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Whatever happened to the sunday Roast?

(54 Posts)
suebailey1 Sat 06-Sept-14 09:36:14

I heard on the radio the other day that the Sunday Roast is less popular and therefore less often cooked at home than ever. Of course there are many reasons for that - time, economy, personal taste but I wondered what your usual Sunday fare is? I cook a roast probably every other Sunday more chicken than anything else although we do splash out on a long slow roast of brisket (Dh prefers it to top side) and last weekend a joint leg of lamb from Waitrose- £151 couldn't do that too often. I alternate with a big paella one week, a casserole usually beef and red wine or beer and sometimes a Shepherds Pie or lasagne. Some new ideas would be very welcome.

FlicketyB Sun 07-Sept-14 08:19:24

A chicken lasts me weeks. After the roast meal I take all the remaining meat off the carcase, divide it into meal size portions, and freeze it. The carcase goes in the pot to be turned into stock and that too goes into the freezer as soon as it has cooled. I then use the frozen meat and stock as required over the next few months.

DD, when a student used to make a chicken last five days. Roast on Sunday, roast meat reheated in gravy on Monday, casseroled on Tuesday and Wednesday and curry on Thursday. The carcase was turned into stock on Sunday and made into soup to last several days. The meat was always kept in the fridge and very thoroughly cooked and recooked on every day she used it. She never ate the meat cold.

tcherry Sun 07-Sept-14 08:27:48

Ana everyone was enjoying this thread and wanted to contribute then you storm in with your usual Negative comments!!

Your comment:
"These posts are nearly all the same as those posted on the thread we had going on this subject in May...grin"----

So what!!--if you don't want to comment then don't but why spoil everyone else's fun

I had not seen this thread before and enjoyed reading the posts.

Brendawymms Sun 07-Sept-14 08:40:27

I do a roast on Sunday and it's also the only meal we have at the table, albeit in the kitchen. The rest of the week it's off a tray.
I try not to spend more that £3 a day on meat (or £21 a week) so a joint costing say £9 to £10 has to do three meals. One hot, one cold and then one curried.
I buy lamb when it's on half price offers and freeze it so not too pricy that way. This week it's a £5 chicken from Aldi for £4.99. Three meals easy.

suebailey1 Sun 07-Sept-14 09:12:48

Our £15 lamb - went for three days (for 2) and then a sandwich so it was worth it. I'm not a big fan of cold meat though and hated it when my mother used to serve it up on Monday with new potatoes and peas- the only vegetable served in her kitchen - with the exception of baked beans.

Having a casserole today. There was a pack of Sainsbury game casserole in the freezer. Not sure if I'm keen but will do lots of veg.

suebailey1 Sun 07-Sept-14 09:15:15

Ana so sorry to have bored you. I await your erudite postings for my edification.

Tegan Sun 07-Sept-14 09:38:21

The S.O. [who did a course of some kind decades ago] won't use re heated gravy [said on the course no reheated gravy or rice; I only found out about rice a couple of years ago so I'm lucky to have survived this long confused], so what is it with reheated gravy and, if that is the case, why is stock not poisonous? Maybe what he was taught was not to reheat gravy that had been made and kept warm for several hours [it was a catering course of some kind]? Given that his cooking hygiene can be a bit slap happy in other ways [not as careful with implements used to cut raw chicken for example] the gravy thing puzzles me.

Tegan Sun 07-Sept-14 09:39:44

...also the hundreds of new gransnetters on the competition thread won't have read the May one wink......

Iam64 Sun 07-Sept-14 09:42:01

Sunday roast is a much loved tradition in our extended family. It's such an easy meal to prepare, and extra potatoes/veg mean it can usually be extended to feed any family/friends who decide to join us. I made a meat and pot pie with the remnants of the lamb roast last week, and lie so many others here, never "waste" the left overs.
Today, there won't be a roast here, as we're invited to join a birthday celebration in one of our children's extended in law families. There is to be an Italian theme (special request from one of the young ones) with lasagne as a main course. I wonder if that's what the complaints are, that we're substituting non British Sunday roast types at family/friends get togethers. We often "do" a Mexican/North African/Greek etc at Sunday afternoon get togethers, because it's so easy to put together, keep warm and as ever, increase/reduce the amount of food to fit the number of people. What's not to like smile

littleflo Sun 07-Sept-14 09:42:33

How do you cook your roast potatoes. One of my Dils' does hers in olive oil and butter they are lovely. My late Mil cooked hers in lard without boiling first, I loved those too.

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 07-Sept-14 09:52:09

Boil 'em for a little while, shake 'em up in the saucepan with lid to rough them up a bit, roast in rapeseed oil.

Or, if there's just the two of us here, I might just microwae them for a few minutes to soften them, and then roast as before.

Don't roast too quickly.

Pittcity Sun 07-Sept-14 09:52:29

We love a Sunday Roast. Have a nice, if tiny, piece of beef defrosting for this evening.

