Shepherds Pie

The pie you make when the shepherd comes home to the cottage and has a party.

Dear reader,

Last week I cooked a rolled lamb shoulder and still have some of it left in the refrigerator. I thought I’d make a shepherds pie with a difference. It’s traditional to use lamb in a shepherds pie and beef in a cottage pie. 

I have no idea what to call this pie apart from lamb and beef pie topped with mashed potato. 

I hope the title of this post gives you an idea of what was going through my mind.

The reference to a party reflects all the peppercorns I cooked with the lamb last week. I love the way peppercorns create a party in my mouth when I add them to a dish.

I find the almost numbing feeling of the mucosa of my buccal cavity and the soft sensitive epithelium of my lips exciting. Yes, I know I’m a bit of an oddball.

Now you could be asking yourself, it’s November, and I live in Australia, why am I cooking pie when I should be making a salad!

Check out the Australian Government Bureau of Meteorology for what’s going on http://www.bom.gov.au/.

Australian Government Bureau of Meteorology Bureau National Operations Centre 

Satellite Notes for 0000UTC Chart Issued at 1433 AEDT Saturday on 13 November 2021

A complex low system is present just off the southeast of the continent. The low-level to middle-level cloud band associated with this system is visible over NSW, Vic and Tas.

A trough extends parallel to the eastern coast of Qld. Thunderstorms also, for northern tropics.

The remainder of the continent is primarily cloud-free, aside from low-level clouds from onshore flow over much of the continent’s southern coast. 

Lamb and corned beef potato mash pie

Ingredients

  • Leftover pressure cooker lamb and peppercorns
  • Tin of corned beef
  • Celery
  • Carrot
  • Onion
  • Worcestershire sauce
  • Flour
  • Cooking sherry
  • Instant mashed potato
  • Grated cheese

Instructions

  1. Lovingly sharpen your cook’s knife (as iron sharpens iron, so a friend sharpens a friend Proverbs 27:17 NLT).
  2. Cut the lamb into small pieces. 
  3. Place the meat into a bowl with some flour and coat the lamb with the white stuff.
  4. Dice the celery, carrot, and onion and set aside.
  5. Warm a skillet and add some cooking oil.
  6. Put the floured meat and peppercorns into the skillet and gently cook to brown it off.
  7. Add in the contents of the tin of corned beef.
  8. Mix everything through until it’s evenly mixed.
  9. Add in the carrot, onion, and celery and allow it all to simmer until the vegetables have cooked through.
  10. Add a splash of cooking sherry and a good slug of Worcestershire sauce.
  11. Evaporate the liquid by simmering everything.
  12. Allow everything to cool in the skillet.
  13. Add a portion to a pie dish and put the rest in another container for another time.
  14. Make the instant potato mash according to the manufacturer’s instructions for use.
  15. Mix some grated cheese into the potato mash and lay it across the top of the pie contents.
  16. Put the pie into a moderate oven and cook until the surface of the potato mash has started to change colour to brown.
  17. Serve the pie however you like and with whatever you like.
  18. Before you eat, though, take the time to give thanks to the Lord and thank Him for his grace.

Thoughts on shepherding

Well, not really about shepherding as much as the inspiration for thinking of shepherds comes from Thursday’s verse of the day in the bible app I use. It was Psalm 23:4. If you want to read some background check out Matthew Henry.

Final thoughts

  • Would you mix your meats in a pie?
  • Do you like lots of peppercorns in your mouth?
  • How do you feel about instant potato mash?
The pie you make when the shepherd comes home to the cottage and has a party

Shepherds Pie My reduced carbohydrate version

It’s been a cold weekend in Canberra, and I had some lamb mince in the refrigerator.

A portion of shepherds pie
A portion of shepherd’s pie

Ingredients

  • Lamb mince
  • Onion finely diced
  • Celery finely diced
  • Carrot finely diced
  • Spring onion finely sliced
  • Garlic onion finely sliced
  • Red chilli finely sliced
  • Parsley finely cut
  • Coon cheese slices
  • Philadelphia cream cheese
  • Cauliflower
  • Kent pumpkin
  • Chicken stock
  • Red wine
  • Queensland nuts
  • Tomato paste
  • Salt and pepper
  • Butter
  • Worcestershire sauce
  • Nutmeg

Method for the mash

  1. Steam the roughly diced cauliflower and pumpkin. You want enough to cover a baking tray when mashed.
  2. When the vegetables are soft, drain them thoroughly
  3. Put them back into the saucepan and blend with a stick blender
  4. Add some cream cheese to thicken
  5. Add some spring onion, chilli and garlic onions

Method for base/filling

  1. In a saucepan, soften the onion
  2. Add the celery, carrot, spring onion and garlic onion and soften
  3. Add the lamb mince and break up
  4. Add the tomato paste
  5. Cook until everything is loose
  6. Add Worcestershire sauce and red wine
  7. Cook until the liquid has reduced away
  8. Add a good large nob of butter
  9. Add the Queensland nuts that have been ground into a nut meal
  10. Transfer the thickened filling to the base of a rectangular baking tray

Method to finish

  1. Over the meat, add a single layer of Coon cheese slices and add some nutmeg
  2. Layer the mash over the top
  3. Add some pepper and paprika if you like
  4. Place into a preheated oven at 150 °C (300 °F) for about an hour  and the mash should be golden brown
  5. Remove from the oven and allow to rest for about ten minutes
  6. Prepare a plated up version
  7. Capture an image of the plate
  8. Eat the shepherds pie
  9. Wash up and clean up
  10. Blog about it
A close up of the shepherds pie straight out of the oven
A close up of the shepherds pie straight out of the oven
A portion of shepherds pie
A portion of shepherds pie