Black pudding
Black pudding is a distinct regional type of blood sausage originating in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It is made from pork or beef blood, with pork fat or beef suet, and a cereal, usually oatmeal, oat groats, or barley groats. The high proportion of cereal, along with the use of certain herbs such as pennyroyal, serves to distinguish black pudding from blood sausages eaten in other parts of the world.[1]
Alternative names | Irish: Marag dhubh, putóg dhubh |
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Place of origin | Great Britain and Ireland |
Region or state | England, Ireland, Scotland |
Associated cuisine | United Kingdom and Ireland |
Serving temperature | Hot, occasionally cold |
Main ingredients | Pork blood, fat, oats, or barley |
Ingredients generally used | Mint, thyme, marjoram, spices |
Variations | Drisheen, Sneem Black Pudding, Stornoway black pudding |
Similar dishes | Blodplättar, Slátur |
Etymology
The word pudding is believed to derive from the French boudin, originally from the Latin botellus, meaning "small sausage".[2]
History and recipes
Blood puddings are often considered to be one of the oldest forms of sausage. Animals are generally bled at slaughter, and as blood rapidly spoils unless prepared in some way, making a pudding with it is one of the easiest ways of ensuring it does not go to waste.[1] While the majority of modern black pudding recipes involve pork blood, this has not always been the case. Sheep or cow blood was also used, and one 15th-century English recipe used that of a porpoise in a pudding eaten exclusively by the nobility.[1] Until at least the 19th century, cow or sheep blood was the usual basis for black puddings in Scotland; Jamieson's Scottish dictionary defined "black pudding" as "a pudding made of the blood of a cow or sheep".[3]
As a product of the slaughtering process, eating black puddings was historically associated with Martinmas, when the annual slaughter of livestock took place. By the 19th century black pudding manufacture was linked with towns known for their large markets for pork, such as Stretford,[4][5] then in Lancashire, and Cork, Ireland. By this time, black puddings were generally omitted from recipe books aimed at urban housewives, as they no longer usually had access to home-killed pork, although recipes continued to appear in Scottish books until the 20th century.[6]
Most traditional recipes from the UK involve stirring the fresh blood,[7] adding fat and some form of rusk, and seasoning, before filling the mixture into a casing and boiling it. Natural casings of beef intestine were formerly used, though modern commercially made puddings use synthetic cellulose skins, and are usually produced from imported dried blood. The relatively limited range of ingredients and use of oats or barley to thicken and absorb the blood is typical of black pudding in comparison to Continental blood sausages.[1] Despite this, black pudding recipes still show more regional variation across the islands than other sausages, with many butchers having their own individual versions.[8] Breadcrumbs or flour are sometimes used to supplement the oats or barley, and the proportion and texture of the fat or suet used can also vary widely. Pennyroyal, marjoram, thyme, and mint are all traditional flavourings: pennyroyal was known as pudding-yerb in the North Riding of Yorkshire for its use in black puddings.[9] Other herbs and spices sometimes used in traditional black puddings include cumin, rue, and parsley.[10]
While the dish has been known as black pudding for centuries, blak podyngs having been recorded c. 1450,[11] a number of dialect names have also been used for the dish, such as black pot (in Somerset),[12] and bloody pot,[13] particularly in reference to versions cooked in an earthenware pot rather than in a sausage casing.
Regional popularity
In the United Kingdom,[14] black pudding is especially associated with the Black Country, the North West and Scotland; it is considered a particular delicacy in Stornoway and in Lancashire, notably in towns such as Bury, where it is traditionally boiled and served with malt vinegar out of a paper wrapping.[15] It was also found in Yorkshire, where black puddings were flavoured with lemon thyme and savory:[16] Barnsley black puddings were particularly well-known.[17] The Stornoway black pudding, made in the Western Isles of Scotland, has been granted Protected Geographical Indicator of Origin status. In the wake of this designation, butchers in Bury sought to demonstrate their history of manufacturing and selling the product. One such claim dates back to 1810.[18] Having been brought there by immigrants, black pudding is now part of the local cuisine of the Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.[19]
In Ireland, in addition to the more general type of black pudding, there is a distinct regional variety called drisheen, which is particularly associated with Cork.[20] Drisheen is usually made from cow's blood, although until the recent past it was often also made with sheep blood, and was sometimes flavoured with tansy.[20] Sneem Black Pudding is a local variety produced in County Kerry; it has Protected Geographical Indication (PGI) status.[21][22][23][24]
Consumption
Black pudding can be grilled, fried, baked, or boiled in its skin. It can also be eaten cold, as it is cooked in production. In parts of north-western England and in the Black Country it was usual to serve a whole black pudding boiled as a complete meal, with bread or potatoes,[11] but elsewhere in the UK and Ireland slices of fried or grilled black puddings are more usually served as part of a traditional full breakfast, a tradition that followed British and Irish emigrants around the world.
