I'm Dublin born and bred and this recipe and others like it is way better than how traditional Irish people would have coddle. My mother would just throw everything into the pot at once and walk away for a couple of hours. Most of the vegetables would be boiled to nothing but it was still a nice dinner. It's only now that I'm grown up and have a place of my own that I have the freedom of cooking for myself and improving the meals I grew up with.
@calebkent47567 ай бұрын
When I was younger I used to wonder why my parents would make such poor versions of potentially delicious food and ultimately it took growing up to realize...damn, cooking takes a LOT of energy. It's hard to fault my parents too much when just keeping a family fed every single day takes a lot out of you unless cooking is your passion.
@fionamb837 ай бұрын
My dad was from Dublin and he always called it Mickey stew, so that's probably why I never made it lol. I do like recipes that use up leftovers, so I might try this. My aunt just doesn't have to know I'm browning the sausages 😂
@aminorityofone7 ай бұрын
@@calebkent4756 father of 3, never would i describe cooking taking lots of energy.. more of i didnt know what i was doing. My cooking got better as the kids aged.
@draculinalilith3967 ай бұрын
@@aminorityofone keep up the good stuff. My parents always did precooked oven meals from the store. Nothing good ever. I was so unhealthy. They stopped cooking for me at 15 or 16.
@castcrus7 ай бұрын
Same, my mother don't really know how to cook, maybe that's why I'm now super interested in cooking. I'm Chinese btw.
@nivthefox7 ай бұрын
When you put those onions and leaks in, you should put in an equal amount of cabbage. It'd add so much flavor. Onions and cabbage are best friends, especially in irish dishes.
@sanguine79247 ай бұрын
Lethal farts
@pauljordan44527 ай бұрын
@MrLBPug Who cares? Fart and laugh at the world's first source of humour.
@largemarge16037 ай бұрын
@@pauljordan4452 Fortunately, my gas is odorless...
@colonelfustercluck4866 ай бұрын
@@largemarge1603 .. mine smell like roses !
@littlejimmy74026 ай бұрын
@@pauljordan4452 Unless You're on your way to Mass.
@wdebruin65197 ай бұрын
I'm from Amsterdam and try to visit Dublin once a year. Gravediggers in Glasnevin is a mandatory stop for me. The coddle there is like Bourdain said 'a little peace of heaven' . Just thinking about the coddle there makes my mouth water. And it's such a simple dish. This one is more complex, and a good way to get inspired. But Cavanaugh's can't be topped.
@gcamon3 ай бұрын
Best pint of Guinness in Dublin too imo
@randytessman67508 ай бұрын
Been pretty much making this for years without ever hearing this recipe. The only difference is after the vegetables are ready I remove them add butter and flour and make a rue. This of course changes the end dish(thick gravy) been calling mine sausage stew for my kids for more then a decade and they love it ! We have used brussel sprouts many times other then cabbage too
@Amieto7597 ай бұрын
Just to correct something… It is a roux. Not a rue. From the French for ginger/red. Un roux, une rousse for red haired man or woman. Here, it is butter. It s the color that gave the name. Like beurre blanc, beurre noir, and beurre roux. But butter is obvious, isn it ?
@peterhoulihan97667 ай бұрын
I've seen coddle recipes with a rue like you describe. It's not a very well defined recipe.
@solangelauthier238118 сағат бұрын
Roux not rue !
@XiangYu945 ай бұрын
As a poor chinese student, i cook this coddle dish a lot and boil it until the veggies become mush - I then eat it all as a stew with sushi rice, it's been very helpful for my bulking / weightlifting
@brandonrohrbaugh595 ай бұрын
What's your major?
@EstherAndTheStraightRazo-rq8sd5 ай бұрын
@@brandonrohrbaugh59 : American Intellectual Property Theft.
@TannuWannu5 ай бұрын
@@EstherAndTheStraightRazo-rq8sd that is so funny lololol also, KZbin is banned in mainland China!
@XiangYu945 ай бұрын
@@EstherAndTheStraightRazo-rq8sd That would be a cool major man, if it weren’t for the lack of intellect to steal from America.
Looks good! I am 84 and in my youth I spent a lot of time backpacking and youth hosteling around Ireland and coddle was a staple of small remote Irish communities and was also easy to make in hostel kitchens. Use anything you had. Only spices available then was salt and pepper! We used a lot of turnip/swede and added finely chopped young nettle and dandylion leaves which added a little peppery/ nutty flavour.
