Bangers 'n' Mash (or Sausage and Mashed Potato)
Any kind of sausage works well, so you can try cider sausages or Lincolnshire / Cumberland Sausages (sausages make with a local recipe of herbs and spices to those counties)
Ingredients
1-2 large potatoes per person
Milk
Butter
Salt and Pepper
Sausages
Gravy mix.
Method
1) Peel the potatoes if you want to (it depends if you want creamy white mash, or if you want some of the fibre and goodness from the skins). Wash and chop the potatoes into fairly small (1 inch cube?) pieces.
2) Boil the potatoes in a large pan of salted water, until they are very soft (about 1/2 hour).
3) While the potatoes are cooking, fry or grill the sausages. Some people still insist on frying sausages in lard, but it is much healthier to use vegeatble oil or grill them. Make the gravy according to the instructions on the packet.
4) Drain the potatoes and mash them. Add milk, butter, salt and pepper as you mash the potatoes - I would use about 1tbsp butter and a small splash of milk, but some people like more.
5) Spoon the mash onto plates, and put the sausages on top. Pour gravy over the top.
English people would usually eat this with some garden peas on the side, or some fried onions and mushrooms. We would also have a little english musard on the side, or sometimes add a teaspoon of mustard to the mash to make it spicy
The Irish have a similar dish called 'colcannon' which is mashed potato and cabbage. To make this, just add some chopped cabbage to the potatoes while you are boiling them, and then mash them together.
I eat a vegetarian version of this dish, using veggie sausages, vegetarian gravy, low fat spread (instead of the butter) and soy milk.