SA
M
AN
TH
A^
NO
TT
/B
BC
TASTE
Norfolk
plough pudding
This hearty dish comes from
Norfolk and was traditionally
eaten on “Plough Monday”
- a Monday in early January
that was seen as the begin-
ning of the farming year.
Serving this pudding marked
the start of spring ploughing.
&KʛEWNV[ 5/10
6KOG3.5 hours
INGREDIENTS
Q\UGNHTKUKPIʚQWT
1 pinch of salt
3oz shredded suet (we used
vegetable suet)
1lb pork sausage-meat
8 rashers of chopped streaky
bacon
1 large peeled and diced onion
1 tsp dried or fresh sage
½ oz brown sugar
Water or pork stock
METHOD
- Grease a large (1 litre)
pudding basin thoroughly.
5KGXGVJGʚQWTCPFUCNVVQIGVJGT
in a large mixing bowl and then
add the suet. Mix well and then
gradually add enough cold
water to make a soft but not
sticky dough. - Roll the dough into a ball
CPFMPGCFNKIJVN[%WVQʘQPG
third of the dough and put it to
one side; you’ll need this for the
lid of the pudding. Roll out the
rest of the dough and line the
pudding basin. - In another bowl mix the
sausage-meat, bacon, onion,
sage and sugar together.
Season to taste and add the
mixture to the lined pudding
basin. Pour in enough water or
RQTMUVQEMVQEQXGTVJGNNKPI - Roll out the remaining pastry
and add to the top of the
pudding basin. Pinch together
the edges to make sure the
pudding is sealed. Cover the
bowl with a large circle of
grease-proof paper (with a pleat
in to allow for expansion of the
pudding) and top with pleated
kitchen foil. Tie with string and
make a loop so you can retrieve
the pudding when hot.
5. Steam the pudding for
approx 3.5 hours.
HISTORY COOKBOOK
WATCH
A life in pictures
Born on the cusp of the Great Depression, pop artist
Andy Warhol (1928–87) lived through the Second
World War, the rise of consumerism and the social
upheavals of the 1960s. The son of working-class
immigrants from what’s now Slovakia, his subsequent
success enabled him to see the upper echelons of
#OGTKECPUQEKGV[CVTUVJCPF
Warhol was thus both an outsider and, later, the kind
of A-list celebrity he celebrated and critiqued in his
work. This makes his life a fascinating prism through
which to view 20th-century American history – which is
precisely what Andy Warhol’s America does.
6JGTUVQHVJTGGGRKUQFGUn.KXKPIVJG&TGCOo
covers the years of Warhol’s upbringing in Pittsburgh
CPFJKUGCTN[UWEEGUU6JGUGEQPFKPUVCNOGPVn6JG
American Nightmare’, looks at the 1960s – the years
when Warhol’s Factory was the meeting point for the
0GY;QTMCTVUEGPG.CUVN[n.KHG#HVGT&GCVJoUJQYUVJG
older Warhol, when he became obsessed with money
and security, yet in his work he documented those on
society’s margins.
Andy Warhol’s America
BBC Two / January
6 JKURQTMNNGFUWGVRCUVT[
VTCFKVKQPCNN[OCTMGFVJG
UVCTVQHURTKPIRNQWIJKPI
Andy Warhol (bottom centre) in New York, 1966. A new series uses the pop
artist’s life as a lens through which to examine 20th-century America