@dgmclar7 ай бұрын
Great video, as someone from dublin its good. Worth noting banger is what English people would call sausage, nobody in Ireland would call a sausage a banger. Otherise 10/10 🙌🏻
@duncanbryson11672 ай бұрын
Haven't looked through all the comments but the word banger came in during WWII. This was because sausages were bulked up with water. This turned to steam during cooking and resulted in them going bang. One had to pick the skin to allow the steam to escape. People continued to prick them, unnecessary, years after the war when quality sausages had become available. A store chain in the UK (Co-Op) started making their sausages skinless fairly recently. Their pork sausages are very good and the ones I usually go for.
@dgmclar2 ай бұрын
@@duncanbryson1167 ok whatever, nobody in Ireland has ever referred to a sausage as a banger
@duncanbryson11672 ай бұрын
@@dgmclar I'm sure they have based on what I laid out above but maybe before your time or maybe you've just never heard anyone say it. It might not have been prevalent because perhaps the Irish Republic, being ostensibly neutral, wasn't affected by the same lack of quality. Even pre internet, words travelled.
@MunenushiАй бұрын
"bangars and mash" is actually a thing in Eastern Canada (lots of Irish immigrants and workers), so i have a hard time believing "noone" on The Island "ever" calls them 'bangers'....
@batman3875max8 ай бұрын
one thing I like Chef Billy's content is how he also shows how he cleans the ingredients.
@peterhoulihan97667 ай бұрын
It's funny, there's actually a bit of a class divide over that here. In protestant households they tend to do it, but in catholic households (where coddle is made) they don't bother. I wasn't aware of it until I read a listicle of "irish protestant stuff."
@catinthehat9065 ай бұрын
If you split a leek down the middle you can wash it under a tap without using a colander. I personally think all the flavour of leeks is in the green leaves, the white stalk is nearly tasteless. I've never heard of them being described as 'bitter'.
@internetdumbassАй бұрын
@@catinthehat906 maybe american leeks are different?
@JohnKreutzer-u2n8 ай бұрын
Delicious! I really enjoy your channel and it is helping me cope with my wife’s stage four cancer - the cooking is a distraction and having good meals really helps when she is able to eat. Thank you.
@seycas1188 ай бұрын
Prayers for your wife 🙏🏼❤️🇨🇦
@jdstalenne97078 ай бұрын
God bless your wife. Prayers to you all.
@aonewatchman8 ай бұрын
Dear User ... Please, both of you go to Bible!
@nikiTricoteuse8 ай бұрын
I'm sorry to hear about your wife. I'm glad she's got you though, you sound like a good person.
@misst15868 ай бұрын
Bless you ❤
@thequietman7608 ай бұрын
I have to make a coddle at least once a week for my daughter and grand daughter it's their favourite dinner 🇮🇪
@brusselssprouts5608 ай бұрын
Nicer with stottie bread.....
@theeddorian8 ай бұрын
@@brusselssprouts560 Comes from the wrong island. Soda bread is lighter. Stottie's nice though.
@JeWCyDuDe7 ай бұрын
🇮🇪 🇮🇪 🇮🇪 🇮🇪
@curiositycloset23597 ай бұрын
Couldn't leave a person's house without soda bread being shoved down your throat
@alunjprice8 ай бұрын
Bangers is generally a British term rather than Irish, comes from the war days when food was short and the filling was really poor with lots of water, so they used to split and “bang” when cooking.
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
Correct. I explain that in my video, as well as on my written post.
@brusselssprouts5608 ай бұрын
I agree, and my Mum who came from NE England (Co. Durham) often cooked lamb or beef cobbler, or, as she termed them, hotpots. Good old USA changing history again.
@aidanoconnor72998 ай бұрын
I'm Irish and have only ever lived in Ireland and we call them bangers too. To be fair it's less used than 'sausages' but each to their own.
@IrishMist6408 ай бұрын
@@brusselssprouts560 Oh, you English are *so* superior, aren't you? Well, would you like to know what you'd be without us, the good ol' U.S. of A. to protect you? I'll tell you. The smallest f'ing province in the Russian Empire, that's what! So don't call me stupid. Just thank me. 😂😂😂 A Fish Called Wanda
@whoknowsthebowler8 ай бұрын
Bangers is English .We Scots call them Links.
