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AR15.COM
2/15/2005 6:43:23 PM EDT
hey guys , is this stuff any good. what does it taste like?......I think only Yankee's eat scrapple....right?
2/16/2005 12:04:10 PM EDT
[#1]
Have no idea what it is..............I live just about a far North as you can get.
2/16/2005 12:05:13 PM EDT
[#2]
I remember a thread about scrapple a few years ago.
2/16/2005 12:06:28 PM EDT
[#3]
It tastes like... scrapple.
2/16/2005 12:10:42 PM EDT
[#4]

Good stuff

2/16/2005 12:11:44 PM EDT
[#5]
You must fry it, then smother it in syrup.

It will still taste nasty. YMMV.
2/16/2005 12:12:29 PM EDT
[#6]
great stuff!!!!!!!  It's a mildly spicy sausage held together with corn meal.  Just make sure it's cooked well.  Habbersetts (spelling?) is probably the best brand.  Awesome awesome stuff.  I had a whole pound of it for breakfast last week.
2/16/2005 12:15:19 PM EDT
[#7]

It's dictionary defined as "cornmeal mush made with the meat and broth of pork, seasoned with onions, spices and herbs and shaped into loaves for slicing and frying." The word, scrapple originates from "scrap" or "scrappy" meaning made up of odds and ends for that's exactly what it is - boiled, ground leftover pig scraps with cornmeal and spices thrown in. Scrapple lovers think of it as food for the gods. Anti-scrapplers consider it a culinary abomination.

Scrapple is the unique creation of the Pennsylvania Dutch, and therefore only quasi-American as the immigrants combined their German heritage with New World ingredients. The term "Pennsylvania Dutch" is a corrupted form of Pennsylvania Deutsche, mostly transplanted Rhineland farmers who worked hard and ate heartily. They are frugal people and many of their dishes make imaginative use of every part of the butchered hog's anatomy. Scrapple is one of them.



2/16/2005 12:16:28 PM EDT
[#8]

Quoted:

It's dictionary defined as "cornmeal mush made with the meat and broth of pork, seasoned with onions, spices and herbs and shaped into loaves for slicing and frying." The word, scrapple originates from "scrap" or "scrappy" meaning made up of odds and ends for that's exactly what it is - boiled, ground leftover pig scraps with cornmeal and spices thrown in. Scrapple lovers think of it as food for the gods. Anti-scrapplers consider it a culinary abomination.

Scrapple is the unique creation of the Pennsylvania Dutch, and therefore only quasi-American as the immigrants combined their German heritage with New World ingredients. The term "Pennsylvania Dutch" is a corrupted form of Pennsylvania Deutsche, mostly transplanted Rhineland farmers who worked hard and ate heartily. They are frugal people and many of their dishes make imaginative use of every part of the butchered hog's anatomy. Scrapple is one of them.






I come from PA Dutch. They eat everything on the pig but the squeal.
2/16/2005 12:17:42 PM EDT
[#9]
It is pretty good.  It is impossible to explain the test though.

Try it.  
2/16/2005 12:19:39 PM EDT
[#10]

Quoted:

Quoted:

It's dictionary defined as "cornmeal mush made with the meat and broth of pork, seasoned with onions, spices and herbs and shaped into loaves for slicing and frying." The word, scrapple originates from "scrap" or "scrappy" meaning made up of odds and ends for that's exactly what it is - boiled, ground leftover pig scraps with cornmeal and spices thrown in. Scrapple lovers think of it as food for the gods. Anti-scrapplers consider it a culinary abomination.

Scrapple is the unique creation of the Pennsylvania Dutch, and therefore only quasi-American as the immigrants combined their German heritage with New World ingredients. The term "Pennsylvania Dutch" is a corrupted form of Pennsylvania Deutsche, mostly transplanted Rhineland farmers who worked hard and ate heartily. They are frugal people and many of their dishes make imaginative use of every part of the butchered hog's anatomy. Scrapple is one of them.






I come from PA Dutch. They eat everything on the pig but the squeal.



My great grandfather was German and had a farm in central Pennsylvania.
2/16/2005 12:56:45 PM EDT
[#11]
think..every thing that dosent make it into hotdogs....
2/16/2005 12:58:44 PM EDT
[#12]

Quoted:
think..every thing that dosent make it into hotdogs....



Yup. Eyelids and assholes was always the saying where I grew up.
2/16/2005 1:10:34 PM EDT
[#13]
Its GREAT!

