The nation is gripped by a right royal occasion, and what an occasion it is. The William, Kate and George show has everything a fairy tale could hope to have: a charming couple, a bouncy baby, pomp, pageantry, secret locations and traditional welcomes. We can't let the hysteria go by without adding to it. Here are some traditional low-cost English recipes to try.
The Duke's bubble and squeakAll you need for this English traditional dish is equal amounts of cold meat, cooked potato, and cooked cabbage, plus butter, pepper and salt. Chop potatoes into large chunks. Heat a little butter in a frypan. Fry potatoes and cabbage lightly in the butter, add salt and pepper to taste. Fry slices of meat, enough to heat through. Put meat into a hot dish with alternate layers of vegetables. Judge quantities by how many hungry lads and fair maidens you have to feed.
The stiff-upper-lip English breakfastThis is the sort of thing you'd expect from a traditional English seaside hotel (probably the ones in need of restoration, not the sort the royals stay in). You will need a couple of eggs, a few rashers of bacon, a few small breakfast sausages, a couple of tomatoes, sliced mushrooms and toast. Cook the sausages and bacon. Remove from pan and keep in a warm oven. Cut tomatoes in half and place in the frypan with the mushrooms and cook for a couple of minutes, turn and cook for another two minutes. Remove from the pan and place in the oven to keep warm. Crack eggs into the frying pan, pop the bread in the toaster and when they are done serve with a piping hot cup of English Breakfast tea.
Lill's Yorkshire puddingsBeing a fan of the royals, Lill from Whangarei shares her delicious Yorkshire puddings.
To make the batter, place 1 cup of flour into a bowl, add 1/4 teaspoon of salt, and break in 2 eggs. Mix with water to form what she calls a "stodgy" mix, then add enough milk to thin into a batter the consistency of thick pouring cream. Pour leftover fat from a roast - or oil - into a baking pan or into deep muffin tins. Place in a hot (200C) oven, and remove when fat or oil is very hot. Quickly pour in your batter mix, place in the oven and bake until the Yorkshire "puds" are crisp and puffy - about 30 minutes if using a baking dish; 15 minutes if using muffin tins. Keep a constant eye on the baking: cooking time will vary depending on flour used, oven heat and type of fat or oil.