@vikingbushcraft19118 ай бұрын
My Nan used to make a version of this - absolutely no garlic, but her addition - half a bottle of Guinness! Good vid 👏
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
Nice!
@noisepuppet7 ай бұрын
My aunt Fiona's secret ingredient was a pint of Bushmill's, poured directly into herself. Kept her on an even keel, so it did.
@markarmstrong58487 ай бұрын
@@noisepuppet That is pure brilliant , god bless your aunt and the oldest licensed distillery in the world.
@Shane-un8pe7 ай бұрын
A bottle of Guinness is an incredible addition to most stews. I'm from Louisiana and a bottle of Guinness always goes into my gumbo.
@karancoyne77197 ай бұрын
no garlic
@charlesward81968 ай бұрын
BOOOYAH! On putting the vegetable peels, ends, etc into a bag in the freezer. We have a 1-gallon ziplock bag in the freezer that we just call “the stock bag” all the time. In addition to the vegetable trimmings, it gets all of the bones and fat that are left on the dinner plates from roast chickens, bone-in steaks or chops, the dry hard rind from the Parmesan cheese wedge, etc. When the bag gets full, it is time to make stock. From September to May, we have homemade soup for lunch every day. My mom used to make soup stock with whole carrots, onions, and celery ribs, and then discard the overcooked vegetables. Instead we use the trimmings from all of those vegetables, and save the whole vegetables for the finished soups.
@TheBlaert8 ай бұрын
That's exactly what I do too. Not much goes to waste. I have a small herb garden too and any excess is put into ice cube trays. Some filled with oil and some with water.
@nikiTricoteuse8 ай бұрын
I also have a small "cheese container" in the freezer. Any bits of cheese that are getting a bit past it, go in there and when l have a collection l make a quiche or a risotto or an omelette or some such. 😊
@LeonardSmith-qv8do8 ай бұрын
"off the Dinner plates " No thanks
@monicatry15837 ай бұрын
Few years ago UK advised peeling carrots as skins had absorbed something harmful. I would not save them.
@sylverscale7 ай бұрын
@@LeonardSmith-qv8doIt's for your family and it gets cooked through. I wouldn't want a restaurant to do it but at home? No issue with that.
@AodhMacRaynall-dr1sf6 ай бұрын
I am a self-taught cook. The greatest thing I learned was exactly what you are talking about; the procedures, the small things. Thats what can actually make a meal and make you a good cook. I like your preparation. I'm subscribing.
@KathiVolck4 ай бұрын
It makes me feel like Grandma's with me.Thank you so much.Because I love her.And miss her so much. And she loved her boy's dinner too
@Nel331472 ай бұрын
Have faith , you’ll see her again !
@SEKreiver6 ай бұрын
Kansas boy of Irish extraction here. I've been making this for 25yrs and everybody ALWAYS loves it.
@shutup27517 ай бұрын
as an Irish person who has never had coddle as it never looked great this one does look very good
@TheSilentW7 ай бұрын
A stew with potatoes and sausages? Sounds like something that makes my German heart very happy! Thanks a lot for this recipe!
@GerinoMorn5 ай бұрын
The similarity between Irish and Polish cuisine never stops amazing me
@riverstun5 ай бұрын
Except the Irish arent big on dumplings. I think German and Polish would be closer. The Irish dont make pasta, dont do anything fancy with the potatoes, and dont use pickled cucumbers or picked cabbage. Or didnt, traditionally. It's just carrots, cabbage, onions, potatoes and meat, mostly.
@RobMacKendrick4 ай бұрын
With a layover in Germany. The missing link, what. (Get it?)
@cadamham3 ай бұрын
Po’ folk food. Delicious
@Camcolito2 ай бұрын
Sure Ireland is just little Poland now anyway.
@witwicky5565Ай бұрын
Very similar to British food too
@peterperigoe92317 ай бұрын
I liked this video, but I suggest you at Dublin Council's web site for Traditional Dublin Coddle, for one thing they state there are no carrots used in a Dublin Coddle, it was traditionally a dish using leftovers and sausages with roughly cut potatoes usually eaten on a Thursday to use up leftovers as Catholics didn't eat meat on a Friday.
