
Lekker Brekker Monday: Welsh Rarebit
Welsh Rarebit actually was once called Welsh Rabbit. If you follow the lore of the dish you will find that once upon a time, in the early 18th century, Welsh peasants were supposedly somewhat peeved that they could not afford to eat the rabbits that their masters and mistresses enjoyed at their groaning dinner tables. So they made do with what they had, and made a nice cheesy sauce with a good dose of flavour, and called it their own kind of Welsh Rabbit. Maybe it's apocryphal but it's a good story and there aren't many 18th century Welshmen around to contradict me.
The origins of the term 'Welsh Rabbit' have been traced to 1725 and the same dish, but called 'Welsh rarebit', only appears in 1785, with Britannica.com observing that there is no known use of the word 'rarebit' outside of this dish, then or now.
It is generally described as toasted bread with a cheese sauce on top flavoured with stout or strong ale, mustard and Worcestershire sauce, having been made with a roux base, and finished in the oven. Given that Lea & Perrins launched their Worcestershire sauce to the British general public in 1835, that could not have been an original ingredient as early as 1725, or even in 1785, but all recipes evolve over time. Certainly today you will be hard-pressed to find a recipe without it. And Worcester, of course, is in England, not Wales, so there's a whole story right there with the potential for war and bloodshed or at least scathing anti-Welsh barbs being countered by anti-English jokes from the other side.
As for the kind of beer that goes in it, it would seem wise to use a Welsh ale of some kind or other, but many recipes call for stout, and some specifically for Guinness, which of course is Irish. The cheese? Well now, many recipes today call for Cheddar, and Cheddar is a little village in Somerset, which of course is in England, so… oh and almost every recipe today calls for Colmans Hot English mustard.
Seeing as Welsh Rarebit hasn't yet ignited a tribal war between Wales, England and Ireland, perhaps we could see it as a great unifier and celebrate the modern day hybrid that it has become.
Here's my take on how to make it, but the recipes do vary very much, with some including Cayenne pepper, others leaving out the beer and using milk or white wine, and yet others not even using a roux (flour and butter) base at all, but starting instead with simply melting cheese in a pan with wine, then adding the other ingredients.
But let's go with the broad consensus that it should have beer, Worcestershire sauce, hot mustard and of course a good mature cheese.
(Serves 2 or 4)
Ingredients
4 slices firm bread, cut thickly
50 g butter
3 Tbsp flour
½ cup/ 125 ml strong beer or stout (I used Guinness)
1 tsp mustard powder or Colman's Hot English prepared mustard
1 tsp Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce
1 egg yolk, beaten
300 g mature cheese such as Cheddar, grated
Salt and pepper to taste
Method
Preheat the oven to 220℃ and place a flat, heavy cast-iron pan in it to get hot. When it's hot, put slices of bread in it and return to the oven for the underside to toast.
Don't use a soft, commercial sliced loaf. You need something more hardy and substantial. I used The Foodie's Wife's Herbed Buttermilk Bread.
Melt the butter in a pan and, once melted, remove from the heat and stir in the flour until combined thoroughly.
Return to a low heat and add the beer a little at a time while stirring, until well combined.
Add the mustard and Worcestershire sauce and stir to combine. Take it off the heat for five minutes, then quickly whisk in the beaten egg.
Return to the heat and stir in the cheese a little at a time, stirring until melted and combined, and season to taste with salt and a little pepper.
Once the cheese is all incorporated, remove the pan from the oven and spoon the mixture on top of the slices, smoothing it so that it reaches all the edges. Some of the sauce dripping over the edges is a good thing.
Return to the oven until it becomes bubbly and starts to brown a little.

