![]() Through trial and error, for my personal taste I like to make my root vegetable mash with 50% potatoes and then whatever I have left cooked in with it. To make it even better the mash could be put into a pie dish and browned in an oven. To use up the last few potatoes, carrots, parsnips, turnips and swedes that maybe past their best in the larder, they were often scrubbed clean and chopped up into small pieces and boiled together until soft then mashed up with margarine/butter and lots of salt and pepper. One example of this is ‘bubble and squeak’. To serve, place a bed of baby spinach on each plate, top with two of the bubble and squeak patties and garnish with the spring onions and toasted sesame seeds.It was quite common to mash up your leftover potatoes with other vegetables during the war.Remove from the pan and keep warm in a low oven. Once the pan is hot, add the patties and fry for 2-3 minutes on each side, or until golden. Add another tbsp of olive oil to the frying pan, and place back on a medium heat. Take the mixture and form 8 round patties.Add the salt and pepper and mix until combined. Transfer this mix into the pan with potatoes and falafel. Add the garlic and fry for a further minute. Once hot, add the spring cabbage, petit pois and spring onions and fry for one minute. Add 1 tbsp of olive oil to a frying pan, and place on a medium heat.Crumble the falafels into the potatoes and mash with a potato masher until smooth. Drain the potatoes and place them back into the pan. ![]() Bring to the boil and then reduce to a simmer, then cook for 20 minutes, or until the potatoes are soft. Put the potatoes in a medium-sized pan of water and place on a high heat.
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