As I mentioned in yesterday’s post, Shepherd’s Pie was on Bev’s meal want list and we made extra mashed potatoes for it. As I understand, it’s Shepherd’s Pie when made with mutton or lamb and it’s Cottage Pie when made with beef, however most folks seem to use the titles interchangeably. Even though Bev said she wanted Shepherd’s Pie, I knew she wanted the other one, especially since she’s not a big ovine fan.
Ours had more liquid in the dish bottom than Trica's appeared to have, but we all thought it was delicious and will use the recipe again. We didn't serve anything else so we could eat more of the pie - which I did.
The next day as I was typing this up, it dawned on me that I should have removed the meat mix with a slotted spoon, leaving the liquid, rather than pouring it from the skillet into the baking dish - thanks Tricia for a very good meal.
Larry
01/21/2012 meal date
As it often happens, a recipe popped up on one of my blog reads just when I needed it and in this case it was for Traditional Cottage Pie from Tricia over at Saving Room For Dessert – a blog I only recently began reading. Please check out her site for the complete recipe and some nice step-by-step photos.
Bev and I jointly did the cooking this day and followed the recipe for the meat mixture, which Tricia had adapted from Danny Boome of the Food Network. After freezer diving, I found a one pound package each of ground bison and lean ground beef from our neighbors Belted Galloway cattle. Since I used our homemade beef broth, rather than consumme, I simmered an additional 5 minutes to cook out some or the liquid.
For the potato topping, we used the leftover potatoes made from the Pioneer Woman recipe and added a cup or so of shredded yellow cheddar - all we had - so our potatoes are a little orange and streaky. I considered making individual bowls, but Bev talked me into the easier one pan version.
It took 15 minutes in our oven at 400* on the convection bake setting to get the potatoes lightly browned.
Ours had more liquid in the dish bottom than Trica's appeared to have, but we all thought it was delicious and will use the recipe again. We didn't serve anything else so we could eat more of the pie - which I did.
The next day as I was typing this up, it dawned on me that I should have removed the meat mix with a slotted spoon, leaving the liquid, rather than pouring it from the skillet into the baking dish - thanks Tricia for a very good meal.
All photos can be enlarged by clicking on them.
Have a great day and thanks for stopping by Almost Heaven South.
One year ago: Bayou Bay – The Local Cajun Joint
Two years ago: Birthday Dinner For Wende
01/21/2012 meal date