British Recipes
58 recipes

Mary Berry Runner Bean Chutney Recipe

Mary Berry Raspberry Coulis: Seedless Fruit Sauce

Mary Berry Coconut Sponge Cake

Mary Berry Beef Chili with Sweet Mango Chutney in 20 Minutes

Mary Berry Blackberry Apple Jam Recipe

Mary Berry's Three Bean Salad with Fresh Herbs and Dijon Dressing

Crispy Protein Batter Stuffed Zucchini Flowers with Ricotta

Low-Carb Rhubarb and Custard Tart

Fat-Burning Raspberry Vinaigrette

Almond Flour Low-Carb Oatcakes with Flax

Easy Keto Butter Chicken with Creamy Spiced Tomato Sauce

Keto Toad in the Hole with Almond Flour Batter

Low Carb Sticky Toffee Pudding with Warm Sauce

Keto Gin and Tonic with Basil and Lemon

Gluten-Free Yorkshire Puddings: Crispy & Golden

Iced Lemon Poppy Seed Shortbread Cookies

Parma Ham-Wrapped Monkfish with Sun-Dried Tomato

Lemon Buttermilk Pound Cake with Syrup Glaze

Low-Carb Almond Flour Lemon Blueberry Scones Recipe

Cinnamon Apple Quick Soak Overnight Oats

Crispy Chickpea Caesar Pasta Salad with Tofu Dressing

Homemade Strawberry Almond Granola with Chia Seeds

Vegan No-Bake Dark Chocolate Hazelnut Cheesecake

Vegan GF Double Chocolate Banana Cake
British cooking runs on butter, flour, and cream. Forget trends.
The backbone is pastry work. Shortcrust needs cold butter cut into flour until it looks like breadcrumbs. Rough puff requires 6 folds with 30-minute chills between each. Victoria sponge demands equal weights of butter, sugar, flour, and eggs. These ratios built an empire of teatime treats.
Sunday roasts anchor the week. Beef hits the oven at 450F for 20 minutes, then drops to 350F. Yorkshire puddings need batter rested 30 minutes and oil smoking at 425F. Gravy starts with pan drippings, 2 tablespoons flour per cup of stock.
Puddings mean dessert here. Sticky toffee needs 200g dates soaked in 250ml boiling water. Treacle tart uses 400g golden syrup to 100g breadcrumbs. Christmas pudding steams for 8 hours, then 2 more hours before serving.
Breakfast runs heavy. Full English means bacon, eggs, sausages, mushrooms, tomatoes, beans, black pudding. Toast gets real butter, 5mm thick minimum.
Pies dominate. Steak and kidney pie braises meat 2 hours at 325F before going under pastry. Fish pie tops 600g mixed fish with 1kg mashed potatoes. Shepherd's pie browns ground lamb with Worcester sauce before the potato cap.
Jams and chutneys preserve the harvest. Equal weights fruit to sugar for jam, boiled to 220F. Chutneys need 500ml vinegar per kilo of vegetables, simmered 45 minutes.
British food feeds hunger, not Instagram. Learn proper pastry, master your roasts, stock your pantry with Marmite and HP sauce. This is cooking that lasts through winter.
Essential Ingredients
Key Techniques
FAQ
Why does my Yorkshire pudding never rise?
Your batter needs 30 minutes minimum rest time for gluten to relax. Oil must be smoking hot at 425F before pouring batter. Use equal parts eggs, flour, and milk by volume. Open oven door only after 20 minutes or they'll collapse. A proper rise needs batter hitting oil that's at least 400F.
What's the difference between British and American scones?
British scones use 55g butter per 225g flour, creating a drier texture meant for clotted cream and jam. American versions often double the butter and add 50g sugar minimum. British scones bake at 425F for 12-15 minutes, staying pale. Handle dough minimally, just 4-5 kneads maximum.
How do I keep my meat pies from getting soggy bottoms?
Start with blind-baked bottom crust at 375F for 15 minutes. Cool filling completely before adding, ideally refrigerated overnight. Brush bottom crust with beaten egg and bake 5 minutes before filling. Use 180g flour to 90g fat for sturdier pastry. Bottom oven rack at 400F gives best results.
Why add vinegar to steamed puddings?
Vinegar reacts with bicarbonate of soda, creating lift in heavy batters. Use 1 tablespoon vinegar per teaspoon bicarb. Mix into wet ingredients just before steaming. This reaction replaces eggs in wartime recipes. Modern puddings still use it for lighter texture, especially in 6-hour steamed Christmas puddings.