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The Classic Full English Breakfast

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By moonbun


The Classic Full English Breakfast

The English breakfast was made popular by the architects of the British Empire, although it had already been the tradition for centuries in rural areas of England. The breakfast was used to fortify oneself throughly first thing in the morning, to prepare for the day ahead.

The traditional English breakfast has made a substantial contribution to culinary history, and is generally accepted worldwide, much like the French croissant. Most hotels serve a breakfast buffet on the English model, however the buffet is merely a variation. It is intended to save on the time and staff which would be used during the breakfast ceremony in it's classic sense. In classic English breakfast form, the dishes are served over several courses, much in the same way that a menu is presented.



The First Course

A true English breakfast begins with a glass of orange juice or half a grapefruit which is cut into segments, sprinkled with sugar and eaten with a spoon. Prunes or stewed fruit would also be available.

Large pots of tea and coffee to be served with milk are also brought to the table.


The Second Course

Next are cornflakes or porridge. Milk is poured onto the cornflakes, but they are eaten before they become saturated. Though for the real English breakfast enthusiast, nothing surpasses freshly prepared porridge. It is made by cooking oatflakes only with water and a pinch of salt, and is served together with a knob of butter, a sprinkling of brown sugar and hot milk then added. It is said that it is only necessary to try this dish once to become virtually addicted to it!


The Third Course

The third course consists of eggs, usually fried eggs. These would be served with fried bacon. Many people would also have scrambled eggs, grilled tomatoes, mushrooms and sausages. The healthier option would be poached eggs, but most prefered theirs a little less healthy!

This part of the breakfast is what is considered to be a 'full English' today. It is also known as a 'fry up' due to the nature in which is is cooked.


The Fourth Course

Now is the choice between fish or meat. The favourite choice for most is the kipper, though another popular choice would have been deviled kidneys. Deviled meaning highly spiced. Another alternative would be kedgeree, cooked fish in curried rice.


The Fifth Course

For the fifth and final course, toast, marmalade and jam are served.

And so this marks the end of the Classic English Breakfast.


Classic Kedgeree Recipe

To serve 4:

250g long grain rice

500g turbot, cod or salmon (or a mixture)

50g butter

1 tbs curry powder

1 pinch cayenne pepper

4 hard bolied eggs sliced

2 tbs chopped parley

  • Cook the rice in salted water for 10-12 minutes.
  • Put the fish in a saucepan, cover with water.
  • Bring to the boil, remove lid and then simmer for 10 minutes.
  • Cut into large pieces, remove any bones and put to one side.
  • Melt the butter in a small pan on the hob, sprinkle the curry powder and cayenne pepper into it, and brown lightly for one minute.
  • Drain the boiled rice.
  • Stir the rice and pieces of fish into the butter and stir gently.
  • Warm for one minute over a low heat.
  • Add the sliced hard boiled egg and fold into the mix.
  • Sprinkle with parsley and serve with buttered toast.


Classic Deviled Kidneys

To serve 4:

8 whole lamb's kidneys, skinned and trimmed of fat

2 tsp mango chutney

1 tbs english mustard

1 1/2 strong mustard powder

2 tsp lemon juice

1/2 tsp salt

1 pinch cayenne pepper

Slices of bread for toasting

  • Cut the kidney's in half lengthways, without cutting through them entirely.
  • Mix the chutney, mustard, mustard powder, lemon juice, salt and cayenne pepper together well.
  • Marinate the kidneys in the above mixture for 60 minutes.
  • Grease a grill pan and set the grill temperature to maximum.
  • Remove the kidneys from the marinade.
  • Place kidneys into the grill pan, cut side facing up.
  • Grill for 3 minutes.
  • Turn and grill for a further 3 minutes.
  • Spread the kidney marinade onto slices of toast.
  • Place the kidneys in pairs onto the toast and serve.

The Fried Slice

Nowdays, instead of having toast, some people prefer to have a Fried Slice with their bacon and eggs. The difference is that the bread is buttered on both sides and placed in a dry hot frying pan until golden on both sides.

This is a really quick and simple way to make a toasted sandwich too.

