Welshman’s caviar (bara lawr)
By Rhiannonw
- 899 reads
I have good memories of freshly cooked laverbread brought home by my mother from Cardiff market.
Vitamins and minerals galore –
apparently, much more
than in any land-veg, and protein rich,
Porphyra seaweed slowly simmered many hours and then sold –
looks unappealing – gloopy greeny-black splodge,
even when rolled
in oats and fried with bacon at its side
but mmmm!
the taste is gentle and delightful,
complimentary to the salty bacon:
black gold!
[IP: vegetables]
(the pictorial represetation of both bacon and laverbread are not good, but if you haven't seen or tasted you can google!)
- Log in to post comments
Comments
Black gold. Mmmmm....anything
Black gold. Mmmmm....anything that goes with salty bacon. It all sounds so delicious. And who knew there was a Welshman's caviar?! :)
- Log in to post comments
I've never had Porphya
I've never had Porphya seaweed, but I do know the Welsh have a love for it. The way you describe it in your poem makes it sounds so tasty.
Jenny.
- Log in to post comments
I've heard of laverbread but
I've heard of laverbread but never tried it - though I would if I saw some now you've given it a good review!
- Log in to post comments
I didn't know about it being
I didn't know about it being fried with bacon. I get quite a lot of sea weed from Amazon, which is silly living by the sea, but people here say don't get stuff off the beach on this side because of sewage etc, though I always wish I could take it fresh, it looks so tempting :0) Have not tried lava bread, like you say it is expensive, have seen it on Amazon in tins. Interesting to read your poem's account of how it should be!
- Log in to post comments
I heard a radio programme
I heard a radio programme about it a while back - this might be it?
- Log in to post comments