In the realm of breakfast and brunch delicacies, scrapple reigns supreme as a dish steeped in history and regional charm. Originating from Pennsylvania Dutch cuisine, this humble dish has captured the hearts of many with its unique blend of flavors and textures. Made from a combination of pork scraps, cornmeal, and seasonings, scrapple is a testament to the art of utilizing every part of the animal. Savor the crispy exterior and tender interior of scrapple, often served with maple syrup or applesauce for a delightful contrast of flavors. This article presents a collection of scrumptious scrapple recipes, each offering a distinctive take on this classic dish. Embark on a culinary journey and discover the versatility of scrapple, whether you prefer the traditional Pennsylvania Dutch recipe, a modern twist with sweet potato, or a vegetarian version bursting with plant-based goodness. Get ready to tantalize your taste buds and create memorable meals with these carefully curated scrapple recipes.
Let's cook with our recipes!
SCRAPPLE
I use a pig's head without the jowls here. I use the jowls to make jowl bacon or guanciale. This results in somewhere around 2 pounds of pig bits once you cook the head and chop it all up. You can use any selection of pig bits, but you need collagen, so a head or pig's feet are necessary.
Provided by Hank Shaw
Categories Breakfast
Time 4h10m
Number Of Ingredients 15
Steps:
- Set the pig's head in a large kettle and cover it with water. Bring this to a boil and skim off all the scum that floats to the surface. When this is done, add the carrots, onion, bay leaves, juniper and black peppercorns. Simmer this, adding more water if the level drops below the pig's head, until the meat wants to fall off the bone, about 3 hours.
- Carefully remove the pig's head and pick off all the meat and random bits. I toss the eyes and the palate, which aren't very tasty. Chop everything up very fine, and combine with the spice mix in a bowl.
- Strain your pig broth and pour about 10 cups into a large pot. Bring this to a simmer and add the cornmeal and buckwheat flour, stirring constantly so you don't get lumps. Add salt to taste. Cook this, stirring often, about 30 minutes.
- Add the chopped pig bits in with the mush and stir well to combine. If you happen to be using the unflavored gelatin, now is when you would add it. Let this all cook for 10 minutes or so.
- Pour this into loaf pans, or a terrine pan. While not strictly necessary, it will make the scrapple easier to remove if you line the pan with plastic wrap first. Pack it in well. Let it cool to room temperature uncovered, then cover it with plastic wrap and refrigerate overnight before slicing and frying.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 129 kcal, Carbohydrate 6 g, Protein 14 g, Fat 5 g, SaturatedFat 2 g, Cholesterol 46 mg, Sodium 497 mg, Fiber 1 g, Sugar 1 g, ServingSize 1 serving
CORNMEAL SCRAPPLE
I grew up in a German-Dutch community and this dish was a favorite there. I like to eat scrapple in the wintertime, but my husband thinks it's perfect anytime. As he always says, "It really sticks to your ribs." -Mrs. Merlin Brubaker, Bettendorf, Iowa
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Side Dishes
Time 30m
Yield 6 servings.
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- In a saucepan, combine the cornmeal, milk, sugar and salt; gradually stir in water. Cook and stir until thickened and bubbly. Reduce heat; cook, covered, 10 minutes longer or until very thick, stirring occasionally. Remove from the heat and stir in sausage. Pour into a greased 7-1/2x3-1/2x2-in. loaf pan (the pan will be very full). Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerator. , To serve, unmold and cut into 1/3-in. slices. Dip both sides in flour. In a skillet, melt butter over medium heat; brown scrapple on both sides. Serve with maple syrup if desired.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 222 calories, Fat 13g fat (6g saturated fat), Cholesterol 29mg cholesterol, Sodium 608mg sodium, Carbohydrate 21g carbohydrate (3g sugars, Fiber 2g fiber), Protein 6g protein.
SOUTHERN SCRAPPLE
Steps:
- In a large skillet, cook sausage over medium heat until no longer pink; drain and set aside. In a large saucepan, bring water to a boil. Gradually add the grits, salt, pepper and cayenne, stirring constantly until thickened. Stir in butter and cheese until melted. Stir in sausage. , Press into a greased 9x5-in. loaf pan. Cover and refrigerate for 1 hour or until cool., Remove scrapple from pan; cut into 1/2-in. slices. In a skillet, cook scrapple in butter until browned on both sides, adding more butter as needed. Serve warm with syrup.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 141 calories, Fat 12g fat (7g saturated fat), Cholesterol 32mg cholesterol, Sodium 497mg sodium, Carbohydrate 4g carbohydrate (0 sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 4g protein.
SCRAPPLE
Originally of Pennsylvania Dutch origin, scrapple was made from the bits and pieces of the pig not suited for anything else! This streamlined recipe takes only minutes to prepare ... perfect for making the night before. Serve topped with choice of warmed syrup.
