From young on, blood sausage has always been on my table because my parents made it and knew how to prepare it.
Most of what's on the market today, I wouldn't eat, but found a butcher shop that makes it nearly as good as my parents. So it'll sell better it's called rice sausage, but outside of using rice instead of barley which my parents used, it's blood sausage.
I buy it by the case and freeze it...it keeps well because each ring is vacuum packed and it's thawed out overnight...no microwave thawing.
Have eaten blood sausage in a few countries and it's all been similar tasting..... marjoram is the common seasoning. Was surprised that it was served in Ireland and was quite good, along w/ that served in Spain, Finland, Germany and Austria.
It's also a staple in camp when hunting....although one guy won't touch it.
The butcher shop we buy it from is 100 miles away, so the "sausage run" requires a lunch stop at an excellent restaurant...also making the trip worthwhile.
Baking a whole ring {the size of a ring baloney} is the preferred method, but frying it is also good. At our family reunions, a platter of freshly fried blood sausage is always served and shortly is all gone.
Also found a source of Spanish blood sausage {morcilla} and use it in cooking various Spanish dishes. The dishes wouldn't be possible w/o the morcilla.
Across the road from my Dad was a farmer friend who would have him bleed a steer or a hog in lieu of a couple rings of his blood sausage.
Actually blood sausage is the "universal food" because people of most countries utilize every part of the animal, including the blood.
To some, blood sausage might be repugnant, so I guess it depends on what your parents served you when young......Fred
Most of what's on the market today, I wouldn't eat, but found a butcher shop that makes it nearly as good as my parents. So it'll sell better it's called rice sausage, but outside of using rice instead of barley which my parents used, it's blood sausage.
I buy it by the case and freeze it...it keeps well because each ring is vacuum packed and it's thawed out overnight...no microwave thawing.
Have eaten blood sausage in a few countries and it's all been similar tasting..... marjoram is the common seasoning. Was surprised that it was served in Ireland and was quite good, along w/ that served in Spain, Finland, Germany and Austria.
It's also a staple in camp when hunting....although one guy won't touch it.
The butcher shop we buy it from is 100 miles away, so the "sausage run" requires a lunch stop at an excellent restaurant...also making the trip worthwhile.
Baking a whole ring {the size of a ring baloney} is the preferred method, but frying it is also good. At our family reunions, a platter of freshly fried blood sausage is always served and shortly is all gone.
Also found a source of Spanish blood sausage {morcilla} and use it in cooking various Spanish dishes. The dishes wouldn't be possible w/o the morcilla.
Across the road from my Dad was a farmer friend who would have him bleed a steer or a hog in lieu of a couple rings of his blood sausage.
Actually blood sausage is the "universal food" because people of most countries utilize every part of the animal, including the blood.
To some, blood sausage might be repugnant, so I guess it depends on what your parents served you when young......Fred