@RyanDB5 ай бұрын
Leek greens are absolutely NOT bitter. That's just one of those weird chef-myths which spreads because people don't stop to think about the things they're saying. But you already know that, because you suggest using them for stock :P
@David8nАй бұрын
Yeah, I don't know anyone that'd be throwing away that much leek or onion 😱
@Skaldewolf5 ай бұрын
One word: Parsnips. These are ridiculous flavourful and can turn a boring stew into something incredible.
@MmeRougarou2 ай бұрын
Thank you. That’s something new to try. 🎉
@robertlarder19072 ай бұрын
One more word for parsnips- Underrated.
@Lightspeed-eo6nw8 ай бұрын
I’d never heard of this before this morning, and I saw the Chef John version while having my coffee. Decided to make it, it’s literally braising in the oven right now. Come back to YT while I’m waiting, and you’ve just released your version, spooky. I’ll have to try yours, I’ve made a bunch of your recipes and they always deliver the goods.
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
They’re listening 😂😂
@angellover021718 ай бұрын
St. Paddy's day is tomorrow
@debbiezullo70568 ай бұрын
Looks delicious. I be making it. Thanks for sharing this dish. Happy St Patrick’s Day🍀♥️
@chrishope98963 ай бұрын
As a non-cook, your explanation made this look easy and was the best and most comprehensive I’ve watched. I don’t care if it’s totally genuine but it looks great. Cheers!
@vortega4728 ай бұрын
I use hard apple cider - I actually use a little in the beginning to deglaze. Then I pour the rest of the cider and top it off with water. It's quite lovely. I'll admit, I skip the salt because between the sausage and bacon I think it has enough. But taste is subjective.
@JamieW-o7b8 ай бұрын
Garlic has to be a modern addition, This will be more than tasty without! Love this recipe! A dish fit for a true King!
@Ro700Repeater7 ай бұрын
Looks delicious! Coddle is very divisive in Ireland, it's mostly only eaten in Dublin. As you said from the description from Dublin City council the traditional method was to just put everything in a pot and boil it. Some Dublin purists say that only the fully boiled OG version is true coddle 😅
@ZenaidaRoxas-yk8pp7 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing, am going to make this next week for my Aussie partner. He's of English- Irish descent so am sure this will be surely appreciated by him.
@kscptv8 ай бұрын
This isn’t a Dublin coddle. That is a more gourmet recipe. It is simpler than what you have. You just take potatoes, carrots, rashers, and small breakfast sausages in with water. That is it, mate. Nothing else. Your recipe is very gourmet and looks tasty. A coddle you’d have after a heavy night of drinking or just as a dinner meal. Remember, this was a poor man’s meal. I am Dub. I have made coddle before.
@hablin18 ай бұрын
Exactly ❤
@llC4ll8 ай бұрын
Dude, don’t be a dick. Billy is showing us meals that we would actually want to make.
@Marcel_Audubon8 ай бұрын
how much does it cost per year to feed that high horse you rode in on??
@cioran17548 ай бұрын
@llC4ll then call it a gourmet sausage gratin, aint a coddle 😂
@cioran17548 ай бұрын
Like to see what he'd do with an Irish stew ! , fairness it does look lush 😋
@clives3448 ай бұрын
Living in France, will cook it for them, they love these traditional dishes!!
@jassonsw8 ай бұрын
I’d suggest for the final braising 30mins, lid on, in the oven followed by 30mins lid off to reduce the cooking liqueur and brown the potatoes. This also stops the bottom layer from catching and burning as it can do on the hob.
@colmmurphy10098 ай бұрын
I'd suggest if you were going to make coddle you don't follow this recipe at all. You put bacon, sausages, onion and potatoes into a pot, cover with water and simmer it for a couple of hours. No browning, caramelising, nothing. Otherwise it ain't coddle.
@jassonsw8 ай бұрын
@@colmmurphy1009 Sure that's the bare bones way, but anything can be improved with a bit of technique. Recipes evolve and there's no one recipe for coddle just as there's no one recipe for Irish stew or coq au vin. Different households all have their own versions of these things.
@colmmurphy10098 ай бұрын
@jassonsw no, that's just the way you make coddle. The bare bones method is the essense of what makes it coddle in the first place. When you add a load of other ingredients and cooking techniques it becomes a different dish. I understand your point however if you put this in front of anyone from Dublin they would tell you it ain't coddle.
