Brightly Colored Facade, Kinvara, Ireland
Brightly Colored Facade,
Kinvara, Ireland
Photographic Print

Buy at AllPosters.com
 

 

 

 

 


$19.95 Intro Offer (SC500 + Travel Mug + 2 lbs.) 

WB01419_1.gif (2752 bytes)

La Belle Cuisine - More Breakfast Recipes

WB01419_1.gif (2752 bytes)

Fine Cuisine with Art Infusion

"To cook is to create. And to create well...
is an act of integrity, and faith."

 

Irish Breakfast

 

 

Stonewall Kitchen, LLC
Save 10% on our Product of the Month 

"May your blessings outnumber the shamrocks that grow,
And may trouble avoid you wherever you go."

~ Irish Blessing


Recipe of the Day Categories:

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Recipe Home

 wb01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Recipe Index

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Recipe Search 

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Appetizers

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Beef

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Beverage

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Bread

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Breakfast

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Cake

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Chocolate

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Cookies

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Fish

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Fruit

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Main Dish

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Pasta

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Pies

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Pork

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Poultry

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Salad

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Seafood

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Side Dish

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Soup

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Vegetable

 WB01507_.gif (1247 bytes)  Surprise!

 


[Flag Campaign icon]

 

 

 

 

 

Traditional Cottage, County Mayo, Ireland
Traditional Cottage, County
Mayo, Ireland
Photographic Print

Sutton, William
Buy at AllPosters.com
 

 

 

 

 


Your patronage of our affiliate partners supports this web site.
We thank you! In other words, please shop at LBC Gift Galerie!

 

Walled Fields, Inishmore, Aran Islands, County Galway, Connacht, Eire (Republic of Ireland)
Walled Fields, Inishmore, Aran Islands, County Galway, Connacht, Eire (Republic of Ireland)
Photographic Print

Gillham, Ken
Buy at AllPosters.com
 

 

Irish Breakfasts

The Little Book of Irish Family Cooking

By Ruth Isabel Ross, 1996, St. Martin’s Press

Alibris

“ ‘Irish breakfasts are not what they used to be,’ some people complain, thinking back longingly to plates piled with slices of bacon, sausages, black pudding,
white pudding, tomatoes, eggs and potato cakes – not to mention plenty of
fried bread.
Certainly the rush of modern life and the worry about cholesterol have caused
the collapse of the universal Irish breakfast. All the same, this hearty meal is
still consumed by farmers and farm workers, by people who stay in bed-and-breakfast accommodation, and by train commuters between places like Dublin
and Cork.
And many more people who scuttle to work all week on half a piece of toast
and a gulp of tea revel in an Irish breakfast at the weekends.
There are two constituents to an Irish breakfast, porridge and ‘a fry’. People
do not usually have both any more."

 

Porridge

“We are told that porridge is positively good for you. So it is worth persevering
with this acquired taste, especially if you have a non-stick saucepan, as por-
ridge sticks stubbornly onto saucepans. Buy quick-cooking oats and follow
the instructions on the packet. They will probably be something like this:

“Boil 3 teacupsful of water in a saucepan. Empty 1 teacupful of quick-cooking oats into the boiling water. Bring it to the boil again, stirring all
the time.”
Let the mixture simmer for as long as the instructions advise, probably
about 10 minutes. Continue stirring. It will thicken.
Serve immediately with brown sugar and fresh milk or cream.
Some people, often Scots, like salt with their porridge…

 

Traditional Breakfast Fry

“Everyone has his or her own way of frying or, with the more health conscious, grilling/broiling for breakfast. It is better not to be in a hurry. This is why a
cooked breakfast tastes so good on a leisurely weekend morning, turning
naturally into a brunch.
These are well-known instructions for bacon, eggs, and fried bread. They
can be enhanced by sausages, tomatoes, sliced white or black pudding and
mushrooms, while the bacon and eggs wait in a warm oven. The eggs may
also be held over and cooked last.
Bacon is always the first thing to be put in the pan as it gives that special
flavor to everything else."

For each person you need:

3 thinly-cut rashers [slices] of bacon
1 or 2 eggs
1 slice bread

Put the bacon in an oiled and buttered frying pan and heat it slowly. Fry
until crisp – there should be hot fat in the frying pan at this point. Place
the bacon onto the bread (it will absorb the bacon juices). Keep warm.
Fry the eggs one by one in the hot bacon fat, basting them thoroughly –
you may need a little more oil or butter.
Fry the bread lightly and put it back under the rashers. Put everything
onto warm plates. Serve at once.
 

Index - Breakfast Recipe Archives
Index - St. Patrick's Day Recipes
Daily Recipe Index
Recipe Archives Index
Recipe Search

WB01419_1.gif (2752 bytes)

WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Home  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Sitemap  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Recipe of the Day  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Art Gallery  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Cafe  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Articles  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Cookbooks
WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Cajun Country  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Features  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Chefs  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Food Quotes  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Gift Gallery  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Favorites
WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Basics  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Recipe Archives  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Links  WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) Guestbook   WB01507_.gif (516 bytes) What's New

LinkShare-Get Your Share!

Webmaster Michele W. Gerhard
Copyright © 1999-2010 Crossroads International.  All rights reserved.
Some graphics copyright www.arttoday.com.
Revised: February 23, 2010.