Dublin Coddle Ii Recipes

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DUBLIN CODDLE

Make and share this Dublin Coddle recipe from Food.com.

Provided by Millereg

Categories     Stew

Time 1h30m

Yield 4 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 9



Dublin Coddle image

Steps:

  • Heat some oil in a pan, add onions and garlic and fry until soft.
  • Put sausages, bacon, potatoes, and carrots in the pan with the onions and garlic.
  • Cover with cider and cook over moderate heat for 1 hour.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1538.3, Fat 111.8, SaturatedFat 37.1, Cholesterol 240.6, Sodium 2434.8, Carbohydrate 75.6, Fiber 10.3, Sugar 7.5, Protein 56.1

2 lbs seasoned pork sausage
2 large diced onions
1 lb lean bacon
2 cloves garlic, sliced
4 large potatoes, peeled and sliced
2 carrots, sliced
herbs
pepper (to season)
hard alcoholic cider or cider

DUBLIN CODDLE - IRISH SAUSAGE, BACON, ONION AND POTATO HOTPOT

This traditional supper dish of sausages, bacon, onions and potatoes dates back at least as far as the early eighteenth century. It seems to be more of a city dish than a rural one: it was a favourite of Jonathan Swift, author of Gulliver's Travels and dean of Christ Church Cathedral in Dublin. In Dublin itself, coddle retains its reputation as a dish that can be prepared ahead of time and left in a very slow oven while the people who're going to eat it have to be out of the house for a while - making it an excellent dish for very busy people! The name of the dish is probably descended from the older word caudle, derived from a French word meaning "to boil gently, parboil, or stew". The more recent version of the verb, "coddle," is still applied to gently cooked eggs, "Coddled Eggs". Please note, the sausages used should be the best quality 100% pork sausages you can get your hands on! This recipe would also work VERY well if cooked in a crock-pot, reduce the liquid by about half if cooking the coddle this way. Serve with Guinness and Irish soda bread. Although this is an easy to prepare one pot meal and its simplicity belies its amazing taste and flavour - comfort food at its best! Sláinte.

Provided by French Tart

Categories     Stew

Time 4h15m

Yield 4-6 serving(s)

Number Of Ingredients 9



Dublin Coddle - Irish Sausage, Bacon, Onion and Potato Hotpot image

Steps:

  • Peel the potatoes. Cut large ones into three or four pieces: leave smaller ones whole. Finely chop the parsley. Boil the water and in it dissolve the bouillon cube.
  • Grill or broil the sausages and bacon long enough to colour them. Be careful not to dry them out! Drain briefly on paper towels. When drained, chop the bacon into one-inch pieces. If you like, chop the sausages into large pieces as well. (Some people prefer to leave them whole.).
  • Preheat the oven to 300F / 150°C In a large flameproof heavy pot with a tight lid, start layering the ingredients: onions, bacon, sausages or sausage pieces, potatoes. Season each layer liberally with fresh-ground pepper and the chopped fresh parsley. Continue until the ingredients are used up. Pour the bouillon mixture over the top. On the stove, bring the liquid to a boil. Immediately turn the heat down and cover the pot. (You may like to additionally put a layer of foil underneath the pot lid to help seal it.).
  • Put the covered pot in the oven and cook for at least three hours. (Four or five hours won't hurt it.) At the two-hour point, check the pot and add more water if necessary. There should be about an inch of liquid at the bottom of the pot at all times.
  • To Serve. Guinness, bottled or draft, goes extremely well with this dish (indeed, adding a little to the pot toward the end of the process wouldn't hurt anything). Another good accompaniment is fresh soda bread, used to mop up the gravy!

Nutrition Facts : Calories 1273.3, Fat 81.1, SaturatedFat 26.9, Cholesterol 157.5, Sodium 1691, Carbohydrate 95.3, Fiber 12.4, Sugar 7.1, Protein 41

2 kg potatoes
2 large onions, peeled and sliced thickly
450 g good quality pork sausages
450 g bacon, piece thick cut
500 ml water
1 beef or 1 chicken stock cube, if ham stock isn't available
3 -4 tablespoons fresh parsley, chopped
salt (to season)
coarse-ground pepper (to season)

TRADITIONAL DUBLIN CODDLE

A true Irish dish which has been enjoyed for many a year by all Dubliners, soon to be enjoyed by your family over and over again! This is the bare bones traditional recipe but feel free to add garlic, a bay leaf, or other fresh herbs for flavor. It's also good if you replace the water with cider.

Provided by J. Boyle

Categories     World Cuisine Recipes     European     UK and Ireland     Irish

Time 1h40m

Yield 8

Number Of Ingredients 6



Traditional Dublin Coddle image

Steps:

  • Place bacon in a large skillet and cook over medium-high heat, turning occasionally, until evenly browned, about 10 minutes. Drain bacon slices on paper towels, reserving grease in the skillet. Slice into big chunky pieces and transfer to a large pot.
  • Cook sausages, turning occasionally, in the bacon grease until browned, about 5 minutes; add to the large pot. Cook and stir onion in the same skillet until softened, about 5 minutes. Transfer to the pot.
  • Arrange potatoes over onion. Pour in enough water to cover the potatoes. Cover the pot; bring water to a boil. Reduce heat to very low; simmer until potatoes are tender, 1 to 1 hour 30 minutes. Garnish with parsley.

Nutrition Facts : Calories 476.8 calories, Carbohydrate 67.3 g, Cholesterol 51.6 mg, Fat 14.8 g, Fiber 8.6 g, Protein 19.7 g, SaturatedFat 4.2 g, Sodium 526.7 mg, Sugar 4.1 g

½ pound smoked streaky bacon
1 pound good-quality sausages
1 onion, thickly sliced
8 large potatoes, peeled and quartered
water to cover
1 tablespoon chopped parsley, or to taste

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