Beyond the full English: how fried breakfasts vary across the UK

Tattie scones, laverbread, soda farls, Bury black pudding: the classic fried breakfast of the British Isles comes in many different forms, and is so much more than just bacon, eggs and sausages.

Winnie the Pooh knew the importance of a good breakfast. So did James Bond, Sherlock Holmes and countless other British heroes — after all, the first meal of the day sets the tone for everything to come. As the late, great restaurant critic A A Gill once wrote, ‘Breakfast is everything. The beginning, the first thing. It is the mouthful that is the commitment to a new day, a continuing life.’ Nowhere, I think, is that promise celebrated more solemnly than in the UK, a country whose culinary prowess in the breakfast department, at least, has never been in doubt.

Indeed, it was perhaps once true that to eat well here, as the novelist Somerset Maugham put it, one ‘should have breakfast three times a day’ — a fantasy made real by the joyful advent of the all-day menu, allowing us to indulge our craving for bacon and eggs at any time. Uncle Monty’s observation in the cult classic film Withnail and I, that this is a land where breakfasts ‘set in’ like the weather, holds true: even if we limit ourselves to muesli all week, when time permits, Britons still like to go the whole hog.

And hogs are almost always involved: in a 2017 YouGov poll, 89% of those surveyed cited bacon as the most important ingredient in a full English, closely followed by eggs. After that, things get contentious — even if you leave the full Scottish, Welsh and Irish versions briefly out of the equation. Should the bacon be back or streaky (once a matter of class, according to novelist Jilly Cooper, with back being the premium option), softly pink or grilled to a crisp? And as for the eggs, do they need to be fried to make it a fry-up? (Not according to the 18-24-year-olds surveyed in the same poll, who were surprisingly keen on them scrambled.)

While tomatoes and mushrooms are very much considered optional extras across the nation, that’s pretty much where the consensus ends. Take sausages: we all agree there should be a sausage on the plate, but what sort very much depends on geography. Should it be a peppery Cumberland ring or a beefy Scottish square? Or should it be of that family of sausages known as puddings and, if so, what type?

In England, you’re most likely to come across a black pudding — made from blood, spices and cereals, and particularly popular in the northwest, home of the famous Bury iteration, which features distinctive snowy cubes of white back fat. Although well-loved in Scotland and Northern Ireland, it has more competition north of the border, where puddings come in white, red and fruit varieties as well. White pudding does occasionally pop up in England, too, most famously in the form of the spicy West Country speciality, hog’s pudding.

Wales, meanwhile, stands proudly alone in its traditional breakfast preferences. You’ll find many a standard fry-up here, but you’ll be lucky to find laverbread anywhere else (if you’re expecting something resembling bread you’ll be disappointed — laver is seaweed of the same type used to wrap maki roll sushi 5,000 miles to the east in Japan).

Bread does have a part to play in the fry-up, of course; after all, you need something with which to mop up that golden egg yolk. Down south, it usually comes in the form of toast or a crunchy fried slice, but Scotland embraces the tattie scone — made with leftover mash, which might be made into bubble and squeak in southeast England — and Northern Ireland is known for serving up both potato bread and fluffy soda farls on the same plate.

You may have noticed I’ve made no mention of that most divisive of fry-up ingredients, the baked bean. The omission is deliberate: as chef Jeremy Lee once observed, if you really need something to dip things in, add ketchup. Or brown sauce. Or even mustard. But that’s a whole other argument.

E Pellicci on London's Bethnal Green Road is considered a local institution.

E Pellicci on London’s Bethnal Green Road is considered a local institution.

PHOTOGRAPH BY ALAMY

Four breakfast staples from the British Isles

1. Staffordshire oatcakes
Not to be confused with the Scottish biscuits, these floppy oat flour flatbreads are more akin to French crepes. Quick and easy to produce over the fire, they once provided sustenance for the region’s miners. They remain popular today, although most of the hole-in-the-wall spots from which they were traditionally sold have gone the same way as the mines. Nevertheless, they’re delicious wrapped around bacon, sausage and eggs for a fry-up on the go.

2. Laverbread
Laver, a type of seaweed, has been eaten by coastal communities for centuries, especially in southwest Wales and the West Country. It’s gathered from rocky shores, rinsed and boiled for hours until the reddish fronds are reduced to an olive-green paste that can be mixed with oatmeal, formed into cakes and fried in bacon fat. Laver’s high iodine content gives it a flavour somewhat reminiscent of oysters and other seafood, lending it the nickname ‘Welsh caviar’.

3. Kippers
Once a firm favourite at breakfast, kippers are more often to be found on hotel menus than being cooked at home these days, probably because of the strong smell. Though kippering is, in fact, the process by which a fish is split open, salted and then smoked, it’s generally used in reference to herring, and is most famously seen in the form of Arbroath smokies and Manx and Craster kippers, all of which are cured in slightly different ways. Kippers are particularly nice with a poached egg or in that Anglo-Indian breakfast favourite, kedgeree.

4. Soda bread
As the name suggests, this is bread raised by bicarbonate of soda rather than yeast, a process that gives it a soft, cakey texture, perfect for soaking up bacon fat or egg yolk. It’s particularly popular in Ireland, where it tends to be made with buttermilk left over from making butter; the lactic acid reacts with the bicarb to produce gas that raises the dough when heated. It was traditionally baked in the embers of the fire and scored with a cross — to assist with the cooking and to let the devil out, of course.

Laverbread with bacon Welsh cakes. Laver, a type of seaweed, has been eaten by coastal communities for ...

Laverbread with bacon Welsh cakes. Laver, a type of seaweed, has been eaten by coastal communities for centuries, especially in southwest Wales and the West Country.

PHOTOGRAPH BY STOCKFOOD

Five of the best breakfast spots across the UK

1. E Pellicci, London E2
A local institution with a bellissimo line in Italian classics and huge fry-ups, including fried bread and bubble and squeak. £8.60 for a classic set breakfast. 

2. Cariad Café, Penclawdd, Swansea
Cariad Café’s Welsh breakfast features bacon, sausages, cockles, toast and laverbread in a nod to local tradition. £6.25.

3. Food from Argyll at the Pier, Oban
Try the soft rolls filled with tattie scones, bacon, haggis, lorne sausage and black or white pudding. Rolls from £1.50. 

4. Sea Salt Cafe, Newcastle, Co Down
You can’t beat the combination of sea air and an Ulster fry: bacon, sausage, eggs, hash browns, black and white puddings, mushrooms, tomato and homemade soda, potato and wheaten breads. £6.50. 

5. Hub, St Ives
Kick off the day with a full Cornish, made with bacon, sausage, sourdough toast, eggs and spicy hog’s pudding. £9.50. 

Published in Issue 11 (spring 2021) of National Geographic Traveller Food

Source: Beyond the full English: how fried breakfasts vary across the UK

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