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toad in the hole
© David Loftus

toad in the hole

servings
4
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method


Mix the batter ingredients together, and put to one side. I like the batter to go huge so the key thing is to have an appropriately-sized baking tin – the thinner the better – as we need to get the oil smoking hot.

Put 1cm/just under ½ inch of sunflower oil into a baking tin, then place this on the middle shelf of your oven at its highest setting (240–250ΊC/475ΊF/gas 9). Place a larger tray underneath it to catch any oil that overflows from the tin while cooking. When the oil is very hot, add your sausages. Keep your eye on them and allow them to color until lightly golden.

At this point, take the tin out of the oven, being very careful, and pour your batter over the sausages. Throw a couple of sprigs of rosemary into the batter. It will bubble and possibly even spit a little, so carefully put the tin back in the oven, and close the door. Don't open it for at least 20 minutes, as Yorkshire puddings can be a bit temperamental when rising. Remove from the oven when golden and crisp.

For the onion gravy, simply fry off your onions and garlic in the butter on a medium heat for about 5 minutes until they go sweet and translucent. You could add a little thyme or rosemary if you like. Add the balsamic vinegar and allow it to cook down by half. At this point, I do cheat a little and add a stock cube or powder. You can get some good ones in the supermarkets now that aren't full of rubbish. Sprinkle this in and add a little water. Allow to simmer and you'll have a really tasty onion gravy. Serve at the table with your Toad in the Hole, mashed potatoes, greens and baked beans or maybe a green salad if you're feeling a little guilty!


• from Happy Days with the Naked Chef

ingredients


• sunflower oil
• 8 large good-quality sausages
• 4 sprigs of fresh rosemary
• 2 large red onions, peeled and sliced
• 2 cloves of garlic, peeled and finely sliced
• 2 knobs of butter
• 6 tablespoons balsamic vinegar
• 1 level tablespoon
good-quality vegetable stock powder or 1 vegetable stock cube

for the batter
• 285ml milk
• 115g plain flour
• a pinch of salt
• 3 eggs

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tried this recipe or a similar one? share your tips...
1. by Dawn on Fri 18 May 2012 @ 16:37

Made this yesterday for my husband - just the toad in the hole with new potatoes & veg, and he has raved about it to anyone and everyone. Many thanks

2. by Beth on Wed 25 Apr 2012 @ 20:34

I tried this dish and it came out like the picture, tasted delicious, I'm in the wrong job!<br />

3. by maddy on Fri 13 Apr 2012 @ 09:58

this worked perfectly for me. Had no problems with it rising and the gravy was amazing, thou there wasnt enough. @Rich you do need alot of oil for it to cook aroundthe batter. you could probably use a bit less, but u do need it.

4. by Rich on Sat 31 Mar 2012 @ 14:29

I'm trying this tonight, but I'm not going to use 1cm of oil! Shame no mention of pan size, but I'll try my 20cm x 30cm one as others have suggested.<br /> <br /> But seriously - a 20cm x 30cm pan, x 1cm depth of oil is 600ml of oil! Over a pint of oil?!?!? Seriously, Jamie? That CAN'T be what you meant. So come on (Jamie or editor) - fix the recipe!

5. by Suzanne on Wed 29 Feb 2012 @ 17:25

@Sean, comment number 2: Toad in the Ole. Priceless.

6. by Kevin Miller on Mon 13 Feb 2012 @ 23:35

This recipe didn't work for me. The pudding was soggy and didn't rise and the house filled with smoke. This recipe has always worked - http://allrecipes.com/recipe/savory-sausage-toad-in-the-hole/

7. by Sean on Wed 01 Feb 2012 @ 21:53

Tasked with creating a Mexican-English fusion dish for a social (don't ask!) and am going to try experimenting with this one this weekend, substituting some chorizo sausages to make it "Toad in the Olι". Maybe add some fresh guacamole, beans and salsa as well. Game on!

8. by South Africa on Wed 01 Feb 2012 @ 15:54

I've made this 3 times and when you get it right it's orgasmic. First time I used a lot less oil and it was perfect, 2nd time hardly any oil and it sorta flopped. 3rd time I added onions/herbs in with the sausages in the beginning and it didn't rise as nicely as the first time. Back to check the recipe for the 4th attempt and going to go back to how I did the first. I use a std size bread tin. For all those getting it wrong I think you need to judge the oil vs tin size as well as the amount of fat your sausages give off. Have a look before you add the batter and drain off some if needs be. Keep at it! When you get the batter to rise properly it is truley delicious! Even when you eat the leftover cold the next day.