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Daily Maverick
14-07-2025
- Daily Maverick
Lekker Brekker Monday: Welsh Rarebit
The Welsh Rarebit we make today probably has little in common with the original dish, first called Welsh Rabbit, that was conceived in the first half of the 18th century among Wales' peasantry. Even some of its components are undeniably English. Welsh Rarebit actually was once called Welsh Rabbit. If you follow the lore of the dish you will find that once upon a time, in the early 18th century, Welsh peasants were supposedly somewhat peeved that they could not afford to eat the rabbits that their masters and mistresses enjoyed at their groaning dinner tables. So they made do with what they had, and made a nice cheesy sauce with a good dose of flavour, and called it their own kind of Welsh Rabbit. Maybe it's apocryphal but it's a good story and there aren't many 18th century Welshmen around to contradict me. The origins of the term 'Welsh Rabbit' have been traced to 1725 and the same dish, but called 'Welsh rarebit', only appears in 1785, with observing that there is no known use of the word 'rarebit' outside of this dish, then or now. It is generally described as toasted bread with a cheese sauce on top flavoured with stout or strong ale, mustard and Worcestershire sauce, having been made with a roux base, and finished in the oven. Given that Lea & Perrins launched their Worcestershire sauce to the British general public in 1835, that could not have been an original ingredient as early as 1725, or even in 1785, but all recipes evolve over time. Certainly today you will be hard-pressed to find a recipe without it. And Worcester, of course, is in England, not Wales, so there's a whole story right there with the potential for war and bloodshed or at least scathing anti-Welsh barbs being countered by anti-English jokes from the other side. As for the kind of beer that goes in it, it would seem wise to use a Welsh ale of some kind or other, but many recipes call for stout, and some specifically for Guinness, which of course is Irish. The cheese? Well now, many recipes today call for Cheddar, and Cheddar is a little village in Somerset, which of course is in England, so… oh and almost every recipe today calls for Colmans Hot English mustard. Seeing as Welsh Rarebit hasn't yet ignited a tribal war between Wales, England and Ireland, perhaps we could see it as a great unifier and celebrate the modern day hybrid that it has become. Here's my take on how to make it, but the recipes do vary very much, with some including Cayenne pepper, others leaving out the beer and using milk or white wine, and yet others not even using a roux (flour and butter) base at all, but starting instead with simply melting cheese in a pan with wine, then adding the other ingredients. But let's go with the broad consensus that it should have beer, Worcestershire sauce, hot mustard and of course a good mature cheese. (Serves 2 or 4) Ingredients 4 slices firm bread, cut thickly 50 g butter 3 Tbsp flour ½ cup/ 125 ml strong beer or stout (I used Guinness) 1 tsp mustard powder or Colman's Hot English prepared mustard 1 tsp Lea & Perrins Worcestershire sauce 1 egg yolk, beaten 300 g mature cheese such as Cheddar, grated Salt and pepper to taste Method Preheat the oven to 220℃ and place a flat, heavy cast-iron pan in it to get hot. When it's hot, put slices of bread in it and return to the oven for the underside to toast. Don't use a soft, commercial sliced loaf. You need something more hardy and substantial. I used The Foodie's Wife's Herbed Buttermilk Bread. Melt the butter in a pan and, once melted, remove from the heat and stir in the flour until combined thoroughly. Return to a low heat and add the beer a little at a time while stirring, until well combined. Add the mustard and Worcestershire sauce and stir to combine. Take it off the heat for five minutes, then quickly whisk in the beaten egg. Return to the heat and stir in the cheese a little at a time, stirring until melted and combined, and season to taste with salt and a little pepper. Once the cheese is all incorporated, remove the pan from the oven and spoon the mixture on top of the slices, smoothing it so that it reaches all the edges. Some of the sauce dripping over the edges is a good thing. Return to the oven until it becomes bubbly and starts to brown a little.


