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Nutrition: per serving

  • kcal460
  • fat31g
  • saturates13g
  • carbs24g
  • sugars0g
  • fibre3g
  • protein23g
  • salt2.72g
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Method

  • step 1

    Heat the oil in a large heavy-based frying pan. Add the sausages and fry for 8-10 minutes until well browned. Remove the sausages, then slice them on the diagonal and set aside.

  • step 2

    Turn the heat to high, then add the potatoes and leeks and give them a good stir. Continue to cook on a fairly high heat until the potatoes begin to brown and turn crisp. Toss the sausage slices back in along with the creamed horseradish and heat for a further 2-3 minutes. Take the pan off the heat, sprinkle in the cheese, season well and gently stir to combine.

RECIPE TIPS
WITH MUSTARD

Try wholegrain mustard instead of horseradish if you like.

Recipe from Good Food magazine, March 2004

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Comments, questions and tips (29)

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Overall rating

A star rating of 4.3 out of 5.37 ratings

ianchristie5

I have cooked this over many years. 1. Parboil the potatoes. Allow to go cold. Cut thick. 2. Cook the sausage, the leeks and the potatoes separately. 3. Combine and heat through.

Everything gets cooked, not burnt or mashed.

maggiebleksley avatar

maggiebleksley

question

Please can somebody tell me how you get the potatoes brown and crisp without burning the leeks?

frome-hallMtMJeiZT

tip

I've made this dish many times and have adapted it successfully since becoming vegan. Whether vegan or not, the potatoes should be parboiled and cut into chunks of 3 to 4 centimetres rather than sliced. That way, they keep together and don't 'mush'. 6 medium or 4 biggish potatoes should do it. …

Bill Randall avatar
Bill Randall

Use waxy potatoes. They don't fall.

Alex Mac 3 avatar

Alex Mac 3

How is this hash?

Just made it and it didn’t quite turn out the way demonstrated by the recipe/picture. Still don’t understand why this is posted as a “good” recipe when it is in fact just a *bad* one.

maggiebleksley avatar
maggiebleksley

If my finished product doesn't turn out like the picture, I blame myself rather than the recipe.

ellestardust avatar

ellestardust

A star rating of 2 out of 5.

The potatoes just turned to mush, I followed the recipe method exactly and they just break apart. I used mustard as suggested in the tip and also a squeeze of honey, the flavour was delicious but ruined by mushy potatoes.

maggiebleksley avatar
maggiebleksley

Might it be that you'd cooked them too much before putting them into the hash? It does say lightly cooked, but maybe you did cook them lightly.

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