9. by sg on Tue 31 Jan 2012 @ 23:22

vegetarian? simply substitute thickly sliced large flat mushrooms and cook the same way. except i use just a medium sized blob of butter, not all that oil. use a tin with decent sides to it. i suspect from the amount of ingredients here you could try a tin approx 20cm x 30cm and 5cm deep. just a guess

10. by Babs on Sun 15 Jan 2012 @ 12:55

Is it sacrilegious to add apple to the batter? Was yummy!

11. by Glenn on Mon 09 Jan 2012 @ 22:55

This is the best Toad In The Hole ever! Classic English Dinner.<br /> Thank Jamie,<br /> <br /> Glenn, New Zealand

12. by Bob on Sun 08 Jan 2012 @ 15:57

How big should the baking tray be?<br />

13. by Julie on Fri 30 Dec 2011 @ 20:32

Well I just made this and it worked perfectly exactly as per the instructions. I used a large glass roaster about 2 inches deep, used the oil as per the recipe, cooked in a fan oven at 230deg C for 20 mins and it rose up to about 5 inches in height at the edges! I did lay the portions onto kitchen paper to drain any excess oil first prior to serving but it wasn't really necessary as very little oil drained onto the paper.

14. by offtheplot on Tue 06 Dec 2011 @ 18:10

Hi, Yes, too much oil - but it was pretty obvious from the recipe - it just didn't feel right. Jamie tends to use a lot of oil and a very high temperature in the oven for these kinds of things. I have a fan-assisted over and went with 225 oC. It was fine. I added some Blacksheep beer to the batter too - just to help it out a bit. Works a treat. <br /> <br /> Thanks, Offtheplot

15. by garrymoore on Thu 24 Nov 2011 @ 02:28

hi to all www.jamieoliver.comers this is my frst post and thought i would say hello to you all - <br /> speak soon <br /> gazza

16. by Sam on Tue 22 Nov 2011 @ 22:17

Just made this as a trial run for a dinner. Thank god I did. It was spoilt by there being too much oil - wish I had read the comments as well as the recipe as I realize other people found the same problem. Please, please Jamie modify the recipe. It would have been really helpful to have the 'ideal' dimensions for the baking tin to use. I should probably have used a bread tin so that the one cm of oil matched the proportions of the of the other ingredients. I used a wider, more shallow tray than th baking tin in the picture so 1 cm of oil was a lot of oil. Had to cook batter for 35 mins to get the greasy center cooked. I know Jamie has a very 'just throw it all together style' but this recipe is an example of where that lack of detail on tin size potentially ruins the dish. Sausages definitely cooked - they were in the oven for 10 mins to golden followed by 30 mins in the batter, but again a guide for initial cooking time would have helped.

17. by Saverio on Sat 19 Nov 2011 @ 13:11

Totally agree with earlier posts about cutting down oil... sadly I didn't see the posts till after I'd made it. Useful suggestion for gravy, add more boilingwater as you reduce it down and take out the tart-iness from the balsamic by adding a teaspoon of honey. Then wizz the lot and pass through sieve.

18. by Bonkers on Thu 17 Nov 2011 @ 10:07

Made it last night... Hubby and I totally loved it, I will defo be making it again and inviting friends :-) Nice one Jamie :-) x<br /> Ps. Ref the oil issue if you use top quality bangers (fram shop or butchers) you will only need a drizzle bake them in the oven pour over batter.

19. by Dan on Sat 12 Nov 2011 @ 17:44

Disgusting.<br /> <br /> This can be fixed by adjusting the oil from 1cm to 0.2cm. Also reduce the temperature to gas mark 7. Only then will it be edible!!!<br /> <br /> As it stands this comes out burnt at the top and fried at the bottom seeping oil all over the plate.

20. by Tom on Wed 26 Oct 2011 @ 19:44

There's no liquid to add to the gravy, won't it just be some kind of oniony seared gloop. And what on earth is an appropriate sized baking tin! and how much is a knob of butter? Im going to use Nigels onion gravy recipe and his toad in the hole recipe instead!