As I am cooking today, I will parboil Maris Pipers empty the water and shake them in the pan to fluff up the outsides and then just throw them in around the meat. Can't do this with chicken though -then I heat up rapeseed oil and throw the spuds in with other root veg.

DH uses much the same methods as me but his roast always comes out completetly different to mine confused

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 07-Sept-14 09:52:45

Tegan grin

MiceElf Sun 07-Sept-14 09:56:36

Not so much in the summer, but in the winter when all the family come for Sunday lunch / dinner (it's generally about 4.00 pm when we start) I do a proper roast. It's the only time we eat red meat and I try to choose a joint which feeds the eight or nine of us satisfactorily but with nothing left over.

I always serve it it in the French way though, as my French mother did. A plate of crudités to begin, then a separate vegetable course followed by the roast meat and potatoes and then a green salad on the same plate to mop up the juices. And then a Tarte or fruit. I love doing this big family meal and they love eating it.

Elizabeth1 Sun 07-Sept-14 10:32:13

When on holiday I always look for a Sunday roast cause I'm just too far removed from making one at home. Think because I was working soo very hard I felt just too exhausted to be bothered. I'm salivating now at the thought of a decent Sunday roast and might in fact think about making one in the near future. However, I can only focus on the afternoon tea some of us Gransnetters will be having today in the beautiful city of Edinburgh. smile

Ana Sun 07-Sept-14 10:41:53

So sorry if my comment dismayed some of you - I hardly think it ruined the thread for everyone else!

kittylester Sun 07-Sept-14 10:43:12

I parboil Maris Pipers and, at the same time, have a roasting tin with goose fat in a really hot oven. I drain the potatoes and let the steam disperse, shake the potatoes and then I tip the goose fat over the potatoes in their pan. This uses less fat and ensures my potatoes are covered all over! They take about thirty minutes so can be done while the meat rests, the Yorkshires cook and I make the gravy.

My mother said they were the best she'd ever tasted confused

Elegran Sun 07-Sept-14 10:46:58

I won't be eating very much for this sunday lunchtime - bread and cheese probably. Must leave plenty of space for afternoon tea.

etheltbags1 Sun 07-Sept-14 10:55:53

I don't do roasts as I live alone but even when DH was alive, I was resentful of the time it took. It would take me all of my precious sunday morning doing the veg, then a long time doing the dishes afterwards so it meant that we had little time to go out, by the time Id done them it was three oclock and not worth going out.

I have a slow cooker full of veggie soup for today though, it doesn't need looking after and I can freeze what s left or use tomorrow. The only time this year I have ever roasted anything was for xmas dinner.

kittylester Sun 07-Sept-14 11:07:49

Forgot to say - you need to put them back in the oven (doh)

jinglbellsfrocks Sun 07-Sept-14 11:35:21

NShSh! grin

Soutra Sun 07-Sept-14 12:15:56

oooh envy Edinburgh Gransnetters - have a lovely time! Have a teacake for me, won't you? I so miss going up to Scotland late summer/early autumn each year - the last time we had our regular visit was 3 years ago when DH's health while not great, was a little more predictable!
Sunday roasts are such a typically British meal aren't they? And actually no more work than an "ordinary" meal as long as your timings are right. When we moved out of London to the country we had a stream of friends and former neighbours to visit for Sunday lunch and I managed to go to church with the children and DH in those days too. Preliminary drink at the village pub, leisurely lunch, kids all out in the garden together, bit of a walk to show them the surroundings, tea and then wave them off home. Happy days! The enthusiasm for visiting us in the country began to wane though when the weather got worse and winter kicked in and especially om the occasion when I had to provide clothes for said friends' mud drenched London children!
I think this is a tradition which we need to think about reviving - certainly much better than the present-day obsession with shopping on a Sunday.

merlotgran Sun 07-Sept-14 18:52:36

DD1 rarely cooks a Sunday roast. Tonight they're having chilli-con-carne hmm

I was watching her from the kitchen window earlier, weeding her small garden, listening to the radio, then relaxing on the patio with a glass of wine.

I was washing up having spent most of the morning doing the roast.

Who's the idiot?

Soutra Mon 08-Sept-14 09:54:13

1st rule of Sunday lunch (ideally any meal)

(S)he who cooks does not wash up.

It is also said that one man's Sunday lunch is another woman's Saturday night sad

Atqui Mon 08-Sept-14 20:03:53

We have our roast meal on a Saturday. It's a hangover from when we worked... Sunday evening was spoilt by 'planning' for the following week , so,we decided to have it on Saturday instead... Far more relaxing!

Deedaa Mon 08-Sept-14 21:46:01

Tegan the problem with stock or gravy is that it is pretty much the same as the cultures used to grow germs in laboratories, and that is something they do very well. In a commercial kitchen you are always told to throw stock out at the end of the day - no more stock pot simmering away on the back of the stove. I've always found that it's fine as long as you don't keep it for days and you take care to reheat it thoroughly.