{{short description|Traditional sausage dish}} {{about|the food|the band|Blood Sausage (band)}} {{more citations needed|date=July 2014}} {{Use dmy dates|date=September 2021}} {{Stack| {{Infobox food | name = Blood sausage | image = Boudin3.jpg | image_size = 250px | caption = French blood sausage (''boudin noir''), before cooking | alternate_name = Blood pudding, black pudding, blutwurst | region = | creator = | course = | served = Hot | main_ingredient = Blood, grains, meat products, onions, spices | variations = | calories = | other = }} {{nutritionalvalue|name=Blood sausage|kJ=1586|fat=35 g|carbs=1 g|protein=15 g|sugars=1 g|iron_mg=6.4|sodium_mg=680|source_usda=1|note=This is one of many types of blood sausage, likely with a large amount of added bacon.}} }}
A '''blood sausage''' is a sausage filled with blood that is cooked or dried and mixed with a filler until it is thick enough to solidify when cooled. Most commonly, the blood of pigs, sheep, lamb, cow, chicken, or goose is used.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Blood sausages|url=https://www.meatsandsausages.com/sausage-types/blood-sausage|access-date=2020-12-22|website=meatsandsausages.com}}</ref>
In Europe and the Americas, typical fillers include meat, fat, suet, bread, cornmeal, onion, chestnuts, barley, oatmeal, and buckwheat. On the Iberian Peninsula and in Latin America and Asia, fillers are often made with rice. Sweet variants with sugar, honey, orange peel, and spices are also regional specialties.
In many languages, a general term such as ''blood sausage'' (American English) is used for all sausages that are made from blood, whether or not they include non-animal material such as bread, cereal, and nuts. Sausages that include such material are often referred to with more specific terms, such as ''black pudding'' in English.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://englishbreakfastsociety.com/black-pudding.html|title=A Guide To Traditional Black Pudding|website=English Breakfast Society|language=en|access-date=2019-11-04}}</ref> Other varieties of blood sausage include ''boudin rouge'' (Creole and Cajun), ''rellena'' or ''moronga'' (Mexico), and ''sanganel'' (Friuli).
== Africa == === Kenya === ''Mutura'' is a traditional blood sausage dish among the people of urban Kenyan regions, although recently its popularity has spread throughout Kenya. It is made with meat, blood, and spices all encased in the animal's intestines or stomach.<ref>[http://swahilivillage.wordpress.com/2012/12/27/mutura-the-traditional-kenyan-sausage/ Mutura – The traditional Kenyan sausage] by Village Talk accessed on 1 May 2014</ref> In Kenya fillers include fresh minced goat, beef, mutton, fat, and red onions.
Nowadays many types of mutura, especially commercial street food versions, do not contain blood.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Canduh|title=Street Food: Mutura|url=http://foodies.co.ke/street-food-mutura/|access-date=2020-12-22|website=Foodies Kenya|language=en-US}}</ref> The meat used in the filling can be any fleshy part, but like any other type of sausage, prime cuts are not ordinarily used for the stuffing. Instead the tougher, leaner cuts – for example the neck – are trimmed off the bone. The casing for the stuffing is the stomach sac and larger intestines. These are flushed many times with water to clean them.
The meat for the stuffing is finely chopped or minced, and the mandatory fat is often trimmed from other parts. The meat is slightly fried, mixed with finely chopped red onions, salt and optionally fresh chili. Other additions include freshly chopped coriander (dhania or cilantro), garlic, pepper, and even beef stock. This is then mixed thoroughly with the fresh blood from the animal, and stuffed into the stomach and intestines, with the openings sewn or tied together with string.
The sausage is boiled in a large pot (often with other parts of the animal not roasted and used to make soup) for 30–45 minutes, and roasted over coals till brown. Sliced, it is served with kachumbari, an onion-based salad consisting of tomatoes, red onions and fresh coriander, a bit of chili and squeeze of lemon.<ref>{{Cite web|title=In Kenya, Making This Sausage Is Its Own Festive Occasion|url=https://www.atlasobscura.com/foods/mutura-african-sausage-kenya|access-date=2020-12-22|website=Atlas Obscura|language=en}}</ref> The accompanying starch is ugali.
== Americas ==
{{anchor|MorcillaPR}} ''Morcilla'' is served in many areas of Latin America. ''Morcilla'' is sometimes made with a filler of rice and onions and seasoned with paprika and other spices.
