Food & Drink


The top ten essentials for a traditional Irish breakfast - sausages, rashers, tea and more

Whether it’s to cure an ailing head from the night before or give you strength for a tough day ahead this is essential knowledge for any Irish person


A full Irish breakfast with all the trimmings.
A full Irish breakfast with all the trimmings.
Photo by Google Images

The traditional Irish breakfast incites memories of meals in kitchens that smell of freshly-cooked meats, fried vegetables and baked bread.

Here are the top ten essentials:

1. Irish sausage – an amalgamation of freshly-ground beef or pork, seasoned with spices and layered with rusk – has cooked in the frying pans of households for centuries. Butchers fill collagen casings or pig intestines with the seasoned meat, whose mild and zesty flavor caters to palettes that routinely disfavor piquant foods.

How to cook: link, pan or oven, until golden brown or slightly-burnt.

2. Irish bacon, or rashers, refers typically to a cut of cured pork loin. Butcher shops inject it with a salt-based rind, and allow the loin to soak in a barrel for two to three days. An alternative – streaky bacon – uses a cut along the pig’s belly, or slab.

How to cook: slice, pan or oven, until golden brown.

3. Black pudding, or blood pudding, is a unique blend of blood, pork, rusk and seasonings; white pudding replaces blood with liver, though it remains similar in almost every other way. Puddings are blanched previously.

How to cook: slice, pan or oven, until crispy.

4. A fried egg also proves to be an essential for a traditional Irish breakfast.

How to cook: egg white and yolk, pan, until fried or scrambled.

Read more: Make a traditional Irish breakfast and start your St. Patrick’s Day off right

5. Certain parts of Northern Ireland eat vegetable roll – a blend of seasoned beef, carrots, leeks and onions – as a part of the Ulster Fry.

How to cook: slice, pan, until crispy.

6. Baked beans – a collection of navy beans stewed inside a tomato sauce – can be purchased at local grocery stores from companies such as Batchelors or Heinz.

How to cook: tin, pot or microwave, until hot.

7. Potato farls, soda farls and boxty are three griddle breads that often complement a traditional Irish breakfast. The square-shaped potato farls use cooked potatoes, flour and salt. Boxty resembles a pancake, and uses raw potatoes.

How to cook: slice, pan, until golden brown.

8. Fried mushrooms and tomatoes, salted for flavor, provide an interesting balance to the generous meat portions.

How to cook: slice, pan, until brown.

9. Brown bread, a frequent staple of Saint Patrick’s Day celebrations in the U.S., tastes great with butter, jam or marmalade.

How to prepare: slice, plate, until sufficiently topped with butter, jam or marmalade.

10. A cup of hot, freshly-brewed tea washes down the considerable breakfast, and delivers a dose of caffeine to start one’s day.

How to prepare: cup, kettle, until teabag steeps.


Nster.com


12 Comments

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I heard a few Americans saying they thought someone was trying to kill them when they first saw a "Full Irish" breakfast.
White pudding, unique to Ireland, tastes quite different from black pudding; a full Irish breakfast should have both. These, the sausages and rashers can all be grilled instead of fried. Baked beans are a British variation, like chips (French fries). Potato farls are common in Ulster, but not the rest of Ireland. I've never seen boxty for breakfast - sounds like a good idea! Tea made without teabags tasted much better.
I don't see any oat porridge
For those of us who remember when breakfast was this big and normal and had no problem burning the calories,sometimes we cook this meal as a main course just to remind ourselves how much energy people used to burn in the old days,the winning rose (of Tralee) gets to have breakfast served in bed.
Article made me miss the Irish breakfasts! Had trouble with the sausages, of course they are seasoned quite differently than in the U.S. but just couldn't quite do them. I do miss the rashers tho and the tomatoe...is it broiled? How is it seasoned? Soooo gooooood ;-)
Frosty: You mean bring back brown bread on the plane to US? If I'm understanding you correctly, why can't you bring it home?
Where is the soda bread?
Just a fried egg, brown bread, *boxty & tea,, please. *Any kind of potatoes will do, though. Think about serving home fries for breakfast, I missed them when I was in Ireland. Irishy Yanks love their homefries!
A heart attack on a plate, but like most things that are bad for you, delicious.
Re #2, that would be salt based brine, not rind.
I love it. I'm on my way back to Ireland in April and look forward to the food. Love the brown bread wish I could carry it on the plane. Oh well wishful thinking. Have to help the Ireland economy
Ha, you forgot regrets about the night before.
 




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