21. by Jenny on Wed 26 Oct 2011 @ 16:15

Just made the batter and sausages are in so just waiting on those!fingers crossed x

22. by Laura on Mon 24 Oct 2011 @ 20:43

Deeeelicious. Made this last night and it worked perfectly! The onion gravy just finished it off - superb. Cheers Jamie!

23. by Laura on Mon 24 Oct 2011 @ 20:42

Deeeeelicious! Worked perfectly, hooray! The gravy was superb too, finished it off nicely. Cheers jamie!<br /> <br />

24. by Carl on Mon 24 Oct 2011 @ 19:47

Just made it... mixed success! Nice and crisp around the edges, but soggy and eggy in the middle. I couldn't get my sausages to stand up vertically like in his photo! Far too much oil, I'd only use a third of a cm next time. Delicious gravy thought. Not sure I can be bothered to try it again... would help if you gave dimensions for the right tin to use.<br />

25. by bizzle on Tue 18 Oct 2011 @ 21:57

Grease in the hole more like. I think you can half the amount of oil suggested for this recipe and prob turn the oven down by about 20 - 30C. Not particularly pleasant to be honest.

26. by Jayne on Mon 03 Oct 2011 @ 22:45

What is an appropriately sized baking tray for this recipe? Would help if there was a size because this information is as important as the measures themselves.

27. by r holland on Mon 03 Oct 2011 @ 18:30

Fantastic recipe has worked every time for me. Love ya Jamie

28. by Pippa on Wed 28 Sep 2011 @ 21:55

Oh dear, total fail. I mustve done something horribly wrong.. we all feel awful. I can barely type this message because my hands ache.

29. by Rosanna on Mon 12 Sep 2011 @ 16:29

WHAT???? WAY WAY to much oil :~ eek

30. by Sarah on Fri 09 Sep 2011 @ 20:48

I think this recipe is great! I use a lot less oil but still end up with a very big, light, fluffy and crisp toad in the hole. I brown the sausages in the oven as per the recipe with no problems. Keep the oven door closed, use the oven window to check on it and de-activate the smoke alarm as it does create a bit of smoke :)

31. by sophie on Sun 28 Aug 2011 @ 20:14

great - 20 mins in the oven on the highest heat - followed advice not to open oven door for 20 minutes and 20 minutes on the dot opened the over and totally burnt!!! not great!!!!<br /> <br /> be careful

32. by Jo on Mon 22 Aug 2011 @ 19:40

I just used the batter from this with my normal method - I doubled the batter quantity and made it in one of those large Ikea roasting tins. Turned out great - just the right amount of cooking time and the batter has a good amount of light crispyness and some claggyness for my hubby who thinks that it is a toad in the hole essential! lovely.

33. by Delicious M on Sun 21 Aug 2011 @ 21:53

Great Recipe, I replaced the sausages with battered cod LOL and replaced the batter with chips and served it with a side of peas, really excellent, truely Delicious, seig Heil! LOL

34. by jack on Fri 19 Aug 2011 @ 21:19

I didnt use quite as much oil after reading previous comments and it turned out deliciously. First time i made it so was very impressed. Thougjt the gravy may be too strong but worked really well. 4/5 from me!

35. by emi on Thu 28 Jul 2011 @ 18:32

Im 21 and only just started to take an interest in cooking, this recipe is fantastic for someone like me, simple and yummy! will make it over and over again!! thank you!! x

36. by Simon on Fri 22 Jul 2011 @ 13:35

The Onion Gravy is amazing and I use it in other meals. Had a bit of trouble with the batter and a bit too much out but if you compensate accordingly, should be fine....and I like to Brown the Susages first, either by frying or BBQing :)<br /> Delicious!!!!

37. by Simon on Mon 18 Jul 2011 @ 19:24

Just made this, followed the recipe to the letter, worst toad in the hole ever and I CAN cook! WAY too much oil, WAY too hot. Result = greasy with a soggy middle, most unpleasant.

38. by Moi on Wed 06 Jul 2011 @ 16:22

I followed the recipe as stated with less oil, after reading the comments left. I also fried the sausages in the gravy pan slightly before adding to the oil. I left in the oven for 25 minutes for opening, then a further 10 minutes; although the top, sides and bottom were a golden brown color the middle with the sausages was still white and jelly like :-( Will be reverting to my usual recipe in future! The onion gravy is fab however!

