It was a great delight therefore when, in an ASDA in Somerset of all places, I stumbled across a tin of laverbread ("bara lawr"), which the blurb on the box it came in informs me is "Bwyd Taddodiadol o Gymru". That's "A traditional Welsh delicacy" to you and me. It goes on to elaborate that it is "produced from the edible seaweed Laver, which grows on the rocky coastal areas of Wales" and is "rich in health giving minerals including iron and iodine". The seaweed is boiled for several hours and then minced or pureed, leaving a "gelatinous paste", according to Wikipedia, which might not sound all that promising, but given that it is sometimes referred to as "Welshman's Caviar" (even Richard Burton thought so, apparently), it must be held in high regard by some. Unless it's nothing special, and the comparison just came about since they are both slightly unusual delicacies from the sea. Or maybe laverbread is horrible, and so that's actually a dig at Welshmen. I was keen to find out, and 1st March this year was the perfect day to do so.
Opening the tin, the description of it as a "gelatinous paste" seems accurate at least; a deep, dark green mush sits there, which even when shaken barely wobbles at all. The smell is not all that dissimilar to the callaloo I tried some months back - that same vegetal funk with a spinach-like hit of iron is there, but also a slight brininess too, which makes sense given where the laver has come from. Taste-wise it is very similar to the seaweed you get in Chinese restaurants, if you can imagine that in gelatinous paste form rather than crisp and crunchy.
Ready for toppings! |
The mussels have the same "SMOKED GREAT TASTE" (as the box says) as the oysters I tried last year for Valentine's Day, also produced by John West. In fact, the smoky taste is the most noticeable thing about them - they certainly look like mussels, but in a blind tasting I'm not sure I would have been able to tell any difference between them and the oysters.
Their smokiness stands up well against the strong ferrous tang of the laverbread, though given that I also have the bacon there, providing a similar flavour, perhaps pickled mussels or cockles would have been even better, adding a vinegary taste to the mix as well. But no matter; while it may have looked like a bit of a car-crash on a plate, it was nonetheless a load of very tasty bits and pieces served up together - a hearty meal if ever there was one.
So, is the laverbread comparable to caviar? Maybe I've it's because I haven't had the really good stuff, but I've never quite seen what all the fuss is about with caviar. The laverbread, however, is tasty, wholesome and nutritious, and of course vastly more affordable. Less refined, maybe - indeed it used to be eaten as part of a full breakfast by Welsh pitmen in need of plenty of energy before a day's work - but overall, it just feels altogether more down-to-earth. Which is perhaps the very same characteristic that attracts me to Wales and its people too. Dydd Gwyl Dewi hapus! (Happy St. David's Day!)
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