=== North America ===
==== United States ====
[[File:Boudin2.jpg|thumb|left|Boiling ''boudin rouge'' (red pudding), a Cajun sausage]] In the U.S. <!--state-->territory of Puerto Rico, blood sausage is known as ''morcilla''.<ref name=":0" /> Puerto Rican blood sausage is made with rice, culantro, cilantro, garlic, and cubanelle pepper. Some contain paprika and annatto. Morcilla is especially popular during Christmas.
Blood sausages are very difficult to find in US supermarkets. Brussels and Sturgeon Bay, Wisconsin, are both home to local grocers who produce blood sausage, due to their large Belgian American populations. Supermarkets throughout Maine also carry locally produced blood pudding due to the state's large French Canadian population. In southeastern Michigan, Polish-style ''kaszanka'' can be found in supermarkets throughout the year and is very popular.
An Italian-American version of blood sausage in the San Francisco Bay Area is called ''biroldo'' and has pine nuts, raisins, spices, and pig snouts and is made using either pig's or cow's blood. German-style blood sausage and Zungenwurst can be found in Fresno and Santa Rosa, where Russian and Armenian delis offer a wide range of Central European foods. Alpine Village in Torrance, California, used to have Blutwurst due to a considerable German-American population in the South Bay area of Los Angeles County.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Pérez |first=Gillian Morán |date=2023-03-04 |title=Auf Wiedersehen To Alpine Village As Shop Owners Pack Up On Word Longtime German American Hub Is Closing |url=https://laist.com/news/la-history/alpine-village-closes-torrance-german-american-hub |access-date=2023-03-04 |website=LAist |language=en}}</ref>
Cajun ''boudin'' is a fresh sausage made with green onions, pork, pork liver (making it somewhat gritty or grainy), and rice. Pig's blood was sometimes added to produce ''boudin rouge'', but this tradition became increasingly rare after the mid-twentieth century due to the decline of the ''boucherie'' (traditional communal butchering) and government health regulations prohibiting the transportation of raw blood. As a result, Cajun ''boudin'' is now usually made without blood; however, blood or "black" ''boudin'' can still be purchased.
==== Mexico ====
In the Yucatán Peninsula, ''morcilla'' is made exclusively from pig's blood and once deep fried it is served with a mix of pickled onions, cilantro and spices. It is always consumed in the form of tacos and paired with fresh habanero peppers.<ref>Ethnic Food Lover's Companion: A Sourcebook for Understanding the Cuisines of the World [https://books.google.com/books?id=9MEfv2p2JP4C]</ref><ref>[https://books.google.com/books?id=rmHIAgAAQBAJ&q=morcilla&pg=PA558 Yucatán: Recipes from a Culinary Expedition, By David Sterling]</ref>
In Central Mexico, ''morcilla'' is known as ''moronga''.<ref>{{Cite web|title=Moronga|url=https://www.meatsandsausages.com/sausage-recipes/blood/moronga|access-date=2020-12-22|website=meatsandsausages.com}}</ref>
=== Central America and the Caribbean ===
==== Caribbean ====
In Antigua, rice pudding is a local delicacy and it is prepared the same way as blood sausage.
In Barbados, blood sausage, also called pudding, is made with sweet potato (''batata''), pig's blood and onions, seasoned with peppers and other herbs and stuffed in pig intestines. Traditionally pig's blood was used to darken the mixture but Browning sauce (caramelized sugar) is sometimes used as a substitute. It is normally served with ''souse'', which is pickled pig's feet, pig's ears and other trimmings. The cooked meat is cut into bite-sized pieces and soaked in a brine made of water, lime juice, cucumbers, hot pepper, and specially prepared seasonings. Blood sausage and souse, more commonly known as pudding and souse, is a Bajan delicacy usually prepared on weekends and special occasions.
In the French Antilles, ''boudin créole'', or ''boudin antillais'' is very popular, this being the French ''boudin noir'' with local Caribbean chilli and other spices.<ref name=":0">{{Cite web|title=Black Pudding: A The Blood and Guts Taste of the Caribbean|url=https://www.uncommoncaribbean.com/caribbean/black-pudding/|access-date=2020-12-22|website=uncommoncaribbean.com |date=30 October 2013 }}</ref>
In Trinidad and Tobago, the local style of blood sausage is heavily seasoned with local peppers and traditionally prepared from pig's blood, often replaced by pig's liver today. It is sold by local producers as a popular accompaniment to rolls of crusty hops bread or served as an accompaniment to ''trotter souse'', a stew based on trotters.<ref>Dave DeWitt & Mary Jane Wilson: Callaloo, Calypso & Carnival, p.62. The Crossing Press 1993</ref>
In the U.S. <!--state-->territory of Puerto Rico, it is served fried and mostly consumed during the holidays.