@jassonsw8 ай бұрын
@@colmmurphy1009 I'm from Dublin!
@ja18898 ай бұрын
It's not that this recipe isn't delicious, it's that if people are looking to make traditional Dublin Coddle, this isn't it. So, it skews the accuracy and history of the dish. Either way though, it's delicious.@@jassonsw
@philnolan99035 күн бұрын
Great video thanks, looks delicious As another commenter has stated, in Dublin 80s/90s nothing was browned/caramelized/sauteed. Everything boiled all at once for couple hrs. Best eaten a day or two old
@fratercontenduntocculta81617 ай бұрын
I'm so happy the internet exists. I never would have known what this was had it not been posted. The recipes on here are truly priceless!
@ricksmith7631Ай бұрын
oh boy, as someone who loves food from that area, this just opened up things a bit more, sausage making this weekend and coddle on sunday. if your other recipes are anything like this, i just found a new place for some tasty dishes
@Laura-fx9we8 ай бұрын
When we were little it was a Dublin Cuddle! Comfort food extraordinaire 🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀🍀
@pauljordan44527 ай бұрын
A food cuddle, eh Laura?
@brendadrew8342 ай бұрын
I've made this as I have some Irish ancestry on my maternal side. I've also made cooked cabbage, onions, noodles and sausages which is a famous Ukrainian dish since my husband is of Russian Ukranian ancestry. There are many world renown dishes that are very similar! Even German dishes since they love potatoes and cabbage with sausages as well and many eastern European countries! Great food is really what unites us all or should! Thanks for posting this as well~ 🥰🥘🍲🧄🥬🥔
@SweatLaserXP7 ай бұрын
That is some soul-satisfying food right there. The Irish are great farmers, and the simplicity of ingredients is perfect to showcase the quality of the food. I may try this one!
@nailily25 күн бұрын
We tried this tonight and loved it. We are in the USA and our local market was missing the recommended banger and bacon. We used beer bratwurst and applewood bacon and it still came out delicious.
@johngladwin3026Ай бұрын
GARLIC! are you mad? It's Irish man.
@JohnnyBravo-tn6kc23 күн бұрын
Coddle is just throwing everything but the kitchen sink in. No food snobbery allowed around poor folks food.
@StewartBarnes-e5nАй бұрын
I've just eaten...and my mouth was salivating watching this. Definitely going to make this one.
@404-ThisUsernameIsAlreadyTaken7 ай бұрын
Cooked this up this evening right as the first chill of autumn started to hit home, it's perfect comfort food and well worth the effort, and I learned a few things along the way. Great video!
@KathiVolck4 ай бұрын
You are my favorite cook, I just love everything ❤️, I'm also am gluten free. I'm Irish descent.My grandmother used to make some of these things that you Put out
@Cdees578 ай бұрын
I could eat that right now. Yum❤
@jonasowens278 ай бұрын
i now know.
@katenorris-ww5sq8 ай бұрын
@@jonasowens270:21
@DavidJensen-nm5sf5 ай бұрын
That's what cooking is about, taking simple inexpensive ingredients and use techniques and patience.
@TheLiamMurphy8 ай бұрын
I'm Irish and I'm a Jackeen (Dublin) and this looks delicious.
@justa.american83033 ай бұрын
Thanks again. I traceed my family to Scotland and Ireland. In fact, from what I have found out, Northern Ireland is specifically near the northern coast. When I visited Scotland, I found where my Grandad was from. Now I have to head to Ireland to finish the research.
@aoconnnell8 ай бұрын
My mother & her mother used make this - two things - water, not stock, never garlic (you wouldn't find this in 60/70's Dublin) & absolutely no unsalted butter- in a Dublin supermarket, most butter is salted - ( unsalted is reserved for baking) - & nerve, ever brown the sausages! Z browning the top is an excellent idea, but that's a Lancashire Hotpot thing. Lastly, my other side GGM during WWI & the civil war, would use oysters in the base - I've never tried that one!