39. by Richard Bolwell on Mon 04 Jul 2011 @ 14:26

What does using more eggs do. I have seen recepies which use 1 or 2 eggs and now 3 on this one. The rest of the ingredients are about the same.

40. by Hanneke on Tue 28 Jun 2011 @ 20:11

I have made this dish serveral times now. I love it. The nice soft yorkshire pudding with the saugceges and balsamic red onion gravy is balanced great. I make it for special familiy dinners, they all lve it.

41. by ivan on Wed 22 Jun 2011 @ 12:31

was an OK dinner but the amount of oil in baking tin 1 cm (1/2 ") was way too extreme i only put in about 6mm (1/4" ) and that made the dish far too oily so heaven knows what double that amount would of done? , didn't seem quite the healthy dish like Jamie Oliver would advise on to be honest .....

42. by julie on Wed 15 Jun 2011 @ 18:59

thanks for a lovely recipe ,hubby and my fussy 15 year old loved it!

43. by peach on Mon 13 Jun 2011 @ 17:53

Thanks for a simple and yummy dinner, that i will do again and again.<br />

44. by Polly on Sat 21 May 2011 @ 12:25

Delicious. Oven not too hot at all. Loved it. Best rise I ever got out of Yorkshire pudding. My 11 year old son made one too with great success!

45. by jessica on Sat 14 May 2011 @ 20:56

Just 'cooked' this, as am a big fan of lovely toad-in-the-hole... Sorry Jamie, must say that the temperature of the oven is way too hot, and having just folded all of my laundry, it now stinks of smoke. Normally a fan of Jaimie's recipes too, but this one, I'll not be using again. :( I'll be going back to my mum's recipe!!!

46. by Lee on Wed 11 May 2011 @ 19:20

Nice one, just made this. The Yorkshire was lovely - very light and crispy round the edges with a soft claggy centre, just how I like it. Couldn't be bothered doing the onion gravy though - Bisto was used because I'm scum. Too much oil though - half a cm would have worked just as well I reckon.

47. by Kitty on Tue 26 Apr 2011 @ 09:08

I made this for dinner tonight and my husband and I loved it. Thanks Jaime - as they say here in Australia, "Yummo!"

48. by LeroyC on Mon 25 Apr 2011 @ 19:35

A.Smith have a word with yourself and learn how to cook please!! Jamie your a ledge top recipie mate nice 1 :)

49. by A. Smith on Tue 12 Apr 2011 @ 18:36

1cm of oil??!?!?! jamie oliver you just set my oven on fire. no joke. cheers mate.

50. by alice on Wed 06 Apr 2011 @ 15:45

I think the toad in the hole looks magnificent but every time I try to do the yorkshire it flops over!! LOL

51. by Geri on Sun 03 Apr 2011 @ 01:15

I use my mummy's recipe which only has 2 eggs and 1 cup or so of skimmed milk and 1<br /> cup of flour and half tsp salt. We cook them in a muffin pan in which we preheat a<br /> little bit of oil or fat. Then we add the batter and partly cooked sausages-sometimes<br /> even frozen cooked sausages saves time. I will try adding rosemary next time. The<br /> house smells good while they cook! They are great to take to a potluck. They cook<br /> evenly in the muffin pan-not soggy or burned.

52. by Lisa on Wed 30 Mar 2011 @ 20:05

ABSOLUTELY AMAZING!!<br /> This was my first attempt at making toad in the hole and i used this recipe, very delicious!! Highly highly recommended and very easy.

53. by juliet on Tue 29 Mar 2011 @ 10:06

Please does anyone know of a great gravey recepie without salt, my dad is on Dialasis and can not have any salt<br /> Thanks<br /> Juliet

54. by stevewoodley64 on Thu 02 Sep 2010 @ 15:24

My 1st time at cooking this dish went very well, very easy to follow instructions. but I would definetly reduce the amout of oil i found it far to much.

55. by Kate on Fri 25 Sep 2009 @ 01:55

We are living in Los Angeles at the moment and cannot find decent sausages so we made "Tadpole in the hole" using meatballs instead. The kids wolfed it down!

56. by priya on Wed 23 Sep 2009 @ 19:17

Was very filling and delicious :)

I've never cooked this before and have to say it was so easy and quick! The only thing i would change next time is the quantity of oil. I found it too much and will deffo reduce it in the future....saying that my partner loved it! I did strugle in cooking the middle, as the outer side cooked great but the middle was still uncooked. How can i prevent this from happening again?