==== Central America ====
In Panama, blood sausage is called ''morcilla'', ''rellena'' or ''tubería negra'', and is usually filled with rice.
In El Salvador and Nicaragua, it is called ''moronga''. In Honduras and Guatemala both ''moronga'' and ''morcilla'' are used.
In Costa Rica, blood sausage is called ''morcilla'' or ''moronga''; but unlike the rest of Latin America, it does not contain rice or other cereals, it is similar to the German blood sausage called ''Blutwurst''.
=== South America ===
==== Andean ==== In Ecuador, Bolivia and Colombia the blood sausage is also called ''morcilla'', and is usually filled with rice.
In Colombia, ''morcilla'' can have rice, green peas, cilantro or culantro, and is often eaten as an appetizer called ''picada'' or with the traditional dishes ''bandeja paisa'' or ''fritanga''. In Venezuela, ''morcilla'' is often served with ''parrilla'' (barbecue).
==== Argentina, Uruguay, Paraguay ====
thumbnail|right|Morcilla for Argentine ''asado'' ''Morcilla'' is also eaten inside a sandwich called "morcipán", especially in the Río de la Plata. ''Morcilla'' is a component of the '' asado criollo'', a regional mixed grill or barbecue meal. In Uruguay and in Argentina, a sweet version, usually called ''morcilla vasca'', including raisins and pine nuts is popular; some vendors even add chocolate, caramelised orange peels, peanuts, and other dried fruits. Uruguayans usually are fond of sweet or salty ''morcilla'', and most restaurants and supermarkets carry both versions. In Paraguay, it is mostly known under the name ''mbusia'', a guaranization of the word ''morcilla''.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Zimmermann |first=Klaus |url=https://dialnet.unirioja.es/servlet/libro?codigo=653183 |title=Prácticas y políticas lingüísticas: nuevas variedades, normas, actitudes y perspectivas |date=2014 |publisher=Iberoamericana Vervuert |isbn=978-84-8489-797-2 |language=es}}</ref>
==== Brazil ====
In Brazil there is a version of the blood sausage called ''chouriço'' or ''morcela'' (sometimes the Castillian Spanish version ''morcilla'' is used as well), consisting of a fresh sausage made of the blood and fat from pork and usually rice. It is a variation of the Portuguese blood sausage, and it is known for its deep dark color. In some regions, it is popular on barbecues (''Churrascos'') as a starter. Like in Uruguay, sweet blood sausage is also popular, known as ''chouriço'' ''doce''.
==== Chile ====
In Chile, the blood sausage is called "prieta" (a synonym of "negra", black) and tends to have a very thick skin, so is eaten cut open lengthwise. Apart from blood and a little fat, "prietas" may contain a variety of ingredients, such as chopped onion and spices, cabbage, peppers, watercress, rice, meat or even dried fruit or nuts. "Prietas" or "morcillas" are part of the Chilote tradition of "''reitimiento''" involving the slaughter and preparation of a pig.
Prietas are easily found at supermarkets throughout the country and are available from practically any butcher.
==== Guianas ====
In Guyana, blood sausage is a very popular snack served at social occasions, and as "cutters" when drinking. The main ingredient is cooked rice seasoned with herbs, such as thyme and basil. The rice is mixed with cow's blood, stuffed into cow's or pig's intestine, and boiled until firm, sliced and served with Sour (a mild type of dipping sauce with hot peppers). White pudding is also made.
In Suriname, blood sausage is known by the Dutch name ''bloedworst'', and white pudding by the equally Dutch name ''vleesworst''.
== Asia == Across Asia, various people create food from congealed animal blood. Most of these food types do not have casings and might be considered a version of sliced sausage.
=== East Asia ===
==== Hong Kong ==== In Hong Kong, the dish closest to blood sausage is pig blood curd, which is only made from pig's blood and is not considered a sausage.
==== Korea ==== [[File:Korean.food-Sundae-01.jpg|thumb|''Sundae'', a Korean blood sausage]] The majority of Korea's ''sundae'' (순대) can be categorised as blood sausage. The most common type of ''sundae'' is made of sweet potato noodle (''dangmyeon''), barley, and pig's blood, but some variants contain sesame leaves, green onion, fermented soy paste (''doenjang''), sweet rice, kimchi, and bean sprouts, in addition to the common ingredients. The Korean sundae is wrapped with pig's intestines. The addition of sweet potato noodle is a more modern addition to the dish.