Daily Maverick
04-07-2025
- Daily Maverick
AirFryday: Chutney chicken comes to the air fryer
That rack at the bottom of an air fryer basket doesn't have to stay in the machine for every meal. For this chutney chicken recipe, take it out and use the 'basket' as a pot. The more you use a machine, the more you get to know it, and the more you get to know an air fryer, the more you realise it's a sort of pot with an element in it. Kind of a two-in-one deal. That rack at the base of it is there to improve air circulation, and an air fryer is largely about hot air being blown around. If there's a rack, the hot air can reach the underside of the food on the rack. Essentially, in a pot on the hob, the heat is underneath it, while in an air fryer the element is above. But you can turn the food over, in some cases, and this applies to chicken portions, or for that matter to a whole chicken. You need to keep your eye on the top of what's cooking to know when it's time to turn it over. You could rely on your machine to tell you it's time to turn the food over, and it does do that, but you're the cook, you're in charge, so you can make up your own mind. Key to this is that you can open the drawer or door of the air fryer any time you want to. Just open it, have a look and/or prod the meat, and either turn it over or wait for a while. As with cooking in a pot or a roasting pan in the big old oven, the food is done when it's done, not when the machine says so. The key components of the sauce that constitutes the 'chutney' part of chutney chicken are not only chutney itself, but mayonnaise and tomato sauce/ketchup. A dash of Worcestershire sauce is a natural fit too. But we can take this further: I added a splash of soy sauce as well, and then decided it needed some brandy. It was the combination of ketchup and mayo that made me think of a Marie-Rose sauce, usually used for avocado Ritz or variations on a theme of a cold starter such as prawns or medallions of lobster in a spiked cold sauce. It's the brandy that makes a Marie-Rose sauce. So I poured a little brandy into this sauce, tasted it and was happy with the result. You could use Old Brown Sherry instead, or port for that matter. Traditionally, there's grated onion in it, and I added garlic as well. I made some yellow rice to go with it, mostly because it's a good-looking match, but the turmeric in it does also suit the flavour profile. Chopped coriander makes a nice garnish. Tony's air fryer chutney chicken (Serves 4) Ingredients ½ cup Mrs HS Ball's chutney ½ cup mayonnaise ¼ cup tomato sauce 3 Tbsp soy sauce 1 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce 1 Tbsp brandy (or more, I used 2) 1 Tbsp garlic paste 1 small onion, grated 8 chicken thighs and drumsticks fresh coriander, to garnish Salt to taste Black pepper to taste Turmeric rice Cucumber and spring onion raita: ⅔ cup diced peeled cucumber 3 slim spring onions 1 fat garlic clove ⅔ cup double cream Greek yoghurt 2 Tbsp white grape vinegar Salt Pepper Method Mix the chutney, mayo and tomato sauce in a bowl. Add the grated onion and garlic, and the Worcestershire sauce, soy and brandy. Season with salt and black pepper. Roll the chicken portions around in it and marinate for 1 hour or more. Remove the rack from the bottom of the air fryer basket. Spray the base with cooking oil spray, or brush some oil over it. Arrange the chicken pieces in it, skin side up, with some of the sauce. Bake for 30 minutes at 180°C. Turn the chicken over. Add the remaining marinade. Bake at 180°C for 15 minutes. Turn the chicken again. Turn the heat up to 200°C and bake for another 5 minutes. Test for doneness by inserting a skewer or slicing into a piece of chicken to the bone, to see if it's pink at the centre. To go with it I made a simple cucumber and spring onion raita, mixed with chilled yoghurt and finished with a splash of vinegar and salt and pepper. For turmeric rice, make rice in your usual way, but add ½ a teaspoon of ground turmeric to the pot. Garnish with coriander. DM Tony Jackman is twice winner of the Galliova Food Writer of the Year award, in 2021 and 2023.


Daily Maverick
20-06-2025
- Daily Maverick
Cottage Pie, Shepherd's Pie: what's in a name?
