Colcannon

Irish potato dish

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Colcannon (Irish: cál ceannann, meaning 'white-headed cabbage') is a traditional Irish dish of mashed potatoes with cabbage. It is a popular dish on Saint Patrick's Day[1] and on the feast day of St. Brigid.[2]

Description

Colcannon is most commonly made with only four ingredients: potatoes, butter, milk and cabbage. Irish historian Patrick Weston Joyce defined it as "potatoes mashed with butter and milk, with chopped up cabbage and pot herbs".[3] It can contain other ingredients such as scallions (spring onions), leeks, laverbread, onions and chives. Some recipes substitute cabbage with kale.[4] There are many regional variations of this staple dish.[5] It was a cheap, year-round food.[6][7] It is often eaten with boiled ham, salt pork or Irish bacon. As a side dish it goes well with corned beef and cabbage.[3]

An Irish Halloween tradition is to serve colcannon with a ring and a thimble hidden in the dish. Prizes of small coins such as threepenny or sixpenny bits also can be concealed inside the dish.[8] Other items could include a stick indicating an unhappy marriage and a rag denoting a life of poverty.[9]

Colcannon is similar to Champ, a dish made with scallions, butter and milk that traditionally offered to fairies be being placed at the foot of a Hawthorn tree in a spoon.[4]

Etymology

The origin of the word is unclear. The first syllable "col" likely comes from the Irish "cál," meaning cabbage. The second syllable may derive from "ceann-fhionn," meaning a white head (i.e. "a white head of cabbage."). This usage is also found in the Irish name for a coot, a white-headed bird known as "cearc cheannan" or "white-head hen.".

In Welsh, the name for leek soup is cawl cennin, a phrase combining cawl meaning "soup", "broth" or "gruel", when it is not a reference to the typical Welsh meat and vegetable stew named in full "cawl Cymreig", with "cennin," the plural of "cenhinen," meaning "leeks".[10]

Song

The song "Colcannon", also called "The Skillet Pot", is a traditional Irish song that has been recorded by numerous artists, including Mary Black.[8][11] It begins:

Did you ever eat Colcannon, made from lovely pickled cream?
With the greens and scallions mingled like a picture in a dream.
Did you ever make a hole on top to hold the melting flake
Of the creamy, flavoured butter that your mother used to make?

The chorus:

Yes you did, so you did, so did he and so did I.
And the more I think about it sure the nearer I'm to cry.
Oh, wasn't it the happy days when troubles we had not,
And our mothers made Colcannon in the little skillet pot.

Similar dishes

See also

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References

  1. ^ Tribune, Beth Dooley Special to the Star. "4 recipes for a traditional St. Patrick's Day meal, and it's not corned beef". Star Tribune. Retrieved 22 May 2024.
  2. ^ "If you really want to celebrate Brigid, eat colcannon on Wednesday and then make your cross". The Irish Times. Retrieved 22 May 2024.
  3. ^ a b Andrews, Colman (21 December 2012). The Country Cooking of Ireland. ISBN 9781452124056.
  4. ^ a b Sheraton, Mimi (13 January 2015). 1,000 Foods To Eat Before You Die: A Food Lover's Life List. ISBN 9780761183068.
  5. ^ "Recipe from An Bord Bia (Irish food board)". Archived from the original on 19 February 2014. Retrieved 12 May 2011.
  6. ^ Irwin, Florence (1986). The Cookin' Woman: Irish Country Recipes. Blackstaff. ISBN 0-85640-373-3.
  7. ^ Friedland, Susan R. (2009). Vegetables: Proceedings of the Oxford Symposium on Food and Cooking 2008. ISBN 9781903018668.
  8. ^ a b Allen, Darina (2012). Irish Traditional Cooking. Dublin: Gill and Macmillan. p. 152. ISBN 9780717154364.
  9. ^ Allen, Darina (28 October 2020). "Eat, drink, and be scary this Halloween". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 29 October 2020.
  10. ^ Evans, H. Meurig (1980). Y Geiriadur Mawr. Gwasg Gomer.
  11. ^ "The Black Family" CD, 1986, Dara Records, DARA CD 023

External links

Media related to Category:Colcannon at Wikimedia Commons

Look up Colcannon in Wiktionary, the free dictionary.
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