==== China ==== In Chinese cuisines, whole coagulated blood is fried or steamed as a snack or cooked in a hot pot. In mainland China, "blood tofu" ({{zh|c=血豆腐|p=xuě dòufǔ}}), or "red tofu" ({{zh|c=红豆腐|p=hóng dòufǔ}}), is most often made with pig's or duck's blood. Like the above dishes, this has no casing but is simply cut into rectangular pieces and cooked.
In Northeast China, the "blood sausage" was a traditional food which is cooked with sheep or goat blood.
In Tibet, congealed yak's blood is a traditional food.<ref>Ma Jian, ''Stick Out Your Tongue'' Chatto and Windus London, 2006.</ref><ref>[http://www.starsunmoon.com/yakuses.htm Uses of yak blood in Tibet] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090401170014/http://www.starsunmoon.com/yakuses.htm |date=1 April 2009 }}. Retrieved on 9 May 2009.</ref> Chinese people also used pig blood curd that was consumed by laborers in Kaifeng over 1,000 years ago<ref>Nina Edwards Offal: A Global History Reaktion Books, 2013 p.30-32</ref> in the south of China.
In Tibetan cuisine, sausages or ''gyurma'' refer to blood sausages and are made with yak or sheep's blood which may or may not include either rice or roasted barley flour as filler. The sausage uses natural casing employing the use of yak or sheep's intestine.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}
==== Mongolia ==== The Yasa permitted the eating of animal blood and entrails, which was previously forbidden, and blood sausage is now popular in Mongolia.
Today, Mongolian blood sausage is sometimes prepared using the khorkhog method.
==== Japan ==== The general Japanese term for blood sausage is {{Nihongo|''kecchōzume''|血腸詰め}}. After the introduction of agriculture from the Asian continent in ancient times, Japanese culture was traditionally averse to blood. As a result, blood-based foods are uncommon in Japanese cuisine.
Before 1945, remote villages in Tochigi Prefecture (formerly Shimotsuke Province) were known to produce {{Nihongo|''soresore''|それゝゝ}}, a blood sausage made by filling tied-off sections of deer or bear intestine with the animal's blood and boiling them in a metal pot over an open fire until the blood coagulated. Once the blood had solidified, the sausage was cut into circular slices and served with soy sauce.<ref>{{cite book |last1=栃木の食事編集委員会 Tochigi no shokuji henshū iinkai |title=聞き書 栃木の食事全集 Kikigaki Tochigi no shokuji zenshū |date=1988 |publisher=農山漁村文化協会 Nōsan Gyoson Bunka Kyōkai |location=Japan |isbn=4540880322}}</ref> Matagi hunters of the former Dewa and Mutsu Provinces are known to have made blood sausage using deer intestine and {{Nihongo|''hoshii''|糒しい}}, or dehydrated boiled rice, as filler. The Japanese are believed to have first discovered Jurchen blood sausage during the Hamgyong campaign in 1592.
==== Taiwan ==== [[File:Taiwanese pig blood cake.jpg|thumb|''Zhuxuegao'', or pork blood cake, on a stick]]
In Taiwan, "pig's blood cake" ({{zh|t=豬血糕|p=zhū xuě gāo|zhu=ㄓㄨˉ ㄒㄧㄝˇ ㄍㄠˉ|poj='''ti-hoeh-ko'''}}) or "rice blood cake" ({{zh|t=米血糕|zhu=ㄇㄧˇ ㄒㄧㄝˇ ㄍㄠˉ}}), made of pork blood and sticky rice, is served on a popsicle stick; this is a very popular snack at local night markets.
