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  2. Head cheese - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head_cheese

    Head cheese, Elizabeth's restaurant, New Orleans. Head cheese (Dutch: hoofdkaas) or brawn is a meat jelly or terrine made of meat. [1] Somewhat similar to a jellied meatloaf, [1] it is made with flesh from the head of a calf or pig (less commonly a sheep or cow), typically set in aspic. It is usually eaten cold, at room temperature, or in a ...

  3. Cretons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cretons

    Recipes vary, but traditional preparation involves covering 1–3 lbs of ground pork shoulder in milk or water in a large pot, then seasoning with onions and a mixture of spices. The blend of spices varies from recipe to recipe, but nearly all include ground cloves. Other spices often used include cinnamon, allspice, ginger, nutmeg, and bay leaf.

  4. Scrapple - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrapple

    Scrapple is typically made of hog offal, such as the head, heart, liver, and other trimmings, which are boiled with any bones attached (often the entire head), to make a broth. Once cooked, bones and fat are removed, the meat is reserved, and (dry) cornmeal is boiled in the broth to make a mush.

  5. 10 Classic Southern Holiday Recipes To Make Right Now

    www.aol.com/10-classic-southern-holiday-recipes...

    2. Hoppin’ John. Southerners are usually eating Hoppin’ John (a simmery mix of black-eyed peas and rice) on New Year's Day. Like most “vegetable” recipes from around this area, it contains ...

  6. The Most Unheard-of State Fair Foods Across America - AOL

    www.aol.com/most-unheard-state-fair-foods...

    This burger sandwiches a quarter-pound beef patty, bacon, and cheese between two full-size original glazed Krispy Kremes. The nutritional price of this sin: somewhere around 1,100 calories and 67 ...

  7. Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bizarre_Foods_with_Andrew...

    Head cheese, slow-cooked piglet in goose fat, pig ears, tongue salad, and eyeballs, scorpions on toast, South American ants on string potatoes, crickets, worms, shot of wheatgrass and barley, "rawsagna" with ground sunflower seeds, flax, cherry tomatoes, and dates, hemp-sunburger on flax flatbread, coconut-durian smoothie, soondae, hot dog ...

  8. Cajun cuisine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cajun_cuisine

    Many Cajun recipes are based on rice and the "holy trinity" of onions, celery, and green pepper, and use locally caught shell fish such as shrimp and crawfish. Much of Cajun cookery starts with a roux made of wheat flour cooked and slowly stirred with a fat such as oil, butter or lard, known especially as the base for étouffée , gumbo and ...

  9. Chaudin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chaudin

    It is a sausage-like variant made from ingredients sewn up in a pig's stomach. [1] The stuffing includes spices, pork, rice (or it can be served over rice) and vegetables including onions and peppers. [2] It can be prepared in a Dutch oven, crock pot, or baked in an oven and is often sold smoked.