Some chip shops, particularly in the north of England and Scotland, sell deep-fried, battered black pudding.[25]
Novel culinary uses for black pudding include black pudding ice cream,[26] while perhaps a more conventional modern recipe is using it as an accompaniment to scallops.[27] Scotch eggs made with black pudding, such as the "Manchester egg",[28][29] have become common.
Nutrition
Black pudding is a good source of protein; it is low in carbohydrate and high in zinc and iron.[30] It has been described as a "superfood" because of these nutritional qualities,[31] although many recipes are also very high in saturated fat and salt.
Festivals
Since the 1980s, the World Black Pudding Throwing Championships has been held in Ramsbottom.[32] The humorous competition invokes the traditional Lancashire – Yorkshire rivalry, with participants throwing the black puddings at piles of Yorkshire puddings.[33] It takes place annually in September, and draws thousands of competitors and spectators to the town.[34]
In past years the Bacup Food and Black Pudding Festival has been held in Bacup.[35][26]
There is an annual European Black Pudding competition held in the Halles de Boudin in Mortagne au Perches in Normandy.
See also
- List of sausages
- Boudin
- Haggis
- Möpkenbrot – A German pork and grain sausage
- Pig blood curd
- Red pudding
- White pudding
References
- Jaine, T. and Davidson, A. The Oxford companion to food, OUP, 2006, p.104
- Olver, Lynne (2000). "The Food Timeline: pudding". The Food Timeline. Retrieved 3 May 2007.
- Jamieson, Supplement to the etymological dictionary of the Scottish language, v1, p.95
- Waugh, E. (1869), Lancashire Sketches, p.78
- The Encyclopedia Britannica, Volume 20, 1929, p.13
- Leach, Helen. "Translating the 18th century pudding" in Clark et al (eds) (2008) Islands of Inquiry: Colonisation, Seafaring and the Archaeology of Maritime Landscapes, ANU, p.390
- Floyd, K. (1988) Floyd on Britain and Ireland, BBC, p.97
- Tatlow (1998) Good enough to eat: how we shop, what we eat, Macmillan, p.41
- Robinson (1876) A glossary of words used in the neighbourhood of Whitby, English Dialect Society, p.147
- Dampney (1977) All about herbs, Exeter, p.13
- Black pudding, The Foods of England, accessed 25-05-18
- Nares (1876) A Glossary: Or, a Collection of Words, Phrases, Names, and Allusions to Customs, Proverbs, Etc: Which Have Been Thought to Require Illustrations in the Works of English Authors, Particularly Shakespeare and His Contemporaries, vI, p.82
- Wright, J. The English Dialect Dictionary, vol I, p.306
- "The Black Pudding". The English Breakfast Society. Retrieved 6 January 2014.
- Lancashire and Cheshire Regional Dishes Archived 21 December 2007 at the Wayback Machine, accessed 30 April 2010
- Sinclair (ed). (1998) International Dictionary of Food and Cooking, Taylor and Francis, p.589
- How Albert's pudding put the town on the map, Barnsley Chronicle, 29 September 2006
- Paul Britton (10 January 2013). "Proof of black pudding's birthplace is back home in Bury". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- "Marystown man enjoys making traditional Newfoundland fare". Southern Gazette. 15 October 2008. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
- Walker, H. (ed) (1995) Disappearing Foods: Studies in Food and Dishes at Risk, Oxford, p.175
- "Kerry-Based Sneem Black Pudding Secures Geographical Indication". Checkout.
- "Proof is in the Sneem black pudding!". Farmersjournal.ie.
- "Sneem Black Pudding granted special European status". 23 December 2019. Archived from the original on 23 December 2019. Retrieved 8 February 2020.
- Nick, Callan. "Minister Creed welcomes approval of PGI status for Sneem Black Pudding". merrionstreet.ie.
- Allen, George (7 November 2020). "What our Secret Service spy thought of these seven Derby fish and chip shops". Derbyshire Live. Local World. Retrieved 25 February 2022.
One interesting item on the menu was deep-fried black pudding.
- "Black pudding ice cream unveiled". 26 August 2005. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- "BBC Food: Scallops with bacon, black pudding and colcannon". Retrieved 30 September 2016.
- Paul Vallely (19 November 2011). "Great Scotch! Manchester's take on the Scotch egg has become a snack sensation". The Independent. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- "Manchester egg recipe". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- "Blood sausage – Nutrition Facts". SELFNutritionData. Retrieved 7 January 2016.
- Adam Boult (6 January 2016). "Black pudding hailed as a 'superfood'". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 6 October 2018.
- "Ramsbottom World Black Pudding Throwing Championships". Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- Paul Britton (7 September 2015). "The World Black Pudding Throwing Championships return to Ramsbottom on Sunday". Manchester Evening News. Retrieved 12 March 2016.
- Dan O'Donoghue (14 September 2015). "PICTURES: Thousands flock to Ramsbottom for World Black Pudding Throwing Championships". Rossendale Free Press. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
- Samrana Hussain. "A crack at world record". Lancashire Telegraph. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
External links
- Media related to Black pudding at Wikimedia Commons