  • Butter bread on both sides.
  • Place ham and cheese (or anything you like) onto the botton slice.
  • Place into dry hot frying pan.
  • Add the second slice of buttered bread on top of the filling.
  • Push down firmly with a spatula.
  • Turn and do the same on the other side.
  • Fry on both sides until golden and serve.


English Breakfast Specialities

Baked Beans

In the 1980's the leading manufacturer of baked beans had the following advertising slogan broadcast on the TV:

A million housewives every day

Pick Up a tin of beans and say,

Beanz Meanz Heinz.

The meaning of the rhyme is quite clear, but the skill of the advertising copywriter is to achieve a brilliant indentification of product and brand through the catchphrase "Beanz Meanz Heinz". A strong link was also created between the product and the brand by misspelling the words, beans and means. By replacing the S with Z, it ties in with the Heinz brand name.

Baked beans are eaten for breakfast, on a slice of toast, or with a full english; bacon, eggs, mushrooms, sausages..... As a morning snack, for lunch, for dunner or for supper. Since it has become known that the beans are particularly healthy due to the high portion of roughage and protein they contain, their popularity has increased even further.


Kippers being smoked
Kippers being smoked

Kippers

A kipper is a herring that has been gutted and smoked over a wood fire. Kippers are very popular as a breakfast dish and are most easily prepared in the following way:

A tall narrow container is filled with hot water, the water is then poured away and the kippers are placed hed downwards into the container and boiling water is poured over them. The carefully sealed container is then left in a warm place for 8-10 minutes. The water is then drained and the kippers are served with toast and butter.

Food History

In 2008 the BBC showed a series which took the presenters back into food history, having them eat exactly what people would have back in the period they were focusing on. The series entitled Supersizers, looked at various eras and the cuisines that went with them. In Edwardian Supersize Me, the Classic English Breakfast is focused on, and the true extent of food volume was realised.

A brief overview of the show can be seen here.

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The Classic Full English Breakfast in the News

  • New York embraces the full English breakfastMalaysiaNews.net6 hours ago

    A full English breakfast. Or is it a half English? Where are the beans, black pudding and fried slice? Photograph: David Ball/Corbis According to the

  • How Un-ContinentalNew York Magazine2 days ago

    The full English breakfast has become all the rage.

  • Kids gaining a taste for cerealThe New Straits Times19 hours ago

    KUALA TERENGGANU: Cereal for breakfast? It's not for everyone, especially in the state where nasi lemak, nasi dagang, nasi kerabu and keropok lekor dominate the breakfast table.

Comments

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Just_Rodney profile image

Just_Rodney  says:
15 months ago

EWxcellent, glad to see that some traditions still do not die, an english breakfast is the next best thing to an Irish breakfast.

Patty Inglish, MS profile image

Patty Inglish, MS  says:
15 months ago

What's in an Irish Breakfast?

The Full English Breakfast would be good, because I would not have to eat again until the next afternoon and would have more time to write.

moonbun profile image

moonbun  says:
15 months ago

I too would like to know what an Irish breakfast consists of. I'm guessing potatoes fit in somewhere?

Patty, I don't know how anyone could eat that much food in one sitting. This breakfast is way more than I eat in an entire day. Possibly two!

Thanks for commenting guys.

MrMarmalade profile image

MrMarmalade  says:
15 months ago

I seriously do not eat breakfast. Val has insisted for the last 50 years, I must start the day off right with breakfast.

I might give it a go now you have seduced me.

Thank you

Just_Rodney profile image

Just_Rodney  says:
15 months ago

An Irish Breakfast,

Start with the fruit or fruit juice.

Lots of Toast and some good strong breakfast tea, or coffe half coffee half hot milk.

Next course and this is the important bit.

Fried Eggs, rashers of bacon, a thick slice of fried black pudding, a thick slice of white pudding, a couple of fried pork sausages, a couple of frried potato fritters.

Then mop your plate clean with fried bread, you cut a couple of thick slices of bread and reheat the frying pan in which the eggs etc was fried, fry till golden brown on both sides.

