Pie and mash is historic, so for this recipe for venison pie with mash I have kept to tradition, but swapped the minced beef with venison, which works very well in a delicious suet pastry crust. The pie casing itself traditionally consisted of two different types of pastry – cold water suet for the bottom and shortcrust or puff pastry on the top.
The instructions for the filling in this venison pie with mash are simple and you may wish to jazz it up with extra spices, tomato puree or ale. The hardest part is preparing the pastry. I made my filling in advance and let it cool slightly, before filling the cases with meat. Venison mince is extremely versatile and makes excellent pie fillings, bolognese, chilli or even hand-pressed burgers. (See our recipe for game bolognese here.)
At Game and Flames, we shoot nearly all the venison we use for our clients, but we always have a surplus. Every week, I tend to use venison mince in one form or another and it is a relatively cheap meat to use.
Living in the south-east of England and being rather close to London, we have an array of different eateries that span a multitude of cultures. A traditional pie and mash shop is among them and, though a dying breed, it provides an excellent meal that warms the soul. Traditionally, the pie and mash is a beef or mutton mince pie served with mashed potato and a liquor. A liquor gravy doesn’t contain alcohol, but a fish-based stock with lots of fresh parsley. The fish stock was often made using the stewed stock from cooked jellied eels.
It was a Victorian working man’s meal that evolved in the East End during the Industrial Revolution. Eel, pie and mash shops were extremely popular and have a firm foothold in the East End’s history.
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