=== Southeast Asia ===
==== Indonesia ====
In Bali, ''urutan'' is a version of blood sausage made with pork intestine and pork blood. It is served with rice.<ref>{{cite web |url=https://in.hotels.com/go/indonesia/bali-bizarre-foods-drinks |accessdate=14 November 2021 |title=13 Bizarre Foods and Drinks in Bali |website=hotels.com }}</ref>
Another version in Java called ''saren'' or ''dideh'', is made with chicken's blood and usually cut into small cube pieces.<ref>{{cite web |title=Saren, Makanan Berbahan Dasar Darah Asal Indonesia |url=https://www.indozone.id/food/M7sDyRx/saren-makanan-berbahan-dasar-darah-asal-indonesia |website=indozone.id |language=id-ID |date=21 September 2020}}</ref>
In Sumatra, ''kidu-kidu'' is a Batak sausage dish made from pork intestines, served with sauce made from pork's blood and spices such as andaliman pepper.<ref name="detikFood 2010">{{cite web | title=Cipera: Masakan Karo yang Mirip Colombia | website=detikfood | date=2010-09-30 | url=https://food.detik.com/makan-siang-bareng-detikfood/d-1451990/cipera-masakan-karo-yang-mirip-colombia | language=id | access-date=2021-09-22}}</ref>
==== Malaysia ==== In Penang or other northern states, pig blood curd (known locally in Penang Hokkien as "''too huet''"; {{zh|c=豬血|p=zhū xuě|l=pig's blood}}) is usually served with the local street-food specialty curry mee (curry noodles).{{citation needed|date=May 2017}} It can also be mixed with some traditional Hokkien dishes as well.
==== Philippines ==== {{See also|Longganisa|Dinuguan}} Blood sausage is known generically as ''longganisang dugô'' (lit. "blood longaniza") in the Philippines. A notable native, precolonial blood sausage is ''pinuneg'', made from minced pork meat and innards in a casing of pigs’ large intestine, prepared in the Cordillera Administrative Region.<ref>{{cite web |title=Longganisa Dugo (Blood Sausage) |url=http://www.panlasangpinoymeatrecipes.com/longganisa-dugo-blood-sausage.htm |website=Panlasang Pinoy Meaty Recipes |date=12 February 2018 |access-date=25 March 2019}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=Baguio eats: Head to this restaurant for a literal taste of blood |url=https://www.abs-cbn.com/life/10/31/18/baguio-eats-head-to-this-restaurant-for-a-literal-taste-of-blood |website=ABS-CBN News |date=30 October 2018 |access-date=25 March 2019}}</ref>
==== Thailand ==== In Thai cuisine ''sai krok lueat'' (Thai: ไส้กรอกเลือด) is a blood sausage ({{langx|th|sai krok}} = sausage, {{langx|th|lueat}} = blood), often served sliced and accompanied by a spicy dipping sauce. "Blood tofu" is simply called ''lueat'' ({{langx|th|เลือด}}, blood) in Thailand. This can be used in many Thai dishes such as in noodle soups, Thai curries, or as an addition to certain rice dishes such as Khao man kai.
==== Vietnam ==== thumb|Dồi, Vietnamese blood sausage Vietnamese ''dồi tiết'' (Northern) or ''dồi huyết'' (Southern) is blood sausage, boiled or fried, made with pork blood, pork fat and basil.
=== South Asia ===
====India==== In Meghalayan cuisine, ''doh snam'' is type of blood sausage made from pork intestine with local spices and ingredients.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.firstpost.com/101%20india/101-india-the-shillong-food-trail-with-khasi-bloodz-4371889.html|title = 101 India | the Shillong food trail with Khasi Bloodz | work=Firstpost | date=March 2018 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.indiatoday.in/food-drink/food/story/blood-rice-blood-sausages-shillong-street-food-doh-snam-khasi-bloodz-lifefd-953375-2017-01-05|title = Blood rice to blood sausages: Here's a look at Shillong's crazy food| date=5 January 2017 }}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.101india.com/travel-food/shillong-food-trail-khasi-bloodz|title = The Shillong Food Trail with Khasi Bloodz|date = 2 January 2017}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.telegraphindia.com/north-east/also-sell-the-food-dude/cid/355396|title = Also sell the food, dude!}}</ref>
==== Nepal ==== In Limbu cuisine, ''sargemba'' or ''sargyangma'' is a type of blood sausage made mostly from pork intestines, pork fat, rice and ''yangben'', a type of edible wild lichen.<ref name=nt>[https://archive.nepalitimes.com/article/review/Noyoz,105 Noyoz], ''The Nepali Times'', 18-24 Jan 2013</ref><ref name=subba>Subba, J. (2008) ''History, Culture and Customs of Sikkim'', Gyan, p.133</ref>