Finish of with more toast or fried bread with cheese and preserves.

Have this at about 09h00, it takes an hour or so to eat it. You wont need lunch till about 15h00.

This is an ideal breakfast for any one working in cold climates. High in fats and cholestrol and all those nice bits that make eating fun.

Cailin Gallagher profile image

Cailin Gallagher  says:
15 months ago

Ah! This sounds delightful. Irish and English breakfasts are truly good breakfasts for farm-hands and hard-working people. When I go to Ireland, I must admit I gain a few pounds from the breakfasts alone. Delicious!

Just_Rodney profile image

Just_Rodney  says:
15 months ago

Cailin, I found as a tourist in Ireland, the breakfast set me for the entire day, and did not eat until late nite.

moonbun profile image

moonbun  says:
15 months ago

Thanks for the insight into the Irish breakfast Rodney, sounds just as filling as the English version! Way too much much food for me to even think about eating in one sitting.

Thanks again for the comments guys.

Christoph Reilly profile image

Christoph Reilly  says:
14 months ago

Moonbun: It was my pleasure to enjoy several English breakfasts while vacationing in London. Not really that different from a big, American breakfast, except we don't eat in courses and most people would drink coffee instead of tea. Thanks for the great hub and making me hungry! I hope you brought enough English breakfast for everybody!

Shalini Kagal profile image

Shalini Kagal  says:
13 months ago

I know it's probably hard for people who haven't been to India to believe, but the English breakfast in some of the old clubs is one of the remnants of the British Raj that has survived to this day. I don't eat breakfast but my husband loves a good English breakfast whenever he's on holiday!

sandra ybert  says:
4 months ago

The full English breakfast is as follows

small glass of orange

pot of tea hot milk and sugar cups and saucers

cerials and milk and sugar sprinkled over

then the main course

one full slice of bacon cut in two plane or smoked not to thin

one egg fried or scrambled or pouched

one mushroom and one tomato grilled or fried

one sausage pork and kidneys or black pudding or white pudding ( if liked)

half a piece of thick bread fried nice with beans on

sliced bread and butter in dish brown or red sauce

another pot of tea hot milk and sugar

Toast in dish or rack another dish of butter and marmolade no jam

this could be interchanged to main course being kippers and scrambled eggs

2 boiled eggs and soldiers or haddock and pouched egg or kippers on there own with bread and butter or pouched eggs on toast or white pudding and eggs or a bacon sandwich or sausage sandwich or egg sandwich ,scambled eggs on toast tomatos on toast ,mushrooms on toast and since the war beans on toast but the best one was dripping on bread with salt on walking to school

this would last at leased an hour every morning from 7-30 till 8-30 am

and people read the morning paper as they got through it

at lunch they would just have a sandwich and a drink

and people used to get home at night at 7pm/ 8pm to have there evening meal

so they were being fed twice a day at 12 hour intervals with a meal

one to work on one to sleep on so we were not being over fed it was not the done thing in britain to stop half way through the day to eat a meal it took hours for the food to cook on the black lead graites porrige used to be cooked over night

we used to have 3 courses and cheese and a light super warm milk horlicks or ovaltine and a biscuit

no picking at bits of food

bharthiae profile image

bharthiae  says:
4 months ago

Delightful breakfast; to be followed with a relaxing nap.

What else can one do after exerting so much !

Epsilon5 profile image

Epsilon5  says:
3 months ago

Much too much food, but it all looks delicious (minus the deviled kidneys).

moonbun profile image

moonbun  says:
3 months ago

I agree on both counts!

askjanbrass profile image

askjanbrass  says:
2 months ago

Great Hub on breakfast..

Thanks!

kartika damon profile image

kartika damon  says:
2 months ago

Lots of fun to read - I have a UK grandfather and all of my family came from England originally so I'm a bit of an Anglophile! I love everything but the fish and kidneys! Kartika

moonbun profile image

moonbun  says:
2 months ago

It is a bit of an acquired taste the classic full english breakfast, but I guess there's a bit of something for everyone what with it being so extensive!

Thanks for commenting Kartika :)

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