Black pudding Scotch egg
- Prepare
- 30 mins to 1 hour
- Cook
- 10 to 30 mins
- Serve
- Makes 6
- Dietary
- Nut-freePregnancy-friendly
I’ve never written a recipe for Scotch eggs before, but I’ve always enjoyed eating them in pubs and I came up with the idea of adding black pudding to the mix. Do feel free to leave it out if you want and use extra sausagemeat, but it does give the scotch egg extra flavour and a moister texture. For me, piccalilli is a must with the eggs.
Ingredients
- eggs: 8 free-range eggs
- vegetable oil: 1 tbsp vegetable oil
- shallot: 1 shallot, finely chopped
- sausagemeat: 400g/14oz sausagemeat
- parsley: handful of flatleaf parsley, chopped
- fennel seeds: 1½ tsp fennel seeds, crushed
- black pudding: 200g/7oz black pudding, crumbled
- plain flour: 100²µ/3½´Ç³ú plain flour
- breadcrumbs: 100²µ/3½´Ç³ú Panko or dried white breadcrumbs
- vegetable oil: 1 litre/1¾ pints sunflower or vegetable oil
- black pepper: salt and freshly ground black pepper
To serve
- piccalilli: piccalilli, mustard or chutney
Method
Bring a saucepan of water to the boil and lower in 6 eggs. Boil for 6–6½ minutes depending on size (medium–large), drain, then immediately cool them under cold running water until completely cold. Peel the eggs and set them aside.
Heat the vegetable oil in a small frying pan, over a medium heat. Gently fry the shallot until translucent, then leave to cool.
Put the sausagemeat in a bowl and add the fried shallot, chopped parsley and crushed fennel seeds, then season with salt and pepper and mix well. Fold in the crumbled black pudding.
Put the flour, breadcrumbs and 2 beaten eggs on separate plates or shallow bowls. Lightly flour the peeled eggs.
Divide the sausage mixture into 6 balls. Flatten one in your hand, then add an egg and shape the sausage mixture around the egg. Repeat with the remaining eggs. Roll each one in flour, then beaten egg, and finally in breadcrumbs.
Heat the oil to 160C in a fairly narrow, deep pan. Using a slotted spoon, lower in the Scotch eggs one at a time and cook for 8–10 minutes until they are deep golden-brown and crisp.
Drain on kitchen paper and serve with your choice of piccalilli, chutney or mustard and pickled onions or as part of a ploughman’s lunch with bread and cheese.