Another Supper of Young Parsnips and Sausage
At the top of the garden, past the sunny stone terrace, the little beds of vegetables and the unruly shrubs, is a thicket, less than ten feet (three meters) deep but just enough to give the whole garden an unkempt, relaxed feel. Here lie the compost bins with their lids of rotting carpet, green plastic bags of decaying leaf mold, and four small trees of damson, hazel, mirabelle, and a King James mulberry—the latter being a “guardian” tree planted in the northernmost corner to protect the garden from the north wind. In between grow drifts of snowdrops, wild garlic sent by a friend from Cornwall, and fraises de bois, with which this garden is littered, and whose flowers twinkle like tiny stars in spring. The work in this part of the garden is mostly done in winter, if only because the leaflessness of the trees makes it possible to see what you are doing. It is always dark and cold here, and damp, too. I come in from turning the compost or cutting hazel twigs with my feet like ice, my fingers numb. Invariably it’s a Saturday, when I have been early to The Ginger Pig for my sausages. I leave them to bake with parsnips and stock. A slow bowl of food, which often sits patiently until I come in, too chilled to the bone to do anything but eat.
Recipe information
Yield
enough for 4
Ingredients
Preparation
Step 1
Preheat the oven to 375°F (190°C). Peel the onions and slice them in half from root to tip, then cut each half into six or eight pieces. Soften them slowly in the oil in a flameproof baking dish or roasting pan over medium heat.
Step 2
While they are softening, peel the parsnips and cut them into short, thick chunks, about the length of a wine cork. Add them to the onions and let color, increasing the heat a little if need be. Remove the onions and parsnips from the pan.
Step 3
Cut each sausage into thirds, put them in the pan, adding a little more oil if it appears dry, and let them color. Return the onions and parsnips to the pan. It is important everything is a good color before you proceed. Strip the leaves from the thyme and stir them in, together with the chicken stock. Bring to a boil briefly, then put in the oven to bake for thirty-five to forty minutes, until the sausages are cooked right through, the parsnips are truly tender, and the stock has reduced a little.