57. by Nicky on Mon 14 Sep 2009 @ 17:25

Tis in the oven cooking as we speak!

58. by Echoe on Mon 24 Aug 2009 @ 21:37

Ok, I'm here in San Diego getting ready to make this for my man from South London, keepining my fingers crossed! He likes his sausage in small pieces though so don't know if I should use muffin pan. I'll work it out and let ya know. Thanx

59. by Farina on Thu 18 Jun 2009 @ 21:10

Brill recipe. Although, halfway through the Yorkshire had risen around the edge, but the middle undercooked so I drained the oil and put back in the oven. Worked a treat! (I even added bacon and garlic cloves to the mix)

60. by mark on Sun 14 Jun 2009 @ 00:56

i did this twice, second time i put in 50 ml of water, me old granny swears with that it helps the pud to rise, and it is lighter

61. by Sophie on Sun 17 May 2009 @ 16:33

This is a great recipe! The hot oil really works. I agree with frying the sausages for a bit first, but other than that, perfect! The narrow tray is the key for the height. Delicious!

62. by MissAnthrope on Mon 23 Feb 2009 @ 21:31

Thanks to a badly placed (mains wired) smoke alarm this recipe resulted in me sitting with my two year old with all the windows and doors open , and the electricity turned off for twenty five minutes.
Needless to say I'll be sticking with the recipes based on lower oven temperatures next time.

Smelt nice though... ;o)

63. by Jo on Sun 25 Jan 2009 @ 21:19

I've just made this and it was delicious, specially the onion gravy! The only thing I'd do differently next time, like one of the other comments, would be to fry the sausages first to give them their colour, I found it took ages to do it in the oven.

64. by Roger on Mon 19 Jan 2009 @ 02:32

Excellent dish, batter came out HUGE, brilliant but the only 2 things that concerned me was 1. Did i really need 3 eggs? A bit too rich and heavy if your watching the pounds. 2 .The oil. I suppose the next time i do it i can reduce the oil, surely? But other than that, excellent.

65. by luke on Sat 17 Jan 2009 @ 19:28

just done the toad in the hole,everyone really enjoyed.thank you jamie your a legend...

66. by jas on Wed 17 Dec 2008 @ 18:35

Just tried the recipe , worked out well except for one fundamental part- ended up being burnt on the outside of the set yorkshire, but quite soggy on the inside! Where did I go wrong?

67. by lee on Tue 25 Nov 2008 @ 17:11

been a yorkshire lad anything with yorkshirepudding
thumbs up jamie top nosh!!

68. by james Harrop on Sun 16 Nov 2008 @ 18:18

just a word of warning be careful on how much oil you use. i over did it which was a shame otherwise a great dish.

69. by cookie on Sun 19 Oct 2008 @ 16:11

wow what a scrummy dish,me and my misses made this together and loved it,it was so easy to make,and cheap to buy the ingredients as well, the kids loved it,so we have a happy house now,thanks jamie,we are passing it on as we speak

70. by rosalind and jordan on Fri 17 Oct 2008 @ 20:46

hi,
i think your book ministry of food is really good.
i will pass any recipies i try on to friends and family.
And hope they will too.
i watch your tv show and i think your tv show is great.
P.S how do i make a perfect jacket potato.

71. by Jon Noballs on Thu 16 Oct 2008 @ 14:10

I'd like to put a toad in my hole.

72. by shereen on Sat 11 Oct 2008 @ 17:02

great cook books can you do a cook book for hyper and msg/pers free cookbook

73. by Tania on Tue 07 Oct 2008 @ 16:36

It was so easy and yummy, u all gotta try it!!!

74. by terry on Mon 06 Oct 2008 @ 15:29

I just bake my bangers in the oven for 20mins, then add the batter mix with a few sliced tomatoes or mushrooms and bake for another 40 mins
Yum Yum

75. by Tasha on Fri 03 Oct 2008 @ 18:34

I fryed the sausages off for a few minutes until they were just coloured.
Then i used the same frying pan to make the gravy, adds that extra bit of flavour!

76. by sabrina on Wed 01 Oct 2008 @ 20:56

Does this cook the sausages all the way through, I'm preggers and nervous about undercooked pork

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