Has anyone got a recipe for White Pudding please ?
Thanks
sausagemaker wrote:SCOTCH WHITE PUDDINGS
4 lb. fine oatmeal
3 lb. beef suet
1/2 lb. leeks
Seasoning
2 1/4 oz. salt
3/4 oz. ground white pepper
Method
Suet and leeks are broken down coarsely on a mincer, seasoning added, and all the ingredients well mixed. Filled into ox runners or wide hog casings, not too tightly, tied off into 1 lb. rings, and boiled for about 30 minutes.
From the book
Sausage and Small Goods Production
by
Frank Gerrard
ISBN 7198 2587 3
Regards
Sausagemaker
im going to try this one.. Referring to Frank Gerrard's Scotch White Puddings
culsal� wrote:This is an authentic recipe for white puddings or 'boudins blancs' I was given some years ago in France. We started with 65kg of meat on that occasion, but the proportions are as follows:
6.5kg fresh pork belly with plenty of fat
3.5 litres of milk
1.5kg onions
knob of butter
salt - approx 20grams per kilo
pepper - approx 5grams per kilo
Method
Remove rind from belly, cut the meat in pieces and chill.
Finely chop the onion, sweat gently in butter without colour and allow to cool.
Mince the pork and onions and place in large bowl. Season with salt and pepper.
Stir in the milk. The mixture should be quite soft and runny. I sometimes use a bit less milk, adding a beaten egg and a pot of double cream instead. Before filling the skins, check the seasoning in the normal way by frying a little of the mixture in a pan.
Make generous puddings as they tend to shrink. I tie each one off with string rather than attempt to twist them. Once this operation is complete, gently lower the puddings into a large pan of simmering water and bring back quickly to simmering point. Poach gently for twenty minutes WITHOUT BOILING and remove from the liquid to drain and cool.
These boudins are delicious barbecued on a gentle charcoal fire. They should be succulent, delicate and creamy. We serve them with soft, creamed potato (what the french call 'pur�e') and apple quarters fried in butter - russets if possible, but coxes will do.
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