@davidscanlan81032 ай бұрын
I cooked a coddle a few days ago and it took about less than a n hour,simply cut the carrotts in about quarter pieces, and then the potatoes in3 pieces, onions sliced and parted rashers and sausages halved and add a vegetable stock, and parsley, and other herbs, and put it into a pot and pour boiling water into it and wait till it cooles and then add some milk before putting it on about number five on the average cooker stirring at a few intervals and after about 50 minutes simmer for a couple of min minutes 😋✌🇨🇮
@RobinsNestBindery8 ай бұрын
I absolutely cook with one hand on my hip.. :)
@jamison-jake2 ай бұрын
7:30 exactly. Those people who complain saying you are ruining the recipe or making things uneven by taste testing or those restaurant managers who claim you are "stealing" because you are taste testing need to get bent.
@johnreeves81568 ай бұрын
This looks like a definite keeper here
@promissoАй бұрын
Oh my - the Dublin Coddle looks amazing I will make this dish this week, I have only just fund your channel but better late than never. Thank you for sharing this
@harleypub8 ай бұрын
Thank you for this recipe!
@hadmatter92405 ай бұрын
Folks, a recipe is a not a blueprint, but a suggestion. You can use what ever potato, sausage, or onion you want, because you are the one eating it. Also, if you want to dice your carrots for this recipe, then do it. If you want to do the same with the potatoes, then do it. You can also cut up the sausages if you like (if using brats/Irish sausage...after you've browned them). One thing, however, is that when using leeks, you absolutely need to wash them. @Chef BIilly Parisi, that looks delish. Once the cold weather drops, I'm trying this out. TY for the recipe.
@riverstun5 ай бұрын
Yes, but then it isnt coddle anymore, It's sausage stew. What makes coddle is its sounds-disgusting but actually-isnt boiled sausages. I'm sure you could make corn dogs by wrapping bratwurst in pancake batter, but it wouldnt be corn dogs anymore (which sound good but are actually disgusting)
@lorikortegard96568 ай бұрын
Love your style of cooking❤
@LifeChatsUnfiltered40665 ай бұрын
I just made this. Wow! It is delicious, the potatoes are buttery and melt in your mouth! The combination of flavors is amazing. I used brat and that was delicious as well. I cook a lot, I have never heard of this and I am Irish! It is absolutely worth making. I do know the correct adjectives to describe this! I really am a cook and not a writer! Next time I will use your recipe for the sausage!
@sprak4048 ай бұрын
This looks awesome! Going to try making it tomorrow!
My grandmother used to make this with added gamon and other meats left over from a roast dinner. With fresh home made soda bread and irish butter. Miss you nan
@nigelhartzog95828 ай бұрын
Fabulous indeed!!
@JoseRamirez-o4p4oАй бұрын
Mexican and Italian food!!the Best in the world in my opinion!!🎉🎉🎉
@dvdbrkn8 ай бұрын
As a Dubliner, I never had coddle with chicken stock? It was always with oxtail soup rather than stock. You should try it with oxtail for a comparison. Brings back childhood memories of the smell permeating the house as it cooked slowly on the stove. Nevertheless, this looks good and I may give it a go sometime. It looks delicious. Thank you for highlighting this dish. Keep up the good work.
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
Thanks for watching! I appreciate the support!
@taritabonita228 ай бұрын
Do you know how hard it is to find oxtail stock or soup this days?
@cassieoz17028 ай бұрын
Oxtail soup just isn't available in most of the world
@Azzury.8 ай бұрын
@@cassieoz1702Anyone can make their own. Alternative to oxtail is beef shin.
@dvdbrkn8 ай бұрын
@@cassieoz1702 Sadly, this is true. I know from personal experience. Now that I no longer live in the Emerald Isle I have struggled to find the oxtail soup satchets I was able to readily buy in Dublin. At least, when I lived there you could easily buy it. I may try this recipe sometime. It has been a while since I had coddle.
@russellrlf5 ай бұрын
Wow! Great vid! This guy shows the traditional recipe but also common substitutes. Plus the entire time he is giving cutting, safety, and hack tips! Sub'd!
@alunjprice8 ай бұрын
Back bacon is cured from a loin, rashers are the name for the individual slices of back, streaky or any other type of bacon. What passes off for bacon in most of America is pretty bad compared to what we get in the UK and Ireland. A top tip if any American who visits this side of the pond and fancies some sausages, don’t buy Richmond Irish sausage, they are utterly disgusting and they contain barely any meat.
