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Sunday roast

British dish of meat and vegetables

Sunday roast

British dish of meat and vegetables

FieldValue
nameSunday roast
imageSunday roast lamb Cock Inn Henham Essex England 01.jpg
captionA Sunday roast consisting of roast beef served with Yorkshire puddings and roast potatoes and parsnips
courseMain course
countryUnited Kingdom
regionWestern Europe
creator
main_ingredientRoast meat
serving_size100 g
no_recipesfalse

A Sunday roast or roast dinner is a British dish traditionally eaten on Sunday. It consists of roast meat, roast or mashed potatoes, and accompaniments such as Yorkshire pudding, gravy and stuffing, and may include condiments such as apple sauce, mint sauce, redcurrant sauce, mustard, cranberry sauce or horseradish sauce. A range of vegetables can be served, such as broccoli, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, carrots, cauliflower, parsnips or peas, which can be boiled, steamed or roasted alongside the meat and potatoes.

The Sunday roast's prominence in British culture is such that in a poll of Britons in 2012 it was ranked second in a list of things people love about Britain. Other names for this meal include Sunday lunch, Sunday dinner, roast dinner and full roast. The meal is often described as a less grand version of a traditional Christmas dinner.

Besides being served in its original homeland, the tradition of a Sunday roast lunch or dinner has been a major influence on food cultures in the English-speaking world, particularly in Australia, Ireland, Canada, South Africa, and New Zealand. A South African Sunday roast normally comprises roast pork, beef, lamb or chicken, roast potatoes or mashed potato, and various vegetables such as cauliflower cheese, creamed spinach, green beans, carrots, peas, beetroot and sweet potato. It is also fairly common to serve rice and gravy or pap and tomato gravy in South Africa instead of Yorkshire pudding.

Origin

The Sunday roast originated in Britain, particularly Yorkshire, as a meal to be eaten after the church service on Sunday. Likewise, it is traditional for Anglicans and English Catholics to fast before Sunday services, with a larger meal to break the fast afterwards. These Christian religious rules created several traditional dishes in the United Kingdom.

  • Only eating fish on Friday resulted in a British tradition of 'fish Fridays', which is still common in fish and chip shops and restaurants across the United Kingdom on Fridays; particularly during Lent.
  • To mark the end of not being able to eat meat, the Sunday roast was created as a mark of celebration.

There are two historical points on the origins of the modern Sunday roast.

  • In the late 1700s, during the Industrial Revolution in the United Kingdom, families would place a cut of meat into the oven as they got ready for church. They would then add in vegetables such as potatoes, turnips and parsnips before going to church on a Sunday morning. When they returned from the church, the dinner was all but ready. The juices from the meat and vegetables were used to make a stock or gravy to pour on top of the dinner.
  • The second opinion holds that the Sunday roast dates back to medieval times, when the village serfs served the squire for six days a week. Then, on the Sunday, after the morning church service, serfs would assemble in a field and practise their battle techniques and were rewarded with a feast of oxen roasted on a spit.

Typical elements

Meat

A Sunday roast with roast lamb, roast potatoes, carrots, green beans and Yorkshire pudding

Typical meats used for a Sunday roast are chicken, lamb, pork or roast beef, although seasonally duck, goose, gammon, turkey or (rarely) other game birds may be used.

Vegetables

Sunday roasts can be served with a range of boiled, steamed and/or roast vegetables. The vegetables served vary seasonally and regionally, but will usually include roast potatoes, roasted in meat dripping or vegetable oil, and also gravy made from juices released by the roasting meat, perhaps supplemented by one or more stock cubes, gravy browning/thickening, roux or cornflour.

The potatoes can be cooked around the meat itself, absorbing the juices and fat directly (as in a traditional Cornish under-roast). However, many cooks prefer to cook the potatoes and the Yorkshire pudding in a hotter oven than that used for the joint and so remove the meat beforehand to rest and "settle" in a warm place.

Other vegetables served with roast dinner can include mashed swede or turnips, roast parsnips, boiled or steamed cabbage, broccoli, green beans, and boiled carrots and peas. It is also not uncommon for vegetable dishes such as cauliflower cheese and stewed red cabbage to be served alongside the more usual assortment of plainly-cooked seasonal vegetables.

Accompaniments

Common traditional accompaniments include:

  • beef: Yorkshire pudding, suet pudding; English mustard, gravy or horseradish sauce. Roast beef with Yorkshire pudding accompanied by "roast potatoes, vegetables, and horseradish sauce" is considered by National Geographic as the national dish of England.
  • pork: crackling and sage-and-onion stuffing; apple sauce or English mustard.
  • lamb: mint sauce or redcurrant jelly.
  • chicken: sausages or sausage meat, stuffing, bread sauce, apple sauce, cranberry sauce or redcurrant jelly.

References

References

  1. (3 February 2012). "Bacon Butty Best of British". SWNS digital.
  2. Foley, Michael P.. (2005-11-29). "Why Do Catholics Eat Fish on Friday?: The Catholic Origin to Just About Everything". Palgrave Macmillan.
  3. Wesley, John. (1825). "[[The Sunday Service of the Methodists]]". J. Kershaw.
  4. Hill, Amelia. (19 August 2007). "How Friday saved the Sunday roast". The Guardian.
  5. [http://www.ivillage.co.uk/food/tools/recipefinder/display_recipe/0,,4102,00.html Classic Roast Dinner] {{webarchive. link. (12 February 2010)
  6. Persey, Amanda. (1993). "Favourite Cornish Recipes". J. Salmon.
  7. Smith, Delia. (1992). "Delia Smith's complete cookery course". BBC Books.
  8. (2011-09-13). "Top 10 National Dishes -- National Geographic".
Info: Wikipedia Source

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