Excitement evidence in this short home movie – my infamous daggy happy dance. 😂 (PS My usual “official” recipe how-to video is above the recipe card, as always!) I wanted to do a special recipe to mark the day. Not just a recipe from the cookbook – too obvious. 🙂 Instead, I’m sharing a brand new British classic recipe. So now you’ve got 130 recipes in the cookbook to make – plus this toad in the hole recipe! Because we can never have enough good recipes, right? 😇 ➤ Cookbook release in other countries: US/Canada 28th March 2023, more countries – stay tuned! More information here. PS Trust me on the mayo! It’s a restaurant secret, brought into my kitchen via the English Chef at my food bank, RecipeTin Meals. I was dubious too, but it really works. Makes Yorkshire pudding more stable – rises more, crispier, deflates far less.
We love hilarious British food names
Toad in the hole, bangers and mash, spotted dick. Be warned – if you intend to google any of these, be sure to add the word “recipe” to your search. I don’t want to be the cause of corrupting your innocence!! 😱😂
Today, it’s toad in the hole
Toad in the hole is a traditional British dish comprised of sausages baked into a giant Yorkshire pudding, typically served with an onion gravy. Yorkshire pudding is similar to popovers in the US and Dutch baby pancakes. Think – puffy edges with crispy ridges and soft insides that taste like savoury crepes. Normally Yorkshire puddings are made in muffin tins for individual servings alongside roasts. But with toad in a hole, it’s a giant one that you tear into. Look at that cavity made for filling with gravy. YES! These are the food moments I live for! (PS Bangers and mash = sausages and mash. Spotted dick = dessert pudding studded with raisins ie the spots. It is not in the shape of a log!👼🏻)
What you need
The sausages
Pork sausages are traditional though you can really use any type of sausages you want – beef, chicken, flavoured, etc. And yes, we are going to pan-fry them lightly before popping in the oven because then we have sausage drippings to make our gravy = tastier gravy! I’m not sure I see that. Maybe without my contact lenses, or perhaps after a few wines, my imagination might stretch that far. But that’s ok! We can just giggle at the name and enjoy the awesome eating experience that is toad in a hole!!
Toad in the hole in the US
In the US, toad in the hole refers to a breakfast dish where an egg is cooked in a round hole cut out of sandwich bread. This recipe I’m sharing today is the English dish, and it’s typically served as a meal. Though, add a fried egg and I’d happily have this for breakfast! Couple of tips on choosing sausages:
Size – We don’t want the sausages that are too large else there is not enough Yorkshire pudding surface area. Look for sausages around 85g/3oz each – nice size to cook 8 sausages in total, 2 sausages per serving. If yours are much larger, consider using less. Better sausages – Look for sausages where you can see “specks” of meat/fat chunks in them (more real meat) rather than the really economical ones that are a smooth uniform pink colour (more fillers).
Toad in the hole batter
The batter used for toad in the hole is actually a Yorkshire pudding batter. Here’s what you need to make it (and yes, I explain the mayonnaise – trust me!):
Mayonnaise – Just 1 tablespoon of mayonnaise gives the notoriously fragile Yorkshire pudding stability so they puff up more and deflate less. It really works! It’s a neat trick taught to me by my English chef (Stephen Fixter) at RecipeTin Meals, my food bank. He was taught this when he worked in pubs and restaurants back in the UK.Sounds like a blasphemy to destroy a traditional recipe with mayonnaise of all things, but I tried it with and without and can confirm unequivocally that it definitely makes the Yorkies more stable. Beef drippings – This is beef fat, the traditional fat used for Yorkshire puddings and toad in a hole. It has a higher smoke point than most oils so is ideal to heat in the oven until smoking hot so when cold batter is poured in, it sizzles and the shock of the heat/cold makes the Yorkshire pudding puff up more.Plus, it has better flavour than plain oil. Not beefy, but a nice savoury flavour unlike oil which is tasteless! Where to find it – Sold in tubs, firm like butter, in the fridge alongside butter in large grocery stores in Australia (Coles, Woolies). Scoop then melt to use. Substitutions / alternatives Duck fat and goose fat would make an excellent substitute with a similar high smoke point and similar “clean” flavoured fat. Lard (pork fat) will also work great but will give the yorkies subtle pork flavour (whereas beef, duck and goose have more neutral flavour). Oil options – Use vegetable or canola oil for baking and searing sausages, and butter for the gravy (for flavour). Don’t use butter for the sausage searing or in the hot pan, it will burn.Use leftover beef drippings to replace the fat in Bangers & Mash, gravy, mushroom gravy and duck fat potatoes (beef drippings is similar to duck fat). It’s better than oil, better than butter!
