All Good Recipes - Cook delicious culinary delights meals for your family and friends in your own kitchen!

Cook delicious culinary delights meals for your family and friends in your own kitchen!
Eat restaurant quality food at home every night at your own dinner table!
Browse or search for your favorite recipes right here.

ABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ123456789



Scrapple



* Exported from MasterCook II *

SCRAPPLE

Recipe By :
Serving Size : 1 Preparation Time :0:00
Categories : Breakfast Usenet

Amount Measure Ingredient -- Preparation Method
-------- ------------ --------------------------------
3 cups Chicken broth
1 1/3 cups Cornmeal (yellow)
1 tablespoon Flour
1 1/2 teaspoons Salt
1/4 teaspoon Sage -- ground fine
1/4 teaspoon Thyme -- ground fine
1/4 teaspoon Cayenne
2 pounds Chicken parts
1 Onion -- chopped
6 Peppercorns (cracked)

Bring the chicken broth to a boil; add chopped onion and peppercorns. Add
chicken and cook until the meat falls off the bones (about 1 hour).

Strain the cooked chicken out of the broth and save the broth. Remove the
bones and inedible parts from the cooked chicken, then chop or grind the
cooked meat into fine pieces. Be careful if you use a food processor, so
that you don't puree the meat.

Simmer the chicken broth in a large pan. Mix cornmeal, flour, salt, thyme,
sage and cayenne with about 1 cup of cold water. Stir well. Now slowly stir
this mixture into the simmering broth.

Add the cooked, ground chicken to the simmering pot. Simmer and stir for
about 5 minutes. Pour hot mixture into well-greased loaf pans. Chill until
firm. To serve: remove from pan, cut into slices, roll in flour or cornmeal,
and fry in a greased frying pan.

NOTES:

* Eastern-style scrapple (a breakfast food like sausage) -- I grew up in
Maryland, and in Maryland people eat scrapple for breakfast. Among my
schoolmates, the story was that if you ever found out what was in commercial
scrapple you would stop eating it, and I did stop eating it for many years.
But now I know how to make my own. I got this recipe from the University of
Maryland poultry farming people, though I have added more seasonings because
they seem to like blander foods than I do. Yield: serves 6 hungry farmers.

* Vary the amount of salt in this recipe to suit your taste. You can make
scrapple out of almost any meat, though chicken and pork are traditional.
For a different, and truly authentic Maryland taste, leave out the salt and
cayenne and substitute about 2 t of Old Bay seasoning.

* A loaf of home-made scrapple will keep for 10 days in the refrigerator,
or it can be cut into slices and frozen.

: Difficulty: easy.
: Time: 1 hour preparation and cooking, several hours cooling, 5 minutes to
fry.
: Precision: no need to measure; approximate measurement OK.

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -



Recipes provided by All Good Recipes are property and copyright of their owners.

All Good Lyrics  |  All Good Tabs  |  Partner Sites

© 2024 All Good Recipes. All Rights Reserved.
www.all-good-recipes.com