SCRAPPLE
Steps:
- To a large stockpot, add the pork butt, hocks, onion, celery, peppercorns and bay leaves. Barely cover with water and simmer over low heat until the pork is tender and the meat falls off the bones, about 2 hours.
- Drain and reserve the stock. Pour the solid contents onto a baking sheet so that you can easily discard the celery, onions, peppercorns, bay leaves and all of the bones. Make sure to pull the meat completely off the bones, being careful to remove all the small pieces of bone.
- Add the meat to a food processor with the blade attachment and pulse to coarsely chop. Don't over grind it.
- Measure 1 gallon of stock and return it to the pot along with the chopped meat and the salt, ground black pepper, cayenne, and sage. Bring to a simmer over low heat.
- Add the cornmeal and stir, stir, stir. Simmer until smooth and thick, about 15 minutes. Add a little stock or water, if needed, to ensure a smooth texture.
- Pour into 3 loaf pans and refrigerate until solid, preferably overnight.
- Unmold, slice and fry in clarified butter until golden brown. Serve with applesauce or maple syrup.
SCRAPPLE
Most recipes for scrapple, a dish popular at diners in eastern Pennsylvania and the Mid-Atlantic, call for offal rather than cooked pork. But ours, first published in December 1953 and later in the Food News Department's booklet "Encore for the Roast," was devised as a way to use up leftover pork loin. You can substitute in 1 1/2 cups puréed pork loin or start from scratch with ground pork. You'll need a food processor and a double boiler for this recipe. The latter will save you 45 minutes active stirring time.
Provided by Sara Bonisteel
Categories breakfast, brunch, project, sausages, side dish
Time 1h
Yield 8 servings
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- Bring ham broth, 1 1/2 cups water and 1/2 teaspoon salt to a boil in the top of a double boiler over direct heat. Once boiling, sprinkle cornmeal into liquid, stirring constantly till mixture is smooth and starts to boil. Meanwhile, bring water to a boil in the bottom of the double boiler. Place the pot with hot cornmeal on top of the bottom of the double boiler, cover and cook for 45 minutes.
- While the cornmeal mixture cooks, heat large nonstick skillet. Brown ground pork until cooked thoroughly. Remove from heat and let cool. Do not drain. Once the pork has reached room temperature, grind meat to a paste in a food processor.
- Place puréed meat in a bowl and add grated onion, 1 teaspoon of salt, the pepper and the sage, and mix well. Add hot cornmeal mixture and combine thoroughly so no lumps remain.
- Rinse 9-by-5-inch loaf pan in cold water and grease with bacon fat. Pack meat mixture in loaf pan and cover skin of meat with plastic wrap, pressing it against the surface. Meat mixture will be warm to touch. Let meat loaf come to room temperature, and then place in the refrigerator to chill overnight.
- Remove plastic wrap and unmold scrapple onto a cutting board. Cut into 1/2-inch slices. Dust lightly with cornmeal and fry on both sides in a small amount of bacon fat.
EASY SCRAPPLE
This is a recipe from my local TV station. I fell in love with Scrapple when I visited a friend in Philadelphia years ago. Since I cannot buy it in the grocery stores in Utah, I am going to make my own. It doesn't sound very hard at all. I will add a picture when I make it.
Provided by Marie Everson
Categories Pork
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- 1. In a Dutch oven or large heavy saucepan scramble fry over medium heat sausage and onion until sausage is no longer pink; drain excess fat. Add milk, salt and seasoning. Over medium low heat, scraping bottom of pan to loosen drippings, bring to a boil; slowly sprinkle/sift in cornmeal, stirring constantly to prevent lumps. Continue to cook and stir for 10 minutes. Rinse a standard bread loaf pan with cold water; spread and pat scrapple mixture into damp loaf pan (may slightly cool scrapple mixture and place in plastic wrap lined loaf pan). Cover and refrigerate overnight. To serve, unmold scrapple from pan. Slice scrapple into 1/4 - 1/2 inch thick slices (thoroughly chilled or partially frozen scrapple slices easier). Butter hot griddle or fry pan, add scrapple slices (slices should not touch) and brown on both sides. Serve scrapple warm, drizzled with maple syrup, and a glass of milk and fruit for a hearty breakfast or brunch.