Eggs – A little unusual perhaps, but I’m going to ask you to measure out 250ml / 1 cup of eggs which might be 4 or maybe 5, or even 6 eggs. Why? Because for Yorkshire puddings, being accurate with the quantity of batter really matters to a successful outcome.If only all those selfish chickens would lay eggs that are exactly the same size, always, then we wouldn’t have to measure our eggs! Flour and milk – Just ordinary flour and ordinary (cow) milk. I haven’t tried this with non-cow milk.
Onion gravy
Toad in the hole is traditionally served with onion gravy. Starting with sautéed onion goes a long way to make the gravy tastier when you don’t have a pan of roast meat drippings or a homemade beef stock! Sounds like a blasphemy to destroy a traditional recipe with mayonnaise of all things, but I tried it with and without and can confirm unequivocally that it definitely makes the Yorkies more stable. Plus, it has better flavour than plain oil. Not beefy, but a nice savoury flavour unlike oil which is tasteless! Where to find it – Sold in tubs, firm like butter, in the fridge alongside butter in large grocery stores in Australia (Coles, Woolies). Scoop then melt to use. Substitutions / alternatives Duck fat and goose fat would make an excellent substitute with a similar high smoke point and similar “clean” flavoured fat. Lard (pork fat) will also work great but will give the yorkies subtle pork flavour (whereas beef, duck and goose have more neutral flavour). Oil options – Use vegetable or canola oil for baking and searing sausages, and butter for the gravy (for flavour). Don’t use butter for the sausage searing or in the hot pan, it will burn. Use leftover beef drippings to replace the fat in Bangers & Mash, gravy, mushroom gravy and duck fat potatoes (beef drippings is similar to duck fat). It’s better than oil, better than butter! If only all those selfish chickens would lay eggs that are exactly the same size, always, then we wouldn’t have to measure our eggs!
Beef drippings or butter – Beef drippings will give your gravy the best flavour but butter makes a fine substitute. Beef stock – Use low sodium, else your gravy may end up too salty. (PS If you want to make a royalty-worthy toad in the hole, make your gravy with homemade beef stock. You’ll need to add a bit more salt as homemade beef stock is not salted.) Flour – to thicken the gravy. Onion – just regular brown / yellow onions. Red onions also works just fine. Garlic – for flavour base. Worcestershire sauce – not pictured, sorry! 🙂 Adds a touch of extra savoury flavour. But it’s not critical if you don’t have it, I only use 1/2 teaspoon. Much more and I find it starts to taste too Worcestershire sauce-y.
OK, ingredients covered. Onto making it!!
How to make toad in the hole
It’s actually very straight forward to make. The secret for a great toad in the hole lies more in the method of how it’s made and obviously having the BEST Yorkshire pudding batter (thank you Chef Stephen!).
The toad in the hole part
Many recipes opt to shortcut the method and bake the sausages from raw. While this works, it means you miss out on the sausage drippings left in the frying pan which is then used to make the gravy. Which means the gravy is not as tasty. Moral to the story? It’s worth the extra 4 minutes to brown the sausages on the stove.
PRO TIP: Try to keep one side of the sausage just lightly browned, and we will make this side face up in the oven so when it comes out, it will be perfectly browned. If you brown the sausages too aggressively on the stove, the sausages may be on the wrong side of “well browned” after baking in the oven. Not a deal breaker, just a tip!
Be prepared for deflation! It WILL deflate. However, thanks to that dab of mayonnaise you used, it will deflate much less than usual recipes!
The onion gravy
Make your gravy while the toad in the hole is in the oven (25 minutes). The gravy takes around 10 minutes from start to finish so just keep it warm until ready to serve.
Serving toad in the hole
To serve toad in the hole, cut it using a small knife then use a spatula to pick it up and transfer onto plates. In the last 30 seconds or so, add the garlic and cook until golden. Then keep warm until ready to serve! Then – douse with gravy. Lots of it. Especially if you’ve got greens on the side. Because vegetables become so much more interesting when drowning in gravy, right??!!
That’s a serious plate of comfort food, right there. You know, I shouldn’t tell you this, but sometimes when I’m testing recipes, I start to lose steam towards the end. I find myself extra grateful to have a team who can help out with testing things over and over again. Like the Mini Pavlovas. That was particularly painful to finalise. There’s only so much pav a girl can eat! But toad in a hole? Let’s just say I was perfectly happy making this repeatedly. It’s me on a plate. Pure comfort food. That combination of the crispy edges of the Yorkshire pudding with the soft insides, the juicy golden brown sausages, all doused with gravy (DOUSED, my friends!). Aggggh. Such good food! – Nagi x PS Serve this with a side of peas or other steamed greens (broccoli, broccolini, carrots). You don’t need to get creative because you’ve got stacks of gravy for dousing. (Word of the day).
Watch how to make it
Life of Dozer
The best cookbook-making-sidekick a girl could ever ask for. Thank you for being there every step of the way, Dozer!