Hindle Wakes (dish)
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Hindle Wakes is a poultry dish supposedly associated with the Bolton area of England. Its origins are claimed to point to Flemish weavers in 16th century Lancashire. The dish consists of a long-steamed capon or boiling fowl, enhanced with black, green and yellow colouring provided by a stuffing of pig's blood or prunes for the black, butter lemon sauce for the yellow and green for the garnish. The dish is prepared by stuffing a fowl with a combination of breadcrumbs, lemon, pig's blood or prunes, then steaming for four hours prior to roasting for thirty minutes and covering in a lemon butter sauce and greenery. It is unclear whether this often-written-about dish is indeed ancient, or was invented, along with its supposed history, in the 1950s.


References

* {{cite book, author=Black, William., title=The Land that Thyme Forgot, publisher=Bantam, year=2005, isbn=0-593-05362-1 pp. 24–26; p. 347


External links


The story of Hindle Wakes at Foodsofengland.co.uk
English cuisine Culture in Greater Manchester