Saturday, September 04, 2021

Weekend Cooking: Bangers and Mash Pie


Some times for a Weekend Cooking post I will use this space to write about books, or flavours or whatever I bake. And then other times I use it just as a place that I save a recipe so that I can find it at a later date. Today is one of those days.

When I was growing up the go to meal in my house was sausages, mashed potato and peas. For variety, we might have had a pie, mashed potato and peas, or mutton chops with mashed potato and peas. You are likely getting the picture. There was a lot of mashed potato with peas.

My reaction to that is that I don't ever serve sausages with mashed potatoes and peas. I might have chicken sausages with mash, carrots, broccoli and gravy, or some other combination. Once, when my mum was here she cooked it for my son and was commenting on the fact that he "wolfed it down". My reaction was that is because it was exotic to him! Fortunately, I wasn't home that night!

Recently we have started making this which is really a version of curried sausages with mash on top instead of on the side, and so I am putting this recipe on the blog so that we can find it again at a later date. It's another recipe that we found in the freebie recipe magazine from the supermarket and it is also online here.


Bangers and mash pie


1 tbs cornflour

2 cups salt-reduced chicken stock

2 tbs curry powder

2 garlic cloves, crushed

600g beef sausages, cut on an angle into thirds

1 brown onion, thinly sliced

1 cup frozen peas

950g roasted garlic mash (we make our own mash)

1/2 cup shredded pizza cheese


Preheat oven to 200°C/180°C fan-forced. Place cornflour in a jug. Gradually add 1/4 cup stock, stirring until smooth. Add curry powder, garlic and remaining stock. Stir until combined.


Place sausage and onion in a 20 x 25cm (4cm deep) baking dish. Pour over stock mixture. Bake for 40 minutes or until sausage is golden. Scatter over peas.


Heat mash according to packet instructions. Dollop mash over sausage mixture and use back of a spoon to swirl. Sprinkle with cheese. Bake for a further 10 minutes or until cheese is golden. Season with pepper and serve.

Weekly Meals

Saturday - 
Monday - Bean Taquito
Tuesday - Chorizo and Onion Chilli
Wednesday - Chicken Birria Tacos
Thursday - Hamburgers
Friday - Takeaway




Weekend Cooking is open to anyone who has any kind of food-related post to share: Book reviews (novel, nonfiction), cookbook reviews, movie reviews, recipes, random thoughts, gadgets, quotations, photographs, restaurant reviews, travel information, or fun food facts. If your post is even vaguely foodie, feel free to grab the button and link up anytime over the weekend. You do not have to post on the weekend. Please link to your specific post, not your blog's home page

18 comments:

  1. I was definitely in a sausages mood today at the market, so this would work out well. With beans and some bell pepper. Potatoes, of course :)

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    1. It's definitely a recipe that you could throw anything in with it!I guess the word I am looking for is adaptable!

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  2. I love mashed potatoes, though I think of your sausage-potato-peas dish as being British or Australian. Thanks for hosting Weekend Cooking!

    best... mae at maefood.blogspot.com

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    1. Certainly featured in my Australian house!!

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  3. My latest meat order arrived yesterday and so I have sausage in the freezer -- I think I'll have to add this to next week's meal plan. It's *finally* getting cooler here. Hope you're starting to see some signs of spring. AND, so funny that your mom made mash, & peas for the boy!

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    1. It is starting to get a bit warmer here which is nice!

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  4. As Irish immigrants to Canada growing we always had meat potatoes and a veg. But my mother was quite adventurous as a cook and would try different things. I remember going to a Spanish friend's house and having spaghetti for the first time and then my mother made it. We only ever had canned peas growing up and still prefer them although I almost never buy them. But I like to have a can in the cupboard.

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  5. We usually make toad in the hole (sausages cooked in Yorkshire pudding) but this sounds good!

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    1. I havent had toad in the hole for years Melynda!

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  6. We haven't had bangers and mash in ages, I love it! Like you, I write whatever I feel like on my blog but decided for a separate book blog. I love the ability to look up recipes on my site and that's so helpful.

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  7. It sounds like total comfort food. Sometimes we need those dishes that remind us of childhood even if we didn't always love them growing up. ;-)

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  8. Nothing better than comfort food you grew up eating. Sounds like a really enjoyable meal.

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    1. We've had it a couple of times now Judee, so we enjoyed it enough to repeat it!

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  9. That sounds good! I'm cooking sausages on the grill for dinner tonight with corn on the cob, potato salad, and baked beans (from a can, unfortunately!) as a cookout meal for the last day of Labor Day weekend.
    What kind of sausages do you use for this recipe? It sounds delicious! I can't figure out whether kielbasa or Italian sausage would be a good substitution or totally wrong for a curry-flavored dish!

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