A shepherd groups and oversees sheep, as a rule to raise them for possible deal at a meat market. When utilized as an action word, the word shepherd intends to direct something (like sheep); move them toward where you need them next. For sheep, that regularly implies from their pen to a field of grass where they eat. Subsequently, the shepherd shepherds the sheep to the field from their pen.
A pie comprises of cake shaped into a bowl that will contain a staple food item that the pastry specialist picks (meat, vegetables, or natural product). With that much done, the item could be called some different option from a pie. At the point when the cook adds a cake cover (top or top) then, at that point heats their creation, the person in question has prepared pie. The name shepherd's pie suggests that lamb (the meat of sheep) got prepared into the pie. While valid, if the bread cook decides to utilize lamb, the name shepherd's pie applies to any eatable food shepherded into the baked good bowl.
You know the name for arranged food items that were not all devoured: extras. Shepherd's pie, a newly heated show of kitchen extras, gives a cook a variety of freedom to tidy up an in any case B list dinner while practically getting the cooler free from more established, yet useable food before it ruins. I have seen the name "cowhand's pie." A pie will eat (taste) something similar if the name changes; the actual pie stays as before. Ranchers crowd steers, as shepherds group sheep. A few anglers crowd fish into a snare, so you may have angler's pie on the off chance that you wish, and you presumably should consider it that on the off chance that you heated extra fish into your pie.
In the event that from Argentina, you may allude to your pie as gaucho pie, since a gaucho (the Argentinean word for a cowpoke) crowds cows while riding a horse. Talking about cows, western Americans favor the name steers, and they loathe the term kid when alluding to themselves and their practice of grouping steers. They like cattlemen better. Cattlemen's pie works then, at that point, isn't that right? It additionally sounds better compared to cowpoke's pie. Most likely, we should give up there, on the grounds that cattlemen don't generally crowd cows, which live in stables, produce dairy items, and make little cows (calves).
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