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November 15, 2024, 08:45:06 AM

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Yum or Yuck

Started by tponka,

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pogo_gamer

Yum

Eggs over Easy, Home Fries, Steak, toast n hot coffee

bams68

all yummie except the eggs...not a big egg fan.



homemade blueberry pancakes

Ur Deer Friend
bams


TmT


Luna


pogo_gamer


pammer


pogo_gamer


bams68

Mmmmm

Italian Sausage

Ur Deer Friend
bams

Mmmm Italian

TmT


pogo_gamer


bams68

yuk, no likie dem patatoes....

Home made french frys (deep fryed) sure is greasy but sooo yummy

Ur Deer Friend
bams

TmT


pogo_gamer

Yummy 

Deep fried scrapple cut 1 inch thick and fried till it has a crust

bams68

dun know what that is....*confuzzled*


Ur Deer Friend
bams

TmT

<<scratchin my head>> uh.. imaginary food--- yuck

Stuffed porkchops

pogo_gamer

Yum


Scrapple is a savory mush in which cornmeal and flour, often buckwheat flour, are simmered with pork scraps and trimmings, then formed into a loaf. Small scraps of meat left over from butchering, too small to be used or sold elsewhere, were made into scrapple to avoid waste, a Pennsylvania Dutch tradition.

Contents [hide]
1 Composition
2 Preparation
3 History and regional popularity
4 See also
5 External links



[edit] Composition
Scrapple is typically made of hog offal, such as the head, particularly the brain, eyes, heart, liver, bladder, and other scraps, which are boiled with any bones attached (often the entire head), to make a broth. Once cooked, bones and fat are discarded, the meat is reserved, and (dry) cornmeal is boiled in the broth to make a mush. The meat, finely minced, is returned, and seasonings, typically sage, thyme, savory, and others, are added. The mush is cast into loaves, and allowed to cool thoroughly until gelled. The proportions and seasoning are very much a matter of the region and the cook's taste.

Commercial scrapple often contains these traditional ingredients, with a distinctive flavor to each brand, though homemade recipes often specify more genteel cuts of pork, with a consequently blander taste. A few manufacturers have introduced beef and turkey varieties, but often color the loaf to retain the traditional coloration derived from the original pork brains base.


[edit] Preparation

A plate of scrappleScrapple is typically cut into thin (quarter-inch-thick) slices, pan-fried in butter or oil until the outsides form a crust, and served at breakfast, as an accompaniment to eggs. It is eaten plain or with ketchup, maple syrup, dark corn syrup, or apple butter.

In some regions, however, such as New England, it is prepared by mixing the scrapple with scrambled eggs and served with toast.


[edit] History and regional popularity
Scrapple is arguably the first pork food invented in America.[1] The first recipes were created by Dutch colonists who settled near Philadelphia and Chester County, Pennsylvania in the 17th and 18th centuries. The culinary ancestor of scrapple was the Low German dish called Panhas (literally, "pan rabbit"), which was adapted to make use of locally available ingredients.[citation needed]

Scrapple is strongly associated with Philadelphia and neighboring eastern Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Maryland and Delaware. Among the Pennsylvania Dutch and in Appalachia, scrapple is known as pawn haas or pon haus, a term hailing back to the old German dish. It can be found in most supermarkets throughout this region in both fresh and frozen refrigerated cases. It can sometimes be found in cities farther from this area, even as far away as Los Angeles, in frozen form.

TmT

Uncooked scrapple.......... dont look for me to give u the history like Gamer..... rofl

kandykitty20012


bams68


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