Jamie drizzling honey on top of a fig tart

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pytt y panna
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Pytt y panna (Little pieces in a pan)

An incredible one-pan Swedish hash

pytt y panna
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35 mins
Super easy

serves 6

About the recipe

My take on Pytt y panna is a great way to use leftover meat and a beautiful meal in its own right.


nutrition per serving

Calories

g

Fat

g

Saturates

g

Sugars

g

Protein

g

Carbs

of an adult’s reference intake


Recipe From

Jamie Does...

Jamie Does...

By Jamie Oliver

Ingredients

2 thick slices of higher-welfare smoked bacon, or 6 rashers of higher-welfare smoked streaky bacon

2 quality smoked or regular sausages, cooked

300g quality cooked brisket or other leftover cooked meat

80g salami, skin removed

2 small onions, peeled

3 large carrots, quartered

1kg potatoes, scrubbed clean

a few sprigs of fresh rosemary and thyme, leaves picked

4 quail’s eggs

a jar of dill pickles, to serve

DRESSING

1 teaspoon good mustard

1 tablespoon good-quality cider vinegar

3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil

a small handful of fresh chives, finely chopped

a small handful of fresh dill, roughly chopped

a small handful of fresh flat-leaf parsley, leaves picked

Top Tip

Swedes always serve this topped with a raw egg yolk. That might freak some people out, but you’ve got to get your head around it because the idea is that you toss it all up yourself and the yolk enriches the whole thing as it slowly gets cooked by the residual heat.

Method

  1. Heat a really wide shallow non-stick pan on a medium heat. Chop your bacon into small pieces and fry for 2 to 3 minutes so that the fat starts to render out.
  2. While that's happening, chop up your sausage, brisket and salami into cubes, and add to the pan as you go. Do the same with the onions, carrots, potatoes and herbs. Keep stirring to make sure nothing catches, using your spoon to scrape all the goodness from the bottom of the pan.
  3. Turn the heat down if you think it’s cooking too fast. Have a taste to check the seasoning; the salt in the smoked meats will probably be enough, but add a pinch of salt and a good pinch of pepper if you think it needs it.
  4. Keep stirring as it cooks and after about 20 minutes, once the potatoes and carrots have softened and everything looks delicious, make your dressing by putting all the dressing ingredients into a jar (reserving the dill flowers if you have them). Pour the dressing into the pan – the acidity will be fantastic with all that rich meat.
  5. Carefully separate the egg whites from their yolks and put them to one side. If you want to, leave the yolks in their shells so everyone can tip their own egg yolk into their dish and stir it through. That will give the dish a bit of a theatrical edge.
  6. Divide your pytt y panna between the plates. Make a well in the top and add a yolk (or eggshell with a yolk in it) to each one.
  7. Load up a side plate with dill pickles, and roughly chop your dill flowers and scatter them over. The combination of meaty comforting hash, egg for sheen, dressing for acidity and herbs for freshness is so good.

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