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cold pease pudding

How to make Pease Pudding from Up North


Pease pudding eating is rife in the North East of England and, my man being of the Geordie diaspora, is something we eat fairly frequently. For a very cheap and simple dish it is delicious and makes me wonder if perhaps it’s not as grim Up North as we’ve been led to believe.

Above the invisible pease pudding line which stretches across Britain at about the level of the Midlands pease pudding is readily available in butcher shops and supermarkets but the rest of us have to make our own.  It’s easy …

How to make Pease Pudding …

250g yellow split peas
stock from cooking a gammon joint – see below

~ Soak the split peas for about 8 hours in cold water. 
~ Drain the peas and place in a medium sized saucepan.
~ Add enough stock from the ham to cover by a depth of 1cm or so.
~ Bring to a boil, stir, turn down the heat and simmer till the stock is absorbed and the lentils are softening.
~ Keep an eye on the proceedings and top up with hot stock as necessary, continuing to simmer till the peas have softened completely and break down into a purée when stirred. This should take about 45 minutes. 

Just this, with no additions, or perhaps, if you like, a little butter and black pepper (don’t salt without tasting – the stock is usually sufficiently salty) is delicious served with the hot ham, new potatoes, fresh veggies and a drizzle of honey mustard salad dressing (not traditional); the salt and the sweet are brill together. 

homemade pease pudding with gammon and honey mustard glaze

How to Cook the Gammon

with a bonus of Delicious Stock

~ Weigh your piece of gammon and calculate how long to cook it based on 20 minutes per 450g.
~ Put the joint in a large saucepan and completely cover with cold water.
~ Bring to a boil, skim off any scum, turn the heat down, cover and cook for the required time.
~ Check now and then and top up with hot water if necessary.
~ When tender remove the meat from the stock but KEEP THE STOCK!

A Horrible Story! …

Legend has it that an oft heard street cry in Medieval London was …

“Pease pudding and a suck of bacon”

The peddler sold slices of firm pease pudding accompanied by a brief suck on a piece of bacon on a string. When it was judged that the purchaser had had a fair suck for his money the bacon was yanked from his mouth ready for the next diner. Yummy!

Leftover Pease Pudding?

Seemingly pease pudding lends itself to reheating and using leftovers if the old song is to be believed.

“Pease pudding in the pot – nine days old”

Here’s some ideas – but, to tell the truth, I would cool and then refrigerate any leftovers rather than the old leave-it-in-the-pot method.

Chilled pease pudding can be sliced and fried (in bacon fat would be a good ideas if you have some) and served with a fry up! And here are some more imaginative ideas …

Geordie~Italian Fusion Pizza!

This was so very much deliciouser than I was expecting! I spread the base (my simple pizza base recipe is here) with pease pudding, topped it with sliced ham, baked till crisp and served it with a green salad all drizzled with balsamic glaze. 

pizza topped with pease pudding and gamon with balsamic glaze

Pease Pudding also makes a Fine Soup …

London Particular 

London Particular – is a name commonly given to split pea soup. 

The thick fogs that used to occur in London up till the 1950s were called pea soupers after the soup and then the soup was named London Particular after the fog. I wonder what will happen next!

1 onion
1 tablespoon oil or, even better, bacon fat
chicken, vegetable or, best of all, ham stock (from cooking a ham) if possible
300g-ish pease pudding
a few slices of ham

~   Cook the onion my favourite way!  In bacon fat if you have some.
~   When the onions are utterly tender stir in pease pudding and heat through.
~   Dilute and season to your requirements.
~  Finely chop the ham and stir in (keeping back a little to garnish).
~   If you prefer to process or liquidize the soup, add the ham and process it in which will result in little flecks.
~   Garnish with croutons which have been baked together with a few pieces of reserved ham.

dal from leftover pease pudding with rice and cashew nuts

Quick Dal (aka Dahl or Dhal!)

~  Cook an onion like this – it is the best way to cook onions.
~   When completely tender,  mix in a little curry powder or paste. 
~   Stir in the leftover pease pudding and dilute if necessary with stock. 
~   Serve with rice and suitable accoutrements. 

Don’t go – there’s more!

Having run the gamut of things to do with leftover Pease Pudding (soup, fritters and dal) I had a little of the spiced pudding, aka dal, left and was going to make myself a dal vada/ fritter of sorts when inspiration struck. 

What would happen if I mixed flour into the dal to make a dough?  This is what happened …

stack of flatbread made from leftover dal with salad

Dal Roti

~    Mix enough flour (I used plain flour but rolled the dough out on wholewheat – probably chapatti flour would be best) into the dal to make a workable dough.
~   Roll into walnut sized balls and then roll out into thin rounds.
~   Fry in a lightly oiled pan till the first side is speckled with brown turn and do the second side.

What a nice surprise these were!  I quickly whipped up a salad, added some cashews and a simple balsamic dressing and dolloped a spoonful of Greek yogurt (fusion!) on the top.

Leftover inspire me which is why I wrote Creative Ways to Use Up Leftovers

creative recipes for 450 potential  leftovers cookbook

Have a look inside here.

download free cooking tips

Having been a somewhat itinerant chef for over 30 years I was amazed, on my return to the UK, at the blatant food waste that now seems to be rife in the country; amazed and irritated. So much so that I decided to start a blog about spontaneous cooking from leftovers to show people that there are great alternatives to throwing food away.

3 Comments

  • Esther

    Brilliant recipe, completely authentic from my childhood. How my nana and mum made it. I lost this page, tried another recipe which had carrots and onions etc and it was all wrong, this is definitely the one, so glad I found it again.

  • Alan Haley

    Like Anita, I homed in on your recipe whilst searching for an image of solid pease pudding – the way me granny did it! Now that avocado has (quite rightly!) been found out as the expensive, carbon gobbling, waste of time that it always was, the ancient delicacy that is pease pudding is receiving the attention it deserves….in the ‘softy south’ where I emigrated to 123 years ago.

  • Anita

    Just wanted to say that yours is the only recipe where it shows the pease pudding in slices – that’s how we had it as a kid in Bradford, Yorkshire (but mum was a Geordie).

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