Bedfordshire clanger recipe (2024)

Table of Contents
Ingredients Method FAQs References

Bedfordshire clanger recipe (1)

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A little bit like a good old fashion British pasty, a Bedfordshire clanger was a staple on farms back in the good old days. It was created so that workers could take a full meal out to the fields when they were going to be work all day. Wrapped up in pastry was two thirds a savoury pasty, and one third a sweet pudding - genius. This British classic has been forgotten and we aren’t sure why. With both sweet and savoury in crumbly shortcrust this Bedfordshire clanger is a winner for any lunchtime. We've plumped for tried and tested flavours, with a ham and potato filling featuring in the savoury side and an apple and cinnamon mixture filling the sweet side. However, once you've nailed this basic Bedfordshire clanger recipe you can have fun experimenting with all sorts of flavour combos - from curry and tropical fruits to pulled chicken and set custard, there's no limit to what you can combine in this tasty pastry recipe.

Ingredients

  • 1 small gammon joint (around 750g)
  • 2-3 bottles of cider (around 600ml)
  • 1 bay leaf
  • 2 sage leaves
  • 2 apples
  • 1 white onion, finely sliced
  • 25g butter (for onions)
  • 2g salt (for onions)
  • 1 ½ tsp brown sugar (for onions)
  • 3 apples, peeled and quartered
  • 3 tbsp brown sugar
  • 10g melted butter
  • ¼ Lemon, juice
  • 1 tsp cinnamon
  • 10g Dijon mustard

for the pastry

  • 400g plain flour
  • 2 eggs, one for glazing
  • 4g salt
  • 130ml water
  • 85 g suet or vegetable shortening
  • 50g butter, chilled and grated

Method

  1. Place the gammon in a deep pan with the cider, bay leaf and sage, so that the liquid is covering the joint. Put on a medium heat. Bring to a slow simmer and cook for 3 hours. Once cooked cut into bite sized pieces.
  2. Place the butter in a frying pan and wait until the it becomes frothy. Add the onions with a little bit of salt and cook until translucent. Once cooked through add the brown sugar and continue to cook on a low to medium heat until they are golden brown and caramelised. Turn off the heat and allow the onions to cool at room temperature.
  3. Place the apples in a frying pan with the melted butter and the lemon juice and cook until soft on the outside but still hard in the centre. Add the sugar and the cinnamon and leave to cool.
  4. Place the peeled and chopped potatoes into salted water and par boil. Then leave to cool.
  5. For the pastry, sieve the flour and salt into a bowl. Add the suet and the butter and rub in with your fingertips until you have a breadcrumb-like consistency. Add in the water and one egg and bring together. Once formed, make the pastry into a flat circle, clingfilm and place in the fridge to chill (if you’re in a rush place the pastry in the freezer).
  6. Preheat the oven to 180C degrees.
  7. Once chilled roll out the pastry, 2mm thin and cut 10cm by 15cm.
  8. Like when making a sausage roll, you only want the filling to cover one half (length-ways) of your pastry, so that you have enough pastry to bring over the top to cover everything neatly.
  9. For a Bedfordshire clanger you want the savoury filling to fill 2/3rd of the space and the sweet side to fill the remaining third. Place a thin wall of pastry at the two third point to prevent leakage between the two sides when you add the fillings.
  10. For the savoury side, first place a thin layer of Dijon mustard on the pastry, then pile the gammon, caramelised onions and potatoes on top.
  11. For the sweet side place the apples with some of the juices.
  12. Egg wash around the three sides and pull the remaining pastry over the top and seal. Egg wash the top of the clanger and place in the fridge for 10.
  13. Take the clanger out of the fridge, slash three times on each side, sprinkle with brown sugar on the sweet end and salt on the savoury and bake for 30 minutes or until golden brown.