- 2. Notes: Scrapple is short for meat scrapes. In pioneer days and even today in Pennsylvania Dutch country scrapple was/is a way to use scrapes of pork during the annual harvest. Today's recipe is "much" easier to make, faster, healthier, and is suited to city dwellers. There are many variations - each created to suite the taste preferences of the family. This recipe is basic, experiment with your own variations. Recipe serves 6-8
- 3. *Variation in preparation: use lean pork cuts, cut in chunks, place in large pan, cover with water or chicken broth, bring to a boil, cover, reduce heat and stew until meat is fork tender. Remove meat from cooking liquid and shred with a fork. Measure remaining liquid, add milk to make 1 quart liquid. Prepare scrapple following directions above. **Variations in seasonings and ingredients, try one or more: pinch ground cloves, pinch ground nutmeg, dried thyme or marjoram, 1/2-1 cup chopped apple, chopped cooked ham etc
GRILLED ROSEMARY PORK CHOPS
Boneless pork chops marinated in a soy sauce/brown sugar/rosemary marinade and grilled to perfection!
Provided by Steve B
Categories Main Dish Recipes Pork Pork Chop Recipes Boneless
Time 3h20m
Yield 4
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Whisk together the soy sauce, water, brown sugar, and rosemary in a bowl, and pour 1/2 of the marinade into a resealable plastic bag. Add the pork chops, coat with the marinade, squeeze out excess air, and seal the bag. Marinate in the refrigerator for at least 3 hours. Set the remaining marinade aside.
- Preheat an outdoor grill for medium heat, and lightly oil the grate. Remove the pork chops from the marinade, and shake off excess. Discard the remaining marinade.
- Place pork chops on the grill and cook until the pork is no longer pink in the center, brushing occasionally with the reserved marinade, 4 to 5 minutes on each side. An instant-read thermometer inserted into the center should read 145 degrees F (63 degrees C).
Nutrition Facts : Calories 272.8 calories, Carbohydrate 25.9 g, Cholesterol 65 mg, Fat 5.8 g, Fiber 1.2 g, Protein 29 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Sodium 3655.7 mg, Sugar 20.8 g
REAL SCRAPPLE
here is why you don't see any real scrapple recipes on Zaar. This is not "the" Scrapple recipe. This is A scrapple recipe. Each family developed its own. When I was a kid, every family had its own. It is becoming a lost art. They can tell you Grandma made scrapple but not what her recipe was.
Provided by drhousespcatcher
Categories Breakfast
Time 30m
Yield 8 pans
Number Of Ingredients 12
Steps:
- NOTE: the meat involved is Pork head, meat, feet, heart and tongue, or other pork trimmings, if desired, including liver.
- Place them in a water in a covered container until the soft tissue separates readily from the bone. Separate tissue from bone and grind with a fine grinder. Return the ground meat to the strained soup container and boil. Cereal is then added. A common cereal mixture is seven parts cornmeal and three parts of either buckwheat, white, or rye flour.
- Approximately 4 lbs of the ground meat combined with 3 lbs of soup (liquid) plus 1 lb of cereal is sometimes used. Gradually moisten the cereal with a cool liquid (water or the cooled soup) to prevent lumping. Add this premoistened cereal to the ground meat-soup mixture slowly then boil for 30 minutes.
- Prior to finishing boiling, add seasoning.
- A suggested seasoning combination for 8 lbs of finished scrapple would include 3 oz salt, 1/4 oz black pepper, 1/4 oz sweetened marjoram, 1/4 oz nutmeg, 1/4 oz sage or thyme, and 2-1/2 oz onions. Some prefer to add a pinch of mace and a pinch of red pepper also.
- After the seasoning is mixed thoroughly and the onions cooked, pour the scrapple into pans (not bowls) and refrigerate to 30 - 32F degrees immediately.
- Note this is usually made in large batches and saved throughout the year until the next butchering. It uses every part of the pig so nothing is wasted. It wasn't a throwaway society. This is also NOT a city recipe. They didn't butcher as they did in the country.
- number of pans is a guess.