@JamesChurchill38 ай бұрын
Richmond have recently come up with a line of vegetarian sausages, which was funny as I thought they'd already been making meat-free sausages for years.
@Hullj8 ай бұрын
States' belly bacon is much better than UK streaky bacon. Back bacon is a different food altogether and the US's loss. Man I wish I could buy back bacon. Only way to get it here really is to make it
@Marcel_Audubon8 ай бұрын
how much does it cost per month to feed that high horse you rode in on??
@robplazzman60498 ай бұрын
With you all the way on the Richmonds. Bloody sad sausages.
@colonelfustercluck4866 ай бұрын
@@JamesChurchill3 vegetarian sausages... that's pc and woke AF..... they should plead guilty at the first opportunity!!! And your comment was pretty funny.
@raysmyth8596Ай бұрын
I've had coddle hundreds of times, cooked by my mother, both grannies and cooks in the Naval Service (in my time a huge number of Dubs in the service), it is my all time favourite dish. Never had either leeks or garlic (garlic?? oh, the horror) in it, but delicious, really delicious. Soda bread and butter to sop it all up, the bowl should be clean before one finishes!☺
@markp44518 ай бұрын
Very good. Period!
@danne8a8 күн бұрын
Love this recipe! I've cooked it twice already as it has become a favorite amongst my family and I!
@StacyInLove18 ай бұрын
I will try this... but I think that a bottle of a nice porter in the braise might be just about right.
@starwyvern0105 ай бұрын
This is a truly amazing dish. I tried your recipe and just took my first few bites and had to thank you right away :D
@seamus97508 ай бұрын
It's fookin delicious 😅
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
😂
@travisdemonbreum85058 ай бұрын
Love it!
@VomicaEmanio7 ай бұрын
For anyone in Sweden, I think that the "rashers" bacon is very close to what, in swedish, is called "stekfläsk" It worked perfectly for this recipe at least =)
@colonelfustercluck4866 ай бұрын
in English, a 'rasher' is one SLICE, typically of bacon. That word is only used with bacon as far as I know. Rashers, is more than one slice of bacon.
@sambomcl8 ай бұрын
That's just a stew/hotpot made with sausages instead of beef or lamb. Home comfort food that has been made in the UK for centuries.
@thexandman887 ай бұрын
LOL I loved how you said that I'm probably not going to make my own Irish bangers and that Bratwurst is an excellent substitute right after I thought "Yeah, right, I'm not going to make my own sausages, I'll just use Bratwurst instead" 😂I love your energy and your passion in this video so I subbed!
@jasonparrish86708 ай бұрын
Well now you've gone and done it, I'll have to pull out my sausage making equipment, buy some fresh casings, and run through your sausage-making video :)
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
Boom!
@IrishGuitarGaz2 ай бұрын
Great dish, I've made this a few times - also do something similar in the large slow cooker with pretty much the same ingredients (more like a sausage stew) for when I'm making larger portions or want enough food to last the family a couple of nights. The stock really adds so much flavour to it, I tend to add more than I need then use the excess at the end to make a separate gravy also. I've also now got into the habit of even boiling potatoes in stock rather than just water, be it for plain old boiled potatoes or making mash.
@Ben_19748 ай бұрын
Yeah G'day from Australia.I'm glad we found this channel as we have a Dutch Oven hardly used it but now i've got more of an idea after seeing this video thank you.I'm thinking you could cook a mini lamb roast in a D.O?to put in the oven cheers and thanks.
@Iamhome3658 ай бұрын
I have one, use it all the time. I roast chicken or beef in mine, turns out delicious, so moist! I also cook my pasta sauce, meatballs, stew, soup. You can also bake bread in it, I haven't done that
@Ben_19748 ай бұрын
@@Iamhome365 thanks! so just a mini oven in an oven?
@colonelfustercluck4866 ай бұрын
@@Ben_1974 a 'Dutch Oven' is normally a cast iron pot with a lid, like a casserole dish. You can use them over/beside hot embers to one side of a fire (outside), in an oven at home, or sometimes on top of the stove-top. So yes, you can use them as a mini-oven, inside your main oven. You can cook a chicken, a roast, a stew, bread.... actually they are quite versatile. If you do a stew with sauce and gravy, it is best to brown the meat first, then add to the pot...
