Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial
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11-09-2014, 09:54 AM
(This post was last modified: 11-09-2014 09:59 AM by L Verge.)
Post: #13
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RE: Lincoln Boyhood National Memorial
(11-09-2014 02:56 AM)Eva Elisabeth Wrote: http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrapple Thanks, Eva, for supplying the answer to Linda. I was raised on store-bought scrapple and love it. It comes in a loaf form, and we always sliced it thin so that it could fry crisply - especially around the edges. I already said that I was accused of being a "white breader" by my in-laws, but I prefer my scrapple between two slices of buttered white toast. My mother often made a modern version of it just using regular sausage meat (Bob Evans brand usually). She combined the sausage with water, salt, garlic powder, sage, and yellow cornmeal. That would steam in the top of a double boiler for several hours and then be put in a loaf pan to chill. She called it Philadelphia Scrapple and said it was a Pennsylvania Dutch recipe. We have a fairly large Amish community in Southern Maryland, and their Saturday markets have some delicious things for sale. I don't remember ever seeing scrapple offered there, however. Perhaps because it requires refrigeration. Right now, for the few true farmers left in Southern Maryland, it is hog killing time. For our ancestors, every conceivable part of the hog was used in some manner - from feet to chitterlings to bladders (elasticity made them useful in covering canning jars and also as "balloons" for children to play with), etc. Even bread could be flavored with crackings, the tiny scraps of well-fried rind left after the lard was rendered. Pork was the mainstay of most early households. Some of you who have studied the Booth escape route in detail know that there is a Cracklingtown Road involved in the search. This was named after the community gathering place where neighbors helped neighbors in the difficult job of slaughtering and butchering the hogs after the first real frost in November. |
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