[Sca-cooks] Black / blood pudding

Tonya R Stinson imbri4 at lycos.com
Thu May 22 19:52:37 PDT 2003


Ya know... someone once told me I had a recipe for just about everything in my files... I guess it's true... this is what I found. :)

---------- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.01

       Title: Boudin Du Pays (Blood Pudding)
  Categories: Ethnic, Pork/ham
       Yield: 1 servings

       2 c  Pork blood           5    Onions; chopped
            -Salt                     -Salt & pepper
       2 lb Pork, fresh               Cloves
       1    Pig's lung                Summer Savory
     1/2    Pig's heart               Coriander seeds; crashed
       2    Pig necks                  -to taste
            -Salt                      2 tb Flour

   "Blood pudding is one of the great delicacies of Acadian cuisine. It used to be that every Acadian family made its own. Since the annual slaughter
   came during Advent, the boudin was usually saved for the Christmas holidays." Also part of Cajun cuisine,
   Sauce a boudin When slaughtering a pig, collect the fresh blood, immediately add salt and stir to prevent coagulation. Cut the fresh pork, the lung, heart and neck into large pieces. Place the meat into a large pot
   and add just water to cover the meat. Add the salt and 3 chopped onions.   Simmer on medium heat for 3 hours. Remove the meat from the cooking liquid and let it cool. Cut the meat into very small pieces or grind it with a meat grinder. Add the meat to the cooking liquid with the 2 remaining onions, pepper and spices. Bring the liquid to a boil and slowly add the blood by pouring it through a sieve. Stir constantly. Add the flour, mixed with a small amount of water. (The flour may be browned in the oven before being add to the meat, provided that slightly more flour is used.) Simmer the mixture on low heat for approximately 1 hour, stirring frequently. This sauce may served later by warming in a skillet.

   Boudin des Branches (Blood Pudding Sausages) To make blood pudding sausages, prepare blood pudding sauce but do not simmer for the last half hour. Rather, clean the small intestines of the pig, cut them into 20 inch pieces at tie them at one end. Using a funnel or a piece of birch bark as was the Acadian tradition, fill the intestinal lining with the sauce until the intestine is three quarters full. press out the air and tie the other end, leaving some space for expansion. Put the branches (sausages) in boiling water and cook for 45 to 1 hour.

   SOURCE:_A Taste of Acadie_ by Marielle Cormier-Boudreau

 -----

Good luck.. you're braver than I am!!!! :)

Elizabeth

--

--------- Original Message ---------

DATE: Thu, 22 May 2003 18:39:51
From: Stacy Robinson <katrenfitzgerald at yahoo.com>
To: sca-cooks at ansteorra.org
Cc:

>the simplest way I know of to make true scottish blood
>pudding is to soak oats in the blood of a fresh kill
>and then steam the swelled grain.....its pretty
>disgusting my great grandfather thought it was the
>greatest stuff on earth though.....
>
>Katren



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