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Alternative names | Hertfordshire clanger, Trowley dumpling |
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Type | boiled suet dumpling (traditional); baked pastry (some modern recipes) |
Place of origin | United Kingdom |
Region or state | South Midlands (Bedfordshire, Buckinghamshire; also Hertfordshire, Cambridgeshire, Huntingdonshire) |
Associated cuisine | English cuisine |
Serving temperature | hot, or ambient temperature |
Main ingredients | suet pastry; liver or meat; potatoes; onions; jam or fruit |
Ingredients generally used | sage |
Similar dishes | Bacon Badger (Buckinghamshire); Bacon Pudding (Sussex) |
The Bedfordshire clanger (also called the Hertfordshire clanger, Trowley dumpling, [1] or simply the clanger) is a dish from Bedfordshire and adjacent counties in England, including Buckinghamshire and Hertfordshire. [2] It dates back to at least the 19th century.
The word "clanger" is related to the dialect term "clung", which Joseph Wright glossed as meaning "heavy", in relation to food. [3] [4]
The clanger is an elongated suet crust dumpling, sometimes described as a savoury type of roly-poly pudding. [5] [6] Its name may refer to its dense consistency: Wright's 19th-century English Dialect Dictionary recorded the phrase "clung dumplings" from Bedfordshire, citing "clungy" and "clangy" as adjectives meaning heavy or close-textured. [4]
Clangers were historically made by women for their husbands to take to their agricultural work as a midday meal: it has been suggested that the crust was not originally intended for consumption but to protect the fillings from the soiled hands of the workers. [7] They could be eaten cold, or warmed by being wrapped in damp newspaper under a brazier. [1] While sometimes associated with the hatmakers of the Luton district, [8] the same dish was also recorded in rural Buckinghamshire, [3] Cambridgeshire and Hertfordshire. [1]
It was traditionally boiled in a cloth like other suet puddings, [9] though some modern recipes use a shortcrust or other pastry and suggest baking it like a pasty, a method dating from a 1990s revival of the dish by a commercial bakery. [10] The dumpling can be filled with liver and onion, [11] bacon and potatoes, [3] pork and onions, [12] or other meat and vegetables, and flavoured with the garden herb sage.
Usually a savoury dish, clangers were also said to have been prepared with a sweet filling, such as jam or fruit, in one end; this variant is referred to in a Bedfordshire Magazine of the 1960s as an "'alf an' 'alf" (half and half), with "clanger" reserved for a savoury version. [6] A 1959 reference also suggests that clangers were usually savoury, stating that the version with a sweet filling in one end was called the Trowley Dumpling after the hamlet in west Hertfordshire where it was supposed to have originated. [13] [1] There is some doubt as to how often a sweet filling was traditionally added in practice, [12] though modern recipes often imitate the folklore by including one.
A similar dumpling was known in parts of Buckinghamshire, particularly Aylesbury Vale, as a "Bacon Badger". [3] It was made from bacon, potatoes and onions, flavoured with sage and enclosed in a suet pastry case, and was usually boiled in a cloth. [14] [8] The etymology of "badger" is unknown, but might relate to a former term for a dealer in flour. [15] "Badger" was widely used in the Midland counties in the early 19th century to refer to a "cornfactor, mealman, or huckster". [16] The same basic suet dumpling recipe is known by a variety of other names elsewhere in the country; "flitting pudding" is recorded in County Durham, "dog in blanket" from Derbyshire, [17] and "bacon pudding" in Berkshire and Sussex.
A baked "clanger" featured as a signature bake in episode 8 of Series 8 of The Great British Bake Off.
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