=== Siberia === Khaan (sausage) (:ru:Хаан (блюдо)) - a pre-Islamic blood sausage of Turkic peoples, nowadays made only by the Sakha people, as blood sausages are prohibited in Islam.<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://etnic.ru/kyhnya/yakutskiye-blyuda.html|title=Якутские блюда {{!}} Etnic.ru|lang=ru|publisher=etnic.ru|accessdate=2020-02-27|archive-date=2019-10-19|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20191019184159/http://etnic.ru/kyhnya/yakutskiye-blyuda.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ydoo.info/recipe/haan.html|title=Кровяная колбаса Хаан — пошаговый рецепт с фото|publisher=ydoo.info|lang=ru|accessdate=2020-02-27|archive-date=2020-02-27|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20200227112930/https://ydoo.info/recipe/haan.html|url-status=live}}</ref>
== Europe ==
=== Central and Eastern Europe === [[File:Krupnioki...jpg|thumb|Polish ''kaszanka'']] thumb|Blood sausage made in Buryatia, Russia Throughout Central and Eastern Europe, blood sausage, known as ''kishka'' (meaning "intestine"), is made with pig's blood and buckwheat kasha. It is also known in Russia as ''krovyanka'' (кровянка), or ''krovyanaya kolbasa'' (кровяная колбаса, literally "blood sausage") and includes buckwheat as a main filler, instead of oats or oatmeal. In Belarus it's called ''kryvianaja kaŭbasa'' (крывяная каўбаса) or ''kryvianka'' (крывянка). In Ukraine it's called ''krov'yanka'' (кров'янка) or ''kryvava kyshka'' (кривава кишка), and ''kiszka'' or ''kaszanka'' in Poland; ''krvavnička'' in Slovakia and ''krvavica'' in Slovenia, ''krupniok'' in Silesia. Polish ''salceson'' ("black" and "Brunszwicki") are a type of head cheese ("brawn") that contains blood. In Hungary, ''véres hurka'' is typically made with pig's blood and barleycorn or cubed bread (typically zsemle) as filler as such also known as ''zsemlés hurka'' and ''gerslis hurka''. In Bulgaria, ''karvavitsa'' (кървавица) is usually prepared with pig's blood, fat and a variety of mountain herbs and spices and eaten warm during the winter.
In Romania, the traditional ''sângerete'' (from ''sânge'', "blood" in Romanian) is made from shoulder butt pork meat, pork blood and a filler such as pre-boiled rice seasoned with pepper, garlic and basil. It has many regional variants, but the most common are the ''sângerete'' from Transylvania.
Similarly, in Czech cuisine, ''jelito'' is made from second-rate pork, pig's blood and peeled barley; the stuffing served by itself, unformed, is called ''prejt''.
=== Northern Europe ===
==== Denmark ==== In Denmark, ''blodpølse'' is made from pigs's blood and suet, rye flour, brown sugar, raisins, salt, cinnamon and cardamom stuffed into natural or artificial intestines. It is usually boiled in its skin, eaten hot or cold, sometimes sliced and fried, served with syrup, cinnamon and stewed apples.
==== Estonia ==== thumb|Oven-cooked Estonian ''verivorst'' In Estonia, ''verivorst'' (blood sausage) is made of pig's blood, barley groats, pork, marjoram and other flavourings. It is sold and eaten mostly in winter, being a traditional Christmas food. At that time there is a large variety of ''verivorst'' in stores, ranging in shapes and sizes. ''Verivorst'' is usually cooked in an oven, but sometimes also fried in a pan. ''Verivorst'' is often eaten together with lingonberry jam, but occasionally also with butter or sour cream. Another similar dish is called ''verikäkk'' (black pudding, or blood dumpling, depending on the shape). The popularity of ''verikäkk'' has decreased during the past decades (possibly because of its less appealing commercial appearance) and has mostly been substituted by ''verivorst''.
==== Finland ==== [[Image:Mustamakkara Meal.jpg|thumb|left|Mustamakkara with lingonberry jam, milk, and a doughnut]] ''Mustamakkara'' (literally "black sausage") is a roasted sausage containing pig's blood and very similar to Estonian ''verivorst''. The sausage is said to originate from Tampere and is considered an integral part of the city's culture.
A dish similar to the British black pudding is also made by making batter out of pig's blood and baking it like pancakes. Traditionally, rye flour or oatmeal is used and minced onion is added to the mix. This dish is called ''veriohukainen'' or ''verilettu'' (blood pancake). ''Rössypottu'' is a traditional soup in northern Finland with blood pudding as a main ingredient.
Most blood sausage dishes in Finland are often eaten with lingonberry jam to sweeten the taste.
==== Iceland ==== In Iceland, ''blóðmör'' is one of two types of ''slátur''. It is made from lamb's blood and suet, rye flour and oats, traditionally stuffed into pouches sewn from the lamb's stomach. It is usually boiled in its skin, eaten hot or cold, sometimes sliced and fried. After cooking, it is often preserved in fermented whey and acquires a distinct sour taste.