- Note: IF you want the instructions for cleaning the meat [from head and so forth] zaar me. I am not going to post it because more people are going to look at this that are NOT going to do it yourself than people who are. Some just don't wanna hear it and that isn't a problem. My brother always turned green.
GRANDMA'S PORK CHOPS IN MUSHROOM GRAVY
This is my Grandma's recipe that she gave me when I got married. Pork chops are baked then served with a rich mushroom sauce. It takes a little bit of work, but is great for a special dinner - my husband loves it!
Provided by HEIDIHELM
Categories Main Dish Recipes Pork Pork Chop Recipes Braised
Time 1h15m
Yield 6
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
- Melt the butter in a large skillet over medium heat. Add garlic, and saute until fragrant. Season pork chops with salt and pepper, then fry them in the skillet just until browned on both sides, about 3 minutes per side. Remove the pork chops to a baking pan or Dutch oven.
- Pour the mushrooms into the skillet with the pork drippings and garlic, and stir in the sherry and beef broth, scraping any bits of pork that are stuck to the pan. Bring to a boil, then pour over the pork chops in the baking pan. Cover with a lid, or aluminum foil.
- Bake for 45 minutes in the preheated oven, then remove the lid or foil, and continue to bake for another 15 minutes. Remove the chops from the pan to a serving platter, and place the dish on the stove over medium heat. Stir together the cornstarch and water. When the juices in the pan come to a boil, slowly stir in the cornstarch mixture and cook until thickened, about 2 minutes. Spoon sauce over the chops, and serve.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 208.7 calories, Carbohydrate 10.7 g, Cholesterol 58.6 mg, Fat 8.1 g, Fiber 0.9 g, Protein 19.2 g, SaturatedFat 3.4 g, Sodium 609 mg, Sugar 0.9 g
GRAMMIE'S PORK SCRAPPLE
I'm not sure where this recipe came from, but my Grammie has been making it her whole life. Her mom was born and raised in Poland and Grammie makes a lot of Polish recipes, so I wonder if this came from her mom? Anyway, it is delicious. My Grammie made this for Christmas breakfast for over 30 years and passed the recipe onto me as cooking got too difficult for her. Enjoy!
Provided by Amy and Jay
Categories Breakfast
Time 30m
Yield 8 slices, 8 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 8
Steps:
- In large skillet, cook sausage meat, breaking lumps, until no longer pink. Transfer to bowl and pour off fat.
- Add butter to skillet and cook onion and apple until softened. Sprinkle with cayenne and add to meat.
- In large, heavy saucepan bring chicken broth to a boil. Add Farina in a stream, whisking constantly. Cook, stirring about 5 minutes.
- Remove from heat and whisk in eggs, then stir in meat/apple/onion mixture.
- Line a 9x5 loaf pan (or two smaller ones) with buttered wax paper and pour in scrapple. Rap pan on counter to eliminate bubbles and press down with spoon. Cool and then chill in frig. overnight wrapped in plastic wrap.
- Slice and fry in butter til slices are browned. Can serve with eggs or warm syrup or sauce.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 338, Fat 19.2, SaturatedFat 8, Cholesterol 98.8, Sodium 326.5, Carbohydrate 27.8, Fiber 1.3, Sugar 3.4, Protein 13.6
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- Place the pork in a large pot. Cover with plenty of water. Bring to a boil over high heat. Reduce heat to medium, cover with a lid, and allow to simmer until the meat is very tender, about 2 hours, adding water as needed.
- Once meat is fork tender, remove from pot and transfer to a large plate. Using two forks, shred the pork into small pieces.
- Bring the broth back to a boil, adding more water if needed. Add the shredded pork back to the broth. Reduce heat to medium and using a wooden spoon, stir vigorously while adding cornmeal. Keep stirring and pouring cornmeal until the mixture starts to become very thick, sort of like wall paper paste. It’s easier to have a second person in this step. One person stirring while the other adds the cornmeal. Immediately remove from heat. Add a generous amount of salt and pepper and mix throughly. Taste the mixture and add more salt and pepper as needed to taste. Don’t be shocked by how much salt and pepper is needed in this recipe.
- Transfer the scrapple to greased loaf pans Allow mixture to set for about one hour, giving it time to set up. Once the mixture sets up, invert it onto a plate, cover and refrigerate.
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