Kinda like a square sausage patty with far less meat and more spice and some corn meal.

It is called SCRAPple though so if you're not into eating "stuff" it may not be for you.

Best way to eat it eat (other than in a breakfast sandwich) is with some apple butter on top.  

2/16/2005 1:15:19 PM EDT
[#14]
America's answer to HAGGIS....

eat your veggies.


2/16/2005 1:17:47 PM EDT
[#15]

Quoted:
You must fry it, then smother it in syrup.

It will still taste nasty. YMMV.



2/16/2005 1:34:06 PM EDT
[#16]
It's okay to feed to your dog. Dogs can bend around far enough to lick its ass to get the bad taste out of its mouth.
2/16/2005 3:12:23 PM EDT
[#17]
Kinda like potted meat has hearts and tongues............I have tried scrapple.........it's not that bad........but I didnt think it was that good either
2/16/2005 3:14:35 PM EDT
[#18]
Scrapple and eggs. YUMMM !!!!!
I first had it a few years back on a trip to Penn. and it was home cooked. Hard to explain the taste.
2/16/2005 3:25:04 PM EDT
[#19]
eh... its ok.  mainly a northern thing I think.
2/16/2005 3:28:15 PM EDT
[#20]
Best way I can describe it.....think of deep fried liverwurst...cut thick, into rectangular slices.
Its an aquired taste...but once you have it, you cant go back.

Oh, and unless you eat it in or around Philladelphia, you probably arent getting the real experience. (the same with hot pretzels, cheesesteaks, and pork roll)

We arent healthy, but we got good eats
2/16/2005 4:02:48 PM EDT
[#21]
You PA people, can you enlighten me as to what Hog Maw is, while we're on the subject of random pig foods?

Scrapple is great IMO.
2/16/2005 4:04:00 PM EDT
[#22]

Quoted:
It's okay to feed to your dog. Dogs can bend around far enough to lick its ass to get the bad taste out of its mouth.




2/16/2005 4:21:45 PM EDT
[#23]
Damn, I don't think I've seen any scrapple since I've lived in Georgia... now I want some!  I think it is best when it is sliced more on the thin side, and nice and crispy on the outside.  And it is DEFINITELY one of those "you're better off not knowing what it's made of" foods...
2/17/2005 4:46:50 AM EDT
[#24]

Quoted:
You PA people, can you enlighten me as to what Hog Maw is, while we're on the subject of random pig foods?

Scrapple is great IMO.



Hog Maw is the lining of a pig's stomach. You stuff it with sausage, bread crumbs, etc, and bake it. Very similar to haggis.

I told you the PA Dutch eat everything on the pig but the squeal.
2/17/2005 4:52:00 AM EDT
[#25]
Scrapple is fricking awsome!!!  Damn you.  Now I want some!
2/17/2005 5:33:26 AM EDT
[#26]
Scrapple is great!  And, there are different varieties of scrapple.  For instance, Rapa makes:

Regular scrapple
Hot and spicy scrapple (my favorite)
Scrapple with bacon
and one other I can't remember.

BTW I've never tried it with syrup.  Gotta try that sometime this week.  
2/17/2005 5:58:39 AM EDT
[#27]
I don't think that anyone has gotten explicit yet, but off the package, scrapple incorporates lymph nodes, pork snouts and other mystery meats.  As stated above, it is mixed into a slurry of corn meal and spices.  I think calling it "sausage" is actually generous.    

My wife will not countenance it.  

My mother gave us scrapple in place of a pig, the traditional Asian wedding x-fer gift.  

I eat the hell out of it.  

BTW, souse is damn good too, but it all makes me think a bit nervously about Kreutzfeldt-Jakob's Disease.  

2/17/2005 6:12:53 AM EDT
[#28]
I ate it a bit when I was a kid, but that was a long time ago.

Food aversions are cultural.  However, over time I've grown to prefer stuff that is actually classified as meat.

BTW, here in SC they have stuff called "Country Pudding" in the grocery stores.  It's kinda like a puree of what's leftover after you've removed the meat from the hog.
2/17/2005 7:06:49 AM EDT
[#29]
My grandmother used to make scrapple all the time when I was a kid. I haven't had any in years and years, but I remember smothered in molasses, it wasn't too bad.

There is another PA Dutch treat called "pawnhaus" (?sp). My grandfather used to say, the first time he ever saw pawnhaus, "it" saw him, 'cause there was a big 'ole pig's eye in it looking back....


Doc H.