No, but you can make them vegetarian by replacing the mutton with flavoured TVP, (Textured Vegetable Protein).
She was in a band called "The Cornish Pasties" with her two sisters! They named them selves "The Cornish Pasties" because of their surname being Cornish :)
The people from Cornwall east pasties. Otherwise known as the Cornish.
The Cornwall mining comunity in Britain.
depends how big the cornish pasties are.
cream teas,clotted cream,cornish pasties!!!!!!!
I doubt it, the Cornish pastie contains ingredients not found in Jamaica.
No, traditional Cornish pasties do not contain yeast. They are made with a shortcrust pastry, which typically consists of flour, fat, and water, without any leavening agents. The pastry is designed to be sturdy enough to hold the filling, which usually includes meat and vegetables.
Nothing. A cornish pasty is a complete meal in itself. I would guess, designed as such for miners (in the same way as the sandwich was devised for use on the battlefield).
Traditional pasties originate from Cornwall, England hence the name Cornish Pasties. Pasties were made for tin miners who could eat their lunches easily and efficiently while down in the mines. Traditional pasties are stuffed with beef, potatoes, swede (type of turnip) or rutabaga, and onions. The crust provided a sort of handle so the miners would not eat traces of arsenic that may have been on their hands from working in the tin mines. The crusts were discarded in the mines for the "knockers," whom some believed to be spirits in the mines that might lead them into danger.
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Pasties are most famously associated with Cornwall, a region in the southwest of England. These savory pastries, typically filled with meat, potatoes, and vegetables, were originally made for miners as a portable meal. The traditional Cornish pasty has a distinctive crimped edge and is recognized as a symbol of Cornish culture. They are also enjoyed in other parts of the UK and have variations in other countries.
* tarts (jam,treacle etc.) * cornish pasties * pies