APAD: over-egg the pudding

7
7grizzly
楼主 (文学城)

Meaning:

  To go too far in exaggerating or embellishing something - to adorn or supply

  to excess.

 

Background:

   `Over-egg the pudding' is an English phrase and first appeared in the

   mid-19th century. It originated as a simple literal phrase alluding to the

   way that baked foods may be spoiled by using too many eggs.

 

   The earliest examples of the phrase in print that I know of are from 1845

   Robert Smith Surtees' novel Hillingdon Hall, 1845:

 

     `We mustn't over-egg the pudding,' as the Yorkshire farmers say.

 

   Francis Kildale Robinson's A glossary of words used in the neighbourhood of

   Whitby, 1876:

 

     He ower-egg'd his market.

 

   As the first of these refers to `over-egg the pudding' as a Yorkshire

   expression and the second relates to the Yorkshire coastal town of Whitby,

   it's reasonable to surmise that the pudding in question is a Yorkshire

   Pudding.

 

   My mother taught me (and so, this must be right) that Yorkshires are made

   from equal volumes of eggs, flour and milk. Too much of any ingredient and

   the pudding won't rise.

 

   We have no smoking gun that points to `over-egging the pudding' deriving from

   the cooking of Yorkshire Pudding but, as circumstantial evidence goes, the

   above looks quite convincing.

 

- www.phrases.org.uk [edited]

 

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I had English high tea years back but don't remember Yorkshire pudding and would

very much like to try, if only for the sake of the proverb. A search turned up

nothing decent south of SF, however. In the city, The Pig and Whistle at the

edge of Japan Town and Lovejoy's Tea Room in Noe Valley looked nice.

 

The latter is reachable by Caltrain, Bart, and a few minutes of walk. If I fancy

meat and two veg over a pint, we'll ride the train, cross King St, hop on a T

car, get off at Union Square, and switch to 38/38R on Geary for the pub.

 

When I brought up my plan to try British, Tim mentioned the "Toad in the Hole"

which was new to me. According to a recipe, this classic dish is essentially

sausage cooked in Yorkshire pudding. So there, another connection.

最西边的岛上
Took Caltrain from SF 2 Stanford last fall &had a nice lunch
最西边的岛上
but no pudding:-) Don’t like taste ofPudding w/Or w/o egg;-)
最西边的岛上
agree cooking is an art, like anything else. Thx 7G.
7
7grizzly
For the proverb, I'd try it if it were stuffed with green
7
7grizzly
eggs and ham!
7
7grizzly
Techno-geeks south of SF consume less culture, I guess.
最西边的岛上
Yep. been there multipleTimes bf, so only went4townStrolling
最西边的岛上
PaloAlto'sUnreal&buzzWords everywhere,even outsideCoffeeShop
最西边的岛上
by Dr. Seuss? ;-)))))
7
7grizzly
Their libraries are more attractive to me.
最西边的岛上
shake hands (+ book stores), but couldn't make it that day.
暖冬cool夏
In cooking, timing and apt ingredients make the difference.
7
7grizzly
And they improve w/ practice. For the kids: first, cook!