==== Ireland and the United Kingdom ==== [[File:Grinners breakfast.jpg|thumb|right|Scottish-style cooked breakfast, centred around black pudding (left), served with square sausage, baked beans, mushrooms, and fried bread]] [[File:Wiki black battered.jpg|thumb|A single battered deep-fried chip shop black pudding (approx. 20 cm long), sliced open]] Black pudding is the version of blood sausage native to the British Isles. While the term "blood sausage" in English is understood, it is applied only to foreign usage (e.g., in the story ''The Name-Day'' by Saki), or to similar blood-based sausages elsewhere in the world. Black pudding is generally made from pork blood and a relatively high proportion of oatmeal. In the past it was occasionally flavoured with pennyroyal, differing from continental European versions in its relatively limited range of ingredients and reliance on oatmeal and barley instead of onions to absorb the blood.<ref name=ocf104>Jaine, T. and Davidson, A. ''The Oxford companion to food'', OUP, 2006, p.104</ref> It can be eaten cold, as it is cooked in production, grilled, fried or boiled in its skin. It is often served sliced and fried or grilled as part of a traditional full breakfast, a tradition that followed British and Irish emigrants around the world. Black pudding is now part of the local cuisine of New Zealand and the Canadian provinces of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland and Labrador.
Stornoway black pudding produced on the Isle of Lewis, Scotland, is one of the most renowned varieties and has been granted Protected Geographical Indicator of Origin (PGI) status.<ref>{{cite news|title=Stornoway black pudding given protected status|work=BBC News|date=8 May 2013|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-highlands-islands-22445935|access-date=15 October 2014}}</ref> Ireland also has two distinctive varieties of black pudding: Sneem Black Pudding from County Kerry, and drisheen, which is distinguished by its gelatinous texture.
The similar white pudding (mealie pudding) is a further important feature of the traditional Northumbrian, Scottish, Irish and Newfoundland breakfast. Black and white pudding, as well as a third variant, red pudding, is served battered in some chip shops in England, Scotland and Ireland as an alternative to fish and chips.
==== Latvia ====
In Latvia, blood sausage is either called ''asinsdesa'' (blood sausage) or ''putraimu desa'' (groat sausage) because of the added barley groats. It is usually served with lingonberry jam and sour cream.<ref>{{cite web |title=Latgalian recipes: Blood Sausage |url=https://eng.lsm.lv/article/culture/food-drink/latgalian-recipes-blood-sausage.a328413/ |access-date=12 August 2019 |publisher=Public Broadcasting of Latvia |date=14 August 2019}}</ref>
==== Sweden ==== thumb|left|Blodpudding, before being prepared to serve [[File:Blodpudding-2.jpg|thumb|Blodpudding served with boiled potatoes, cucumbers and lingonberry jam ]] ''Blodpudding'' is a traditional dish first documented in the 18th century<ref>{{cite web |author1=Institutet för språk och folkminnen |author1-link=Swedish Institute for Language and Folklore |title=Blodmat |trans-title=Food made from blood |url=https://www.matkult.se/kott/blodmat.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20250612161114/https://www.matkult.se/kott/blodmat.html |archive-date=12 June 2025|language=Swedish |date=8 December 2021 |quote="I dag är blodpudding den vanligaste blodmaten. Den finns belagd från 1700-talet, men blev lättare att tillaga när järnspisen blev vanlig efter 1860." }}</ref> and still popular in Sweden. The exact proportions and ingredients vary, partly according to regional preference, but generally it is made from pig's blood, milk, rye or barley flour, diced lard, either beer or ''svagdricka'', treacle and onion, flavoured with allspice and marjoram. It is then poured into forms and oven-baked in a waterbath. Most of the ''blodpudding'' consumed today is made on industrial basis.
When prepared for serving, it is sliced and fried. The style of serving and accompaniments vary across the country, and it is not uncommon to have the ''blodpudding'' act as the meat in a meal. Nationally, the common way is to serve it with lingonberry jam, grated carrots and ice cold milk to drink. Fried bacon or pork side is also common. In Scania, the lingonberry jam is often replaced by finely sliced apples, fried along with the pork.
Other blood-based foods include ''blodkorv'' (blood sausage) which differs from ''blodpudding'' by having raisins, pork tallow and apple sauce in it, ''blodplättar'' (blood pancakes, similar to the original Finnish dish ''veriohukainen'' above) and ''blodpalt''. There is also a soup made from blood, called ''svartsoppa'' (black soup).
