Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (2024)

Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (1)

Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (2)
our 3rd place winner: peggy doyle

We are posting our recipe winners out of order, because this recipe is one that should really be made right now... while the beans and peas are still in season and the potatoes can be found on the smaller side.

We love Peggy Doyle's recipe for its definite cheekiness, personality and attitude! This is a recipe filled with character! We love its language and the tone of itsadvice andcomments... the way this recipe is written. We love its cultural background... its regional character and biases. And we love its educational angle... it has the potential to teach something to our market goers about the maritimes(and goodness knows there are a lot of displaced maritimers living here in Edmonton! Lol), adding another layer of richness and complexity to the market community that we are working so hard to build.

Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (3)
photo from eat-this-town.com


Hodge Podge is the best of traditional, home cooking: heavy dutch ovens, cream and the nuts and bolts of a farmers' market: potatoes, carrots, beans and peas. It is more like a soup than a stew. Using the freshest of vegetables selected at the market, and not allowing them to overcook is the secret to this being a health-filled recipe, despite its use of cream and butter.Notice that the lack of flour to thicken this recipe means that it is gluten free!

Many a maritimer would insist that this is a perfect summer recipe, best made when the beans just start appearing at the farmers' market and the potatoes are new and tiny and can be added to the recipe whole, or simply cut in half. But as long as the beans are in season... and at our market that means into the fall (with T.R. Greenhouses'green broad beans)... the recipe can be adapted & it can still be made!It is a celebration of fresh vegetables, and a winning combination of great taste, age-old tradition and wonderful comfort food.

Veggies for this recipe can be found at the booths of any one of three vegetables vendors: Dargatz Family Farm, Riverbend Gardens and the Holden Colony. And don't forget that Peter's Lakeview Farm also has beans... they're not just about saskatoons. Delicious bread for sopping up its juices can be found at Prairie Mill Bakery, or if you'd prefer something gluten free, at Celebrate, Gluten Free. Perfectly in season as fall approaches, now is the time to explore a well loved Canadian maritime tradition... Dig in and enjoy!

nova scotia hodge podge

- a traditional recipe


Peggy writes, Simple. Fresh. Delicious. No hiding behind fancy schmancy ingredients, or overseasoning. Just a little salt and pepper to round things out. If you’re looking for a recipethat is brimming with complex flavours and seasonings, this isn’t it. Hodge podge is allabout the vegetables. We like to let ‘em shine.

Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (4)Once you’re done eating the veggies, I think most Maritimers would tell you to sop upthe extra broth up with some hearty bread. I’m also betting that most would like me tomention that hodge podge is just as good – if not better – on the second day. And that ittastes mighty fine alongside a juicy steak.

Makes enough for 4-6 people.


ingredients
Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (5)10-12 new potatoes – scrubbed/not peeled, and halved – quarter any largepotatoes, and don’t cut the small ones – you want the potato pieces to be about thesame size
2-3 cups chopped new carrots – scrubbed/not peeled, cut into bite sized pieces(you can peel them if you like)
Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (6)1 cup chopped yellow beans – 1 inch long pieces
1 cup chopped green beans – 1 inch long pieces
Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (7)1 cup shelled pod peas – you want just the peas, not the pods
1 cup blend – you want something around the 10% fat mark (FYI – some people
use a higher fat cream, and up to 1.5 cups of it)
1/4 – 1/2 cup butter (I use 6 tablespoons)
salt and pepper to taste

instructions
Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (8)Note: the cooking times listed below are what I use. Generally, you want the veggies –especially the beans – to be tender crisp. Some people like their veggies softer, and willcook longer – thus the frequent use of the word “about.”

  1. Fill a Dutch oven about halfway with water, and salt lightly (about 1/2 teaspoon of salt).Bring to a boil.
  2. Add the potatoes to the boiling water. Cook for about 7 minutes.
  3. Add the carrots to the pot, and continue cooking for about 5 minutes.
  4. Next add the yellow and green beans to the pot, and continue cooking for about 5minutes.
  5. Finally, add the peas, and continue cooking for about 3 minutes.
  6. Drain off most of the water – leave about an inch of water (no more) in the bottom of thepot with the vegetables. Return the pot to the stove, and reduce burner heat to low. Addthe blend and butter, and some salt and pepper (I start with a 1/4 teaspoon of each).
  7. Gently stir to combine, allowing the the blend and butter to heat through. As you’restirring, the potatoes might break up a bit. Not to worry. As the the blend and butter heatthrough, the broth may begin to thicken. This is normal. Don’t allow the mixture to boil.
  8. Once the mixture has heated through, it is ready to serve. Season with a little salt andpepper to taste. Serve with bread to sop up the extra broth.

Store any unused portions in the refrigerator, and re-heat before serving.

Recipe fromPeggy Doyle, 3rd Placed Winner in our Annual Recipe Contest

Visit our website athttp://www.swefm.ca

Intro by Sheri Hendsbee (in maritimer speak, a true CFA... Come From Away)

Recipe: Nova Scotia Hodge Podge (2024)

FAQs

What is hodgepodge made of? ›

Hodge-podge or hotch potch (variously capitalised and hyphenated) is a soup or stew, usually based on diced mutton or other meat, with green and root vegetables. It is familiar in different versions in Britain and North America and is particularly associated with Scotland.

What is a hodgepodge or stew with many ingredients beginning with O? ›

Oden: Japanese Hodgepodge Stew.

Why is it called hobo stew? ›

Mulligan stew, also known as hobo stew, is a type of stew said to have been prepared by American hobos in camps in the early 1900s.

Why is it called Irish stew? ›

One theory about the dish's origins is that it was originally made with goat meat, which was readily available in Ireland at the time. However, as the popularity of the dish spread, it evolved to include lamb or mutton, which was more commonly consumed by the wealthy.

Where did the term Hodge Podge come from? ›

In the case of hodgepodge and hotchpotch, the rhyme is not an accident. These words came to English from early French in the form hochepot. The spelling was changed to make the second half of the word rhyme with the first. In French hochepot was a stew of many foods cooked together in a pot.

Where does hodgepodge come from? ›

Etymology. From Middle English hochepoche, a variation of hochepot, from Old French hochepot, from Middle Dutch hutspot (“beef or mutton cut into small pieces and mixed and boiled together in a pot”), from hotsen, hutsen (“to shake; jog; jolt”) + pot (“pot”), equivalent to hotch +‎ pot.

What is hodgepodge? ›

Definitions of hodgepodge. a motley assortment of things. synonyms: farrago, gallimaufry, hotchpotch, melange, mingle-mangle, mishmash, oddments, odds and ends, omnium-gatherum, ragbag.

What is Mod Podge used for? ›

Mod Podge is a glue, sealer and varnish in one, which is perfect for decoupage and other arts and crafts. With Mod Podge you can glue your project, varnish the surface and at the same time provide a protective coating (sealing). This makes Mod Podge great for all kinds of projects.

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