Showing posts with label pig. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pig. Show all posts

Sunday, 3 March 2013

A Bucket of Blood

A friend arrived with a bucket of fresh organic pig's blood a couple of days ago, this was the opportunity that we have been waiting for. Fed up with eating black puddings, posing as being made from traditional recipes, but actually made from dried imported blood, here was our chance to make our own genuine organic pudding.
Fresh organic pig's blood
The first problem was to locate a traditional Irish recipe, there were plenty telling us how to use them in cooking, but few were found on how to actually make them and those ones had quantities of white breadcrumbs in them, that we wished to avoid. Not having used fresh blood before, the safest course of action was to use a sensible French recipe. So, we began with Jennifer McLagan's Boudin Noir. This proved to be a success and good starting point.
Black pudding made with fresh organic pig's blood, ready for the oven.
The next morning, feeling a lot braver and considerably more foolhardy, it was time to go it alone and create our own recipe to try and achieve the traditional style of Irish black pudding, that we were aiming for.
It turned out to be as simple as rendering down some organic pork back fat, cooking onions in the fat, adding cooked pearl barley, oat flakes, spices and last of all: the blood. Then baking it all in a bath of water, in the oven.
Traditional homemade black pudding ready to cook for breakfast
What a delicious breakfast - two different types of homemade, locally sourced, blood pudding, fried slowly with a nob of country butter. The first one was very rich and light in texture and the second was exactly as we had hoped: moist with a rich traditional flavour.
Homemade black pudding almost ready for the breakfast table
From now on, we will find it difficult to buy blood puddings, as we know that we can make vastly superior ones, in full awareness of the origin of all the main ingredients.

Email: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com

Monday, 11 June 2012

A Feast of Kilkenny Produce

Where can I eat a meal like this in Kilkenny? The photograph may not be the best, but the flavour was superb. The roast pork was from a Kilkenny free range, Tamworth pig crossed with a wild boar - succulent, full of flavour, without being too strong, with the perfect crisp crackling.

Kilkenny Produce at its best
The classic Sharpe's Express new potatoes, the mint, the spinach and the broad beans were freshly dug and/or picked, less than an hour before consumption. The gravy was made from the rich pork juices. Such simple fresh ingredients need no elaborate sauces, in fact they make salt and pepper almost redundant.

The tender young broad beans, cooked briefly in their jackets (no need for peeling), have a immediate and delicious flavour that no picture can convey. The spinach briefly wilted, had no requirement for any seasoning and there is simply no alternative to a freshly dug new potato, steamed with some sprigs of mint. The experience is intense.

These ingredients are all easily reared and grown in Kilkenny. So, why is it so difficult to find a restaurant in County Kilkenny serving simple high quality, seasonal and local ingredients, that are squeeky fresh, at a reasonable price?

If you know of one, please email me at: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com

Thursday, 3 May 2012

Jellied Pork Stock made from a Kilkenny Pig

Two organic pigs' heads and several feet (crubeens or trotters) landed up on the kitchen table. Great food for recessionary times. The heads from these Kilkenny reared, saddle back pigs were split, one half was placed in the pot to make a parsley and lemon brawn, seasoned with nutmeg. There was enough meat to fill a large loaf tin and it will take a few days to eat it all. So, the remainder of the heads were frozen until required.

Organically reared Kilkenny Crubeens
If you are a bit squeamish about eating crubeens, you can still use them - do not let them go to waste. Use them to make a wonderful jellied stock. Boil them up, simmer for 2-3 hours with an onion, some root vegetables and whatever herbs and spices are available and suitable for flavouring stock.

Slices of Jellied Pork Stock ready for use
Once the meat begins to leave the bones, strain and reduce the stock to the required consistency (it will probably cool to a jelly without even reducing it). Any the liquid left over from the brawn, can be added to the liquid stock.

Pig's Crubeen Jellied Stock
Pour into a mould and cool. The jellied stock is ready for use. It can be sliced and frozen for later use or else use immediately for soups, stews and pies or for more adventurous recipes. At least you now know what is in your stock, unlike the stock made from a shop-bought stock cube. Stew a pork hock in this stock for extra rich flavour.

There would be no free range, happy organic pigs, if we did not eat them. These pigs were killed so that we can eat them, we should respect this and make use of every part of that pig and avoid waste. Eat less meat and better quality meat and your diet will be healthier. 

Monday, 9 January 2012

Ham Hock and Potato Pie

A local Kilkenny organic pig is killed and no one wants the delicious ham hocks, so they landed up on my kitchen table. If we kill animals for food, we should be respectful of the fact that a life has been taken and be prepared to make use of the entire animal. Some of the lesser known cuts of meat make for the best eating. This Ham Hock and Potato Pie is made using mostly locally produced Kilkenny ingredients.

Ham Hock covered with water, simmered with celery, onions,
leek tops, herbs and spices.
INGREDIENTS TO COOK THE HOCK 
1 ham hock, 
Leeks, 
Onions, 
Celery,
Bay leaf, 
Black pepper, 
4 cloves,
1 star anise, 
Herbs.

Cover with the ham hock with water, add fresh leeks leaf tops, onion, celery, bay leaves (anyone can grow a bay tree), whole black peppers, cloves, star anise, parsley stalks, sage, thyme. Simmer 2-3 hours until the meat is falling off the bone.
Leave to cool in stock. Strain the stock and reduce it and retain whatever you do not require for soup.

Ham Hock cooling in its own stock
INGREDIENTS FOR PIE
Meat off hock,
Onion,
Freshly dug carrots,
Freshly dug leeks,
Freshly picked thyme - tablespoon
Goose grease left over from Christmas
1 tablespoon flour
500 mls Homemade cider
250 mls reduced ham hock stock
Creme fraiche
6 floury potatoes

Some Kilkenny produced ingredients for Ham Hock Pie
Fry onion, fresh carrots, fresh leek, thyme in goose grease left over from Christmas. Once soft, add tablespoon flour mix in and add 500 mls homemade cider, 250 mls reduced ham hock stock. Add ham removed from bone and simmer 10 minutes.

Ham Hock Pie filling ready for Potato topping
Steam 6 floury Golden Wonder potatoes, until they are smiling, these ones were grown on the fertile flood plain of the River Nore. Remove the skins, mash with 100gms of creme fraiche or milk and add any seasoning you wish. Place on top of meat and vegetables.

Kilkenny Organic Ham Hock & Potato Pie
Put in moderate oven for 45-50 minutes and you will wonder why we do not eat ham hocks more often.
Email: kilkennyseakale@gmail.com