Provided by KCFOXY
Categories Meat and Poultry Recipes Pork Ground Pork Recipes
Time 13h45m
Yield 8
Number Of Ingredients 4
Steps:
- Place sausage in a large, deep skillet. Cook over medium high heat until evenly brown. Drain and rinse in colander under cold water, breaking sausage into pea sized pieces.
- Return to skillet along with the condensed milk, and heat over medium until just bubbling. Immediately stir in the cornmeal and pepper and reduce heat to simmer. Continue cooking, 5 minutes total; mush will be stiff.
- Pack into 8x4 loaf pan, cover and chill overnight. To serve, cut into 1/4 to 1/2 inch slices and saute until golden in nonstick skillet.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 576 calories, Carbohydrate 41.2 g, Cholesterol 74.5 mg, Fat 38.9 g, Fiber 0.7 g, Protein 15.1 g, SaturatedFat 15 g, Sodium 631.2 mg, Sugar 26.9 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.
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
Steps:
- Trim the fat from around the top of the heart and remove the sinews. Cut the heart into 4 pieces and put it in a heavy stewing kettle with the meaty bones and liver. Add 3 quarts of water, cover and simmer gently for 3 hours until the meat falls from the bones.
- Strain the broth into a clean pot. Discard the bones and put the meat through a coarse grinder. Grind the heart and liver as fine as possible and combine the 2 meat mixtures.
- Bring the broth to a simmer. Combine the cornmeal and the seasonings and gradually add to the boiling broth, stirring constantly. Reduce heat to medium and add the meat mixture. Stir until everything is well mixed. Cook slowly for 30 minutes, stirring almost constantly so it does not stick to the bottom, as it will be quite thick.
- After 30 minutes it is ready to pour. Rinse 9 small breadpans with cold water or grease them and pour the scrapple to the top of the pans. Set the pans to cool and when cool refrigerate until the next day.
- When ready to eat, unmold the scrapple onto a cutting board and cut into 1/4-inch thick slices. Melt fat in a skillet and fry the slices until brown and crusty on both sides. Serve immediately with or without maple syrup.
- The loaves can be unmolded and frozen but will keep refrigerated for about 1 week.
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
Make and share this Easy Scrapple recipe from Food.com.
Provided by Kit Redmond
Categories Breakfast
Time 25m
Yield 12 slices, 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Pour 2 cups of water in a sauce pan and bring to a boil.
- Cut sausage into pieces and add to boiling water mixing throughly (a potato masher works well). Once sausage is done take pan off heat and add red pepper flakes and sage.
- Add cornmeal and mix throughly and pour into loaf pan.
- Refrigerate until completely cooled.
- Slice and fry in frying pan with cooking spray.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 159.5, Fat 11.3, SaturatedFat 3.8, Cholesterol 21.9, Sodium 349.5, Carbohydrate 9, Fiber 0.9, Sugar 0.1, Protein 5.4
OLD-FASHIONED SCRAPPLE
Wonderful for breakfast sure beats the stuff sold in stores! Cooking times include chilling time.
Provided by Chef Shadows
Categories Breakfast
Time 4h30m
Yield 12 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 9
Steps:
- In a large saucepan combine pork, cornmeal, chicken broth, thyme and salt.
- Bring to a boil, stirring often.
- Reduce heat and simmer about 2 minutes or until mixture is very thick, stirring constantly.
- Line an 8x8x2-inch baking pan or a 9x5x3-inch loaf pan with waxed paper, letting paper extend 3-4 inches above top of pan.
- Spoon pork mixture into pan.
- Cover and chill in the refrigerator 4 hours or overnight.
- Unmold; cut scrapple into squares.
- Combine flour and pepper; dust squares with flour mixture.
- In large skillet brown scrapple on both sides in a small amount of hot oil.
- Serves 12.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 156.6, Fat 7.7, SaturatedFat 2.1, Cholesterol 23.8, Sodium 186.3, Carbohydrate 12, Fiber 0.9, Sugar 0.2, Protein 9.6
Tips:
- For the best scrapple, use a combination of pork scraps, pork liver, and pork heart. This will give the scrapple a rich, flavorful taste.
- Be sure to clean the pork scraps thoroughly before cooking. This will help to remove any unwanted impurities.
- Cook the pork scraps, liver, and heart in a large pot until they are tender. This will help to extract the flavor from the meat.
- Once the meat is cooked, drain it and let it cool slightly. Then, chop it into small pieces.
- In a large bowl, combine the chopped meat, cornmeal, flour, salt, pepper, and sage. Mix well until all of the ingredients are evenly combined.
- Pour the scrapple mixture into a greased loaf pan. Then, bake it in a preheated oven at 350 degrees Fahrenheit for 1 hour.
- Let the scrapple cool completely before slicing and serving.
Conclusion:
Scrapple is a delicious and versatile dish that can be enjoyed for breakfast, lunch, or dinner. It is a great way to use up leftover pork scraps, and it is also a good source of protein and iron. If you are looking for a new and exciting way to enjoy pork, then scrapple is definitely worth a try.
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