Porridge was a staple winter breakfast, always made with milk, always served with sugar, and as a special treat we would have brown sugar as well as white. Brown sugar was always lumpy and I would be very careful when I stirred it in so that some of the lumps might stay intact and would met and become a lovely concealed puddle of sweetness.
My tastes have changed; I know porridge is a good filler, but somehow these days I want something lighter for breakfast. When I had porridge as a child we would cycle or walk everywhere, we didn’t have central heating or double glazing and no doubt needed and burned up all those calories!
The word probably comes from pottage, or maybe poringer, and could originally mean a stew made from barley – barley porridge sounds nice, I love anything made from barley, including bread! It was the Scots, as you might guess who started having porridge made from oats. Sometimes it was made very thick and poured into a special drawer and left to set then cut into slices to be eaten while at work – maybe the first flapjack?
These days if I make it I make it with milk and water – and the milk is half-fat not full-fat as it was when I was young. I don’t add any sugar, occasionally fruit, and these days I do add a pinch of salt – which seemed like a bizarre heresy when I heard about it as a child!

Brochan and porridge are interchangeable in the north of County Antrim, Northern Ireland. A brochan-house was a place where brochan was served during the famine,
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I didn’t know that, Nevin, I must investigate! Thanks for the comment!
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Macbain [Scottish Gaelic dictionary]: “, gruel, porridge, Ir. [brochán], O.Ir. [brothchán]; [broth‐chán], [*broti‐], cookery; root [bru], I.E. [bhru], whence Eng. [broth], Lat. [defrutum], must. See [bruith].”
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Thanks… so interesting to see the development of language!
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More info on porridge at the Dictionary of the Scots Language: http://www.dsl.ac.uk/results/porridge/fulltext/withquotes/both/
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Thank you!
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Golden syrup or Maple Syrup is a must on Porridge. Sugar just doesn’t cut it for me.
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Ooooh, golden syrup! And yes, for special treats it has to be maple syrup!
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porridge, my favourite breakfast:) specially with almond mil, sultanas, cranberries, nuts and seeds and honey:)
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That sounds super!
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Still love porage in winter months, with a knob of butter and a drizzle of maple syrup. I also remember this way of spelling it from my childhood.
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It must be one of the oldest comfort foods!
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My Dad, during World War 2, ended up being the only Welshman in a Scottish regiment for a while and they took pity on him and gave him sugar with his portage. The Scots ate it with salt.
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