Bedfordshire clanger recipe (2)

Food Editor

Jessica Dady is Food Editor at GoodtoKnow and has over 11 years of experience as a digital editor, specialising in all things food, recipes, and SEO. From the must-buy seasonal food hampers and advent calendars for Christmas to the family-friendly air fryers that’ll make dinner time a breeze, Jessica loves trying and testing various food products to find the best of the best for the busy parents among us. Over the years of working with GoodtoKnow, Jessica has had the privilege of working alongside Future’s Test Kitchen to create exclusive videos - as well as writing, testing, and shooting her own recipes. When she’s not embracing the great outdoors with her family at the weekends, Jessica enjoys baking up a storm in the kitchen with her favourite bakes being chocolate chip cookies, cupcakes, and a tray of gooey chocolate brownies.

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Bedfordshire clanger recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why is it called a Bedfordshire clanger? ›

Place of Origin

You might nibble a pasty or gobble a pie, but you clang a Bedfordshire clanger. That's because this pastry, which comes from the South-East of the United Kingdom, takes its name from the local slang for eating voraciously. (Think of the noise teeth make when clashing together.)

What is a British clanger? ›

The clanger is an elongated suet crust dumpling, sometimes described as a savoury type of roly-poly pudding.

What food do the Clangers eat? ›

They speak only in a whistled language, and eat green soup (supplied by the Soup Dragon) and blue string pudding. The programmes were originally broadcast on BBC1 between 1969 and 1972, followed by a special episode which was broadcast in 1974.

What is a Titanic clanger? ›

The Titanic Clanger provided by the team at Usel would have been a shipyard staple back in the 1900s, combining the lunch and the box 'rolled' into one – a hearty meal for hard workers!

Where can I buy Bedfordshire clangers? ›

All Bedfordshire Clangers - old and new - available everyday Monday to Saturday at Gunns Bakery, High Street Bedford, Hitchin Street Biggleswade and at our flagship shop in Market Square Sandy, where you can eat your Clanger in our tearoom with a pot of whipped cream served with the "dessert" end!

What is a co*ckney pie? ›

Pie and mash is a traditional working-class food, originating in the Docks of London. Often accompanied with jellied eels, the dish has been popularised as "a co*ckney classic". It typically consists of a minced beef pie, mashed potato, and a parsley sauce known as liquor.

What is a squidgy in British slang? ›

(especially British English, informal) ​soft and wet, and easily squashed.

What is a porky pie in co*ckney slang? ›

Porky pie = lie

A fib or a lie; to tell a pork pie means to fabricate something and it has to be one of the all-time favourite phrases in the co*ckney Rhyming slang dictionary.

What is Clanger slang for? ›

Clanger is a colloquial term for 'mistake'. It may also refer to: Clangers, a television series by Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin. Traditional nickname for a person local to Bedfordshire, England.

What is the blue string soup Clangers? ›

Clanger food. The Blue String Pudding is grown on spaghetti trees. Together with the green soup this forms the staple diet of the Clangers. The Soup-wells are impenetrable to all but the Soup-dragon.

Who invented the Clangers? ›

The children's stop-motion animation Clangers was first broadcast on 16 November 1969. It was created by Oliver Postgate and Peter Firmin – with charming music by Vernon Elliott.

What is a clanger in Scottish slang? ›

Clanger is a colloquial term for 'mistake'.

What does clanger mean? ›

plural clangers. Britannica Dictionary definition of CLANGER. [count] British, informal. : a bad and embarrassing mistake : blunder.

What is a clanger in Ireland? ›

(chiefly UK, Australia, New Zealand, Ireland, informal, often in the phrase drop a clanger) A very noticeable mistake; an attention-getting faux pas.

Why is the pasty cornish? ›

And so the humble Cornish Pasty was born. The wives of Cornish tin miners would lovingly prepare these all-in-one meals to provide sustenance for their spouses during their gruelling days down the dark, damp mines, working at such depths it wasn't possible for them to surface at lunchtime.

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