable consistency. Serve hot in wooden bowls if you have them.
You can pour good porridge onto a plate, let it cool and then slice it like bread. It should never, ever have sugar or any other sweetener put on it. Also, never use rolled outs. The rougher the oats, the better the porridge.
It is traditionally eaten standing up for breakfast and taken into the hills when cold (it can be wrapped up in a cloth). Just the thing for a day in the Trossachs!
So, what's your favourite porridge? Let's have your recipes.
Alan