November 9th, 2012
09:00 AM ET
While you're frying up some eggs and bacon, we're cooking up something else: a way to celebrate today's food holiday. Throw your snoot in the air. Wave it like you just don't care - November 9 is National Scrapple Day! But what exactly is scrapple, you ask? Per chef Andrew Little of Sheppard Mansion in Hanover, Pennsylvania, "Scrapple is affectionately known as 'everything but the squeal.' It is traditionally a loaf made with the leftover bits of the butchering of hogs. Spices and buckwheat flour are added while the pork is cooking, and the entire mix is poured into loaf pans to chill and set." And as for what those "bits" consist of - perhaps it's best not to delve too deeply. Devotees of the pantheon of loaf meats (scrapple, goetta, livermush, liver pudding, souse, C-loaf, etc.) are well aware that the deliciousness of this delicacy derives partially from the satisfaction of having been thrifty and employed every last part of a pig. Or, in the case of this classic recipe (that employs cornmeal rather then buckwheat), cow trimmings will suffice - we're going for thrifty, not picky. Scrapple 1/2 lb chopped raw meat (beef or pork) Brown onion slowly in a little fat. Add meat, seasoning and water. Cook at simmering point 20 minutes. Add to corn meal and boil for 1 hour. Turn into a mold, cool, cut into slices and fry in fat until brown. Serve with gravy or tomato sauce. Got a favorite way to enjoy this marvelous mushy meat? Shout it out in the comments below. |
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I still don't get what it is!
i don't think it's for me.
i don't think this is for me.
I see you've been practicing your photography.
Is that a recent picture or did you managed to find expired product?
Old pic!
2.29, man I remember when you could get that for under a dollar and feed five kids.
I don't want to eat any food with "cr@p" in its name.