Once upon a time, there was only Cottage Pie, no matter what meat was used in it. The term 'Shepherd's Pie' would only surface six decades later. So, when next an uppity food snob corrects you for calling a lamb version 'Cottage Pie', correct them right back. Cottage Pie dates to early 1790s England and had been around for six decades before Shepherd's Pie came along, the latter only appearing in the 1850s. For a very long time both were called Cottage Pie, because regardless of what we call it, it really is the same thing, whether the meat is beef or mutton. Cottagers in Britain in the late 18th century made potatoes a key part of their diet, so it made its way into various dishes, not least 'Cottage Pie', and whether the meat in it was beef or lamb, or for that matter venison nabbed in the wilds for the pot, it was simply the name of a 'pie' the cottagers made and ate. 'Pie' being a broader definition, for the British, than merely a description of a dish with a pastry crust; just as 'pudding' in the land of Blighty could be savoury or sweet. By the 1850s people began making a distinction if the meat in its making was lamb/mutton, which explains why even now many people are happy to call either of them 'cottage pie', given that the name does not indicate any type of meat. The 'Shepherd's Pie' entry in Wikipedia makes the puzzling claim that 'since the 21st century' (like, right now), 'the term shepherd's pie is used more commonly when the meat is lamb'. In the UK, that is. Honestly, does it really matter? Either way, it's the same thing: A layered 'pie' (we would say 'bake' in our time) of savoury minced/ground meat below, containing onions, other vegetables and aromatics, almost always including Worcestershire sauce, and creamy mashed potato on top, with or without cheese added. Some of the better recipes today call for Cheddar cheese to be grated and stirred into the mash before covering the top, and for beaten egg yolk to be brushed over to give it a pleasing golden glow. But it wasn't always layered in this way. Wikipedia explains that in earlier forms it was a way to use up leftover roasted meats, which were ground (after having been cooked, obviously). Mashed potato was used to line the bottom and sides of a dish, the meat was spooned in the middle, and it was topped with more mashed potatoes. Meanwhile, a Cumberland Pie can be either lamb or beef, with vegetables, but there's an extra topping of breadcrumbs mixed with grated cheese. Here's how I made a Cottage Pie this week: Ingredients 800 g beef mince/ ground beef 3 Tbsp olive oil 2 medium onions 2 or 3 garlic cloves 1 stick celery 2 carrots 2 lemon leaves (or bay) Zest of 1 lemon, grated finely 1 x 400 g can chopped tomatoes 2 Tbsp Worcestershire sauce Salt and pepper to taste For the topping: 700 g potatoes, peeled 2 heaped Tbsp butter 4 Tbsp cream 1 cup/ 225 g grated Cheddar Salt and pepper to taste 2 egg yolks Method Peel the potatoes and cut into smaller chunks. Boil them in plenty of salted water until al dente. Drain and reserve. Preheat the oven to 220℃ or a little higher. Chop and dice the onions, garlic, carrots and celery and sauté in olive oil until softened. Add the lemon leaves (or bay) and grated lemon zest and cook, stirring, for a minute. Add the tomatoes and Worcestershire sauce, season with salt and pepper, then add the minced beef and work it with a wooden spoon so that it does not form clumps. Simmer on a low heat for about half an hour for the meat to cook through and tenderise. Stir now and then to ensure it does not catch at the bottom of the pot. Mash the potatoes on a low heat, adding the butter and stirring until it melts and is absorbed, then adding cream and cooking until that has melted into the mash. Season to taste with salt and pepper; it's important to taste the mash while adding the salt until the right level of saltiness is achieved, so add only a little at a time, taste, add more, and so on, until you're happy with it. Grate the Cheddar and stir it into the mashed potato. Grease a suitable oven dish. Spoon in the meat mixture. Spoon the mash over the top and work it to all edges and corners, as evenly as possible. Beat the egg yolks with a fork and brush it all over the topping. Use a fork to make patterns on top of the mash. Bake until the topping turns golden. For me it took about 40 minutes, but all ovens are different so just check it every five minutes until it looks perfect. It doesn't need an accompaniment. DM