@jim721720 күн бұрын
This is my absolute favorite dish that I can make, and I believe I will try this version of it. The last time I made it was for 9 guys on a wkend, didn't come out as good as this looks.
@norcalgal6925 ай бұрын
Real Irish Soda Bread does NOT have raisins or currents in it. It is flour, salt, soda and buttermilk. That's all.
@colonelfustercluck486Ай бұрын
or Soda Bread with raisins in it
@user-d5f38a2cАй бұрын
Best Sausage Recipe I've seen in my entire life
@lorenzodavolio53418 ай бұрын
I checked watching another authentic Irish cook 🧑🍳 Definitely an American and fancier version of an Irish plate. The cook actually said it’s an authentic recipe with an update of modern technique 😅 The order is kinda messed up and no leek + no oven! Bottom line the onion shouldn’t be cook American style and meat come first then you add the ingredients one by one without removing anything from the pan!
@RobMacKendrick4 ай бұрын
This is similar in concept to Scottish stovies; essentially, a one-pot meal of potatoes and carrots, often with cabbage, kale, or celery as well, tossed into a pot with chicken, sausage, or mutton and simmered in a strong stock. In my house we strain off the stock each time and freeze it for next; after a few rounds, it's incredible. (Makes the best gravy on earth, if you don't have meat juices from the rest of the meal.) The great advantage of Irish cooking is the bacon. The Irish have understood bacon.
@rhondascraftobsessions58178 ай бұрын
I really like your kitchen. It's very industrial. It reminds me of the kitchens at mess halls on Ft. Leonardwood where I used to be a cook.
@jeromedavid79448 ай бұрын
If you were cooking there in 1985 thanks for the nourishment! You helped me survive through Basic and 12B AIT @ Fort Lostinthewoods!!!
@mildlydazed96085 ай бұрын
I had no idea what a dublin coddle was before this but I love stews going to give this a try.
@jonasowens278 ай бұрын
i love yeh
@rufuspage62108 ай бұрын
Looks lovely, now off to the shop to buy the ingredients! Also, subbed!
@jaymee101008 ай бұрын
I’m Irish ☘️ , this looks yum 🤤
@edwardguzik42825 ай бұрын
I like it!!, I really like your knife skills and the content of the video. Chef, keep up the great cooking
@clubshedbrewery32208 ай бұрын
I'm from Dublin, that's not coddle but looks tasty.
@danchostanchevyordanov15777 ай бұрын
Seems like a delicious recipe. When I have time to spare I might try to make it.
@jayroser98768 ай бұрын
I went to Kroger today and they had Irish Brats that might be good. I've never seen them before.
@redvelvetshoes8 ай бұрын
No such thing as Irish bratwurst. If you use brat, Irish it ain’t
@anieldelouvain1537 ай бұрын
Plutôt rustique, mais cela semble appétissant. Je note que vous utilisez une cocotte française, Le Creuset. Excellent !
@lorikortegard96568 ай бұрын
You should do a corned beef hash 😋
@ChefBillyParisi8 ай бұрын
Already have
@neilstern710819 күн бұрын
Had a frozen ham bone i was starving so i put in a big pot with leftovers celery potatoes onions can of carrots with chicken cubes. Served it with flat noodles. I was surprised at the flavor. Must be lucky cus never had to make it again.
@lorikortegard96568 ай бұрын
Beer brats 😁
@alexon94155 ай бұрын
Wow, this look so delicious and healthy
@chuckmccullough53828 ай бұрын
Coddle is basically a leftover stew. Cute to see folks arguing about proper leftovers
@colonelfustercluck4866 ай бұрын
my leftovers are more authentic than your leftovers? Yep it's pretty bad. We'll be arguing over 'bubble and squeak' recipes next. (Both are pretty much throwing in what you can find and making a meal from it.... depending on what you have, you can choose to fry up, roast, simmer...whatever.... it's all according to circumstances and what you have to cook with)
@timivers88235 ай бұрын
Gotta make this, this week! Thanks Billy!
@redvelvetshoes8 ай бұрын
Not Dublin coddle, but close enough
@brucemurray9127Ай бұрын
Hello from a Belfast boy. Looks great. Will deffo give that a go. Have you tried Champ? Northern Irish potato dish. Down south they have Colcannon.
@notreyf8 ай бұрын
Dude, looks nice whatever it is, but it sure ain't Dublin coddle.