bean wrote:I tend to avoid Shepard's Pie when I dine out, mostly because I have been so disappointed when it comes with some kind of ground meat. I like somewhat gamey chunks of lamb. Who ever heard of a shepard tending cows?
Anybody want to defend the ground?
I like all varieties. The ground version is fine; the pot roast version is fine; the leftover roast & veggies version is fine. Cottage pie, shepherd's pie, I don't particularly care what it's called. I use the lamb-beef distinction for the two, but in common parlance, I'm don't care. (Plus, there seems to be evidence out there that the shepherd's=lamb, cottage=beef is a more contemporary distinction. Most of the oldest recipes I could find--from the mid-1800s, seem to call for any kind of meat, so the use of the term shepherd's pie to mean any meat pie topped with mashed potatoes has a long history. I even found a record from the House of Commons in 1888 referring to shepherd's pie made with rabbit. And
this recipe from 1895 makes the shepherd's vs cottage distinction by how the potatoes are presented. Shepherd's pie is mashed, cottage pie is layered, sliced potatoes.)