Saveloy

From Justapedia, unleashing the power of collective wisdom
Jump to navigation Jump to search
A saveloy served with chips and curry sauce in Nottingham, England

A saveloy is a type of highly seasoned sausage, usually bright red, normally boiled and available in most fish and chip shops around the United Kingdom. It is occasionally also available fried in batter.

Etymology

The word is believed to be derived from Middle French cervelas or servelat, originating from Old Italian cervellato ('pigs brains'), ultimately from the Latin cerebrus ('brain'). Its first known use in the English language in this meaning was 1784.[1] Cervellato is still the name of a sausage in Italy; it is longer and thinner than standard Italian sausages.

Ingredients

Although the saveloy was traditionally made from pork brains, the ingredients of a shop-bought sausage are typically pork (58%), water, rusk, pork fat, potato starch, salt, emulsifiers (tetrasodium diphosphate, disodium diphosphate), white pepper, spices, dried sage, preservatives (sodium nitrite, potassium nitrate), and beef collagen casing.[2][better source needed]

The saveloy is mostly eaten with chips.

United Kingdom

Popular in the North East of England, saveloys are sometimes eaten in a "Saveloy Dip" sandwich: the bun is dipped in the water which the saveloy is boiled in or in gravy, with a layer of stuffing and pease pudding, additionally seasoned with English mustard.[3] In the rest of the United Kingdom it is most commonly eaten from fish and chip shops.

Australia and New Zealand

The saveloy is eaten in Australia and New Zealand, often sold at fairs, fêtes, agricultural shows and sporting events, served deep fried in batter, and known as a battered sav. At the turn of the 20th century, the saveloy was described in an Australian court case as a "highly seasoned dry sausage originally made of brains, but now young pork, salted"[4]: 6  but by the mid-century, it was commonly defined by its size as a 19 cm (7.5 in) sausage, as opposed to a frankfurter at 26 cm (10 in).[5]: 8  This distinction may be due to the frankfurter's popularisation (as an ingredient of hot dogs), which tend to have less seasoning and are thinner.[6]: 12 

Despite "frankfurter" sausage makers being the target of violence in World War I,[7]: 1  the story that saveloys were once frankfurters, renamed due to anti-German sentiment, is purely apocryphal, as far as Australia is concerned.[citation needed]

In Australia, saveloys are usually a beef-pork blend.[8] In New Zealand, saveloys are usually a lamb-pork-beef blend (which distinguishes them from frankfurters which are a pork-beef blend).[citation needed] As in England, they are sold at fish-and-chip shops, and bought to be simmered at home. Saveloys are known colloquially in both countries as "savs".[citation needed] They are often the basis of the New Zealand battered-sausage-on-a-stick "hot dog", equivalent to a US corn dog, often sold at fairgrounds and public events. The Australian version is often called a "dagwood dog"[9] or "pluto pup".[10] Another Australian variant, the "battered sav", while not as common as it once was, used wheat flour batter with no corn in the mixture and, like its English counterpart, was sold in fish-and-chip shops and had no stick. In South Australia and Tasmania, up to at least the early 1980's, the "sav and roll" was popular football fare especially at country matches; it was a saveloy heated in a wood-fired copper (boiler) placed in a split bread roll and liberally covered with tomato sauce.[citation needed]

A cocktail sausage is a smaller version of the saveloy, about a quarter of the size; in Australia sometimes called a "baby sav", a "footy frank" or a "little boy", and in New Zealand and Queensland called a "cheerio".[11] These are a popular children's party food in New Zealand and Australia, often served hot with tomato sauce.

United States

A type of hot dog which is almost indistinguishable from the saveloy is popular in the state of Maine, where it is commonly known as a "red hot" or "red snapper".[12]

In popular culture

In The Pickwick Papers (Chapter LV) Solomon Pell, an attorney at the Insolvent Court, is described as "regaling himself, business being rather slack, with a cold collation of an Abernethy biscuit and a saveloy".[13]

Saveloy is also eaten by Fagin in Oliver Twist[14] and it also appears in the 1968 musical film based on the novel, directed by Carol Reed, when it is mentioned in the number "Food, Glorious Food".

A saveloy is passed from Paul McGann's character (I) to Withnail and subsequently to Danny in Bruce Robinson's 1987 film Withnail and I.[15]

The phrase "oi oi saveloy" is sometimes used in the United Kingdom as a greeting.[16]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Saveloy". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. 2012-08-31. Retrieved 2013-03-14.
  2. ^ "Counter Loose Saveloys By Each - Groceries - Tesco Groceries". Tesco.com. Retrieved 2014-06-18.
  3. ^ nefadmin (2018-07-20). "Top 5 North East Foods!". North East Food. Retrieved 2022-09-02.
  4. ^ "Saveloy Reticence" in The Examiner, Launceston, Tas, 14 March 1913
  5. ^ "Variety of Sausage for Home Menus" in The Courier Mail, Brisbane, QLD, 12 September 1951
  6. ^ "Hot Dog is Favourite American Sandwich" in the Centralian Advocate, 26 October 1951
  7. ^ "Exciting Night in Sydney" in Barrier Miner, Broken Hill, NSW, 28 November 1915
  8. ^ "Saveloy-Australian". www.meatsandsausages.com. Retrieved Jun 10, 2021.
  9. ^ "Dagwood Dog vs Pronto Pup". Australian food history timeline. 1940-09-18. Retrieved 2019-09-28.
  10. ^ "Pluto pups". Australian Women's Weekly Food. Retrieved Jun 10, 2021.
  11. ^ Leitner, Gerhard (2004). Australian English - The National Language. Walter de Gruyter. p. 257. ISBN 9783110904871.
  12. ^ "The Neon-Red Hot Dog of Maine". Atlas Obscura. Retrieved 2019-05-07.
  13. ^ Charles Dickens. The Pickwick Papers.
  14. ^ "Oliver Twist - page 55". www.dickens-online.info. Retrieved 2019-12-08.
  15. ^ "WITHNAIL AND I". www.markfiend.com. Retrieved 2021-07-02.
  16. ^ "What's your name, where you from, what you on? How to speak acid house". the Guardian. 2015-09-09. Retrieved 2022-09-02.

External links