Traditional Newfoundland Jiggs DinnerThis Boiled Vegetable Meal Is Enjoyed by Locals and Tourists
Jiggs dinner is a traditional Newfoundland meal of salted meat, vegetables and a pudding made from yellow split peas. All of the ingredients are cooked in boiling water.
With very little fresh meat, or cold storage for keeping it, early Newfoundlanders used corned or salted meat in many meals. Using home-grown vegetables and dried yellow split peas, jiggs dinner became one of the most common of these meals. It remains a favorite today. Corned or Salt Beef (or Spareribs)These are chunks of beef or spareribs that have been cured or pickled in brine. For a meal like jiggs dinner, the meat is soaked in cold water overnight to remove some of the salt. Otherwise, the meal would be too salty to eat. The VegetablesIn early Newfoundland, most people kept a vegetable garden to grow their own food. The vegetables were usually stored in an underground or sod cellar. The most common vegetables used in a jiggs dinner are potatoes, carrots, turnip, cabbage and parsnips. Yellow Split Peas Pudding (or Pease Pudding)The dried peas for the pudding are placed in a cloth bag and soaked in cold water overnight. They are cooked along with the salt beef and vegetables. When the pudding is ready, it is often mashed with butter and black pepper. Traditional Newfoundland Jiggs DinnerIngredients:
Steps:
Vegetable Hash from Leftover Jiggs DinnerMany people use the leftover vegetables from a jiggs dinner to make a vegetable hash the next day. A little salt pork is fried in a pan. The chopped up vegetables are added to the rendered fat and mixed together. Oil can be used in place of the pork. Many restaurants in Newfoundland serve jiggs dinner. It is also a favorite at events like church suppers and community festival days. Jiggs dinner is a warm, hearty meal on a cold day. For more articles on Newfoundland and Labrador see The Thomas Howe Demonstration Forest, Moor-Crafts and Gifts Offers Homemade Fudge, and Toutons Made by Frying Bread Dough. Sources: Ultramar collectors recipe books: Traditional Recipes of Atlantic Canada, Target Marketing Inc., St. John’s, Newfoundland. Jesperson, Ivan F., Fat-back and Molasses: A Collection of Favorite Old Recipes from Newfoundland and Labrador. St. John’s, Newfoundland: Jesperson Press, 1974. Hines, Sherman, Newfoundland Pictorial Cookbook. Halifax, Nova Scotia: Nimbus Publishing Limited, 1990.
The copyright of the article Traditional Newfoundland Jiggs Dinner in Culinary Travel is owned by Stella Walsh. Permission to republish Traditional Newfoundland Jiggs Dinner in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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