The Cornish Pasty | Saffron Cake | Cornish pilchard | Cornish Cream Tea | Cornish Clotted Cream | Fish Recipe Stargazy Pie | Saffron Cake
No Cornwall Holiday is complete without sampling a delicious proper Cornish pastie. Whether served piping hot, crisp and golden brown and just out of the oven, or eaten cold as a lunch buffet snack with a sprig of parsley. A way I used to enjoy on cold winter days as a child was wrapped in foil to keep it warm, immediately after being cooked. Never ever served warmed up in a microwave.
For the Pastry ( This is for Shortcrust)
The Cornish Pasty Filling
Finely chop the steak. Dice the potato, swede and onion.
You may prefer to slice them.
Add seasoning.
Mix all in a bowl or to be really authentic use your kitchen table top.
Cooking your Cornish Pasty Place on lightly greased metal baking tray in the middle of a preheated oven, for around 40 minutes at 450 F . The pasty is cooked when their undersides turn brown and crisp.
There is as much folklore around the Cornish Pasty as there are recipe variations. One such tale said it was bad luck for fishermen to take a pasty on board a boat, but then again I know a modern day skipper that 'loves his pasties'. A very famous photograph from the late Nineteenth Century shows a group of tin miners at 'Croust Time' , that is meal time to you and I, tucking into very large pasties. Incidentally the mining boom was largely over by the 1860's Such pasties would have meat at one end and a fruit filling at the other.
Whatever the truth there is no doubt that the pasty formed an important part of many working Cornishman's diet, be they miners, farmers, or fishermen. With the decline of the mining industry in Cornwall many Cornishmen were forced to emigrate, as far afield as the USA, Australia, New Zealand and South Africa taking the pasty recipe with them.
Though the recipe above uses shortcrust pastry, many people prefer flaky pastry, being lighter on the stomach. My grandmother, a Cornish woman through and through, used to add gravy into the slit of the pasty before cooking.
© Cornish Light
Here are some
Nice Places to Stay |
Holiday and Touring Parks |
Hotels and Country Houses
Camping |
Self Catering and Holiday Cottages |
Bed and Breakfast and Guesthouses |
Activity Breaks
Home |
If you've not visited our site before please visit our Welcome page
Cornwall by Cornishlight A Travel Guide with Beautiful Pictures
Home |
Towns and Villages |
Places to See |
Accommodation in Cornwall |
Customs and Culture |
Cornwall Coast |
Cornish Life |
Cycling |
Things To Do |
Walking |
Beach Guide |
Cornwall Tourist Brochures
The Cornish Pasty
Legal Notice Copyright Cornish Light
Page updated March 2005
1998-2012
The Cornish Pasty