=== Southern Europe ===
==== Croatia, Bosnia, Serbia, Slovenia ==== [[File:Međimurske čurke - pečene u protvanu.jpg|thumb|Blood pudding (right) from Croatia baked on a sheet pan]] [[File:Blood sausage hrvatska.jpg|thumb|right|Blood sausage served with sauerkraut and "restani krumpir" in Hrvatsko Zagorje ]] A similar blood sausage to ''karvavitsa'', called ''krvavica'' (крвавица), made out of similar ingredients, is eaten in Bosnia, Croatia, Serbia, and Slovenia in wintertime, usually with sauerkraut and potatoes.
==== Italy ==== thumb|left|Italian 17th century still-life showing Blutwurst-like sausages In Italy, regional varieties of blood sausage are known as ''sanguinaccio''. In Tuscany, ''{{interlanguage link|buristo|it}}'' is a sausage made with pig's blood and fat cooked in a pig's stomach. It is not reheated and is often spread on bread. It is found only in the south of Tuscany in the winter months and even there it can be difficult to come by. ''Biroldo'' is another type of black pudding which can be found in Tuscany, while the version made in southern Lombardy is called ''marsapan''.
''Migliaccio''<ref>"[http://www.pellegrinoartusi.it/il-libro/ La scienza in cucina e l'Arte di mangiar bene]" by Pellegrino Artusi; recipe n. 702</ref> is a black pudding that is traditionally prepared in winter in Romagna. It is a sweet pudding with a thick black filling made with pig's blood, sugar, breadcrumbs, almonds, chocolate, butter and spices contained in a thin pastry crust. A similar pudding is made throughout southern Italy, generally called ''sanguinaccio'' or ''sanguinaccio dolce''.
==== Portugal ==== In Portuguese cuisine, there are many varieties of blood sausage. Sausages made of blood are usually called ''morcela'' (for the larger variety) and ''negrinha or negrito''<ref>{{Cite web |title=Negrito, Enchidos de Lavos, Figueira da Foz |url=https://enchidosdelavos.com/negrito.html |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=enchidosdelavos.com |language=pt}}</ref> (from Portuguese ''negro'' that means dark or black, for the thinner variety). There are many varieties around the Portuguese-speaking world. In Portugal proper, there are local varieties from different regions of mainland Portugal, including from Guarda, Portalegre,<ref name="Fernandes">{{Cite web |last=Fernandes |first=Daniel |title=Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses |url=https://tradicional.dgadr.gov.pt/ |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=Produtos Tradicionais Portugueses |language=pt}}</ref> Estremoz and Borba, as well as from the Azores.<ref name="Fernandes"/> A variety of morcela made with rice, ''morcela de arroz'' (rice blood sausage), is typically associated with Tomar,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Rice blood sausage ("Morcela de arroz") – Foto de Cervejaria do Fernando, Tomar - Tripadvisor |url=https://www.tripadvisor.pt/LocationPhotoDirectLink-g312717-d5977692-i341801673-Cervejaria_Do_Fernando-Tomar_Santarem_District_Central_Portugal.html |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=www.tripadvisor.pt |language=pt-PT}}</ref> Leiria,<ref>{{Cite web |title=VivaLeiria {{!}} Morcela de Arroz |url=https://www.vivaleiria.pt/morcela-de-arroz |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=www.vivaleiria.pt |language=pt}}</ref> Porto de Mós,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Morcela com arroz e receita secreta é o petisco mais procurado em Porto de Mós |url=https://tvi.iol.pt/noticias/videos/sociedade/morcela-com-arroz-e-receita-secreta-e-o-petisco-mais-procurado-em-porto-de-mos/59621d690cf2202a6541df7d |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=TVI Notícias |language=pt}}</ref> Fundão and Belmonte.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Quitério |first=José |date=4 October 2014 |title=Ataíja de Cima: Morcelas de Arroz |url=https://ataijadecima.blogspot.com/2014/10/morcelas-de-arroz.html |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=Ataíja de Cima}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Feira da Morcela e do Arroz Doce {{!}} Olas |url=https://turismodocentro.pt/evento/feira-da-morcela-e-do-arroz-doce-olas/ |access-date=2023-03-16 |website=Turismo Centro Portugal |language=pt}}</ref> The morcela is made with a combination of different pork parts, namely blood and pork fat cut into pieces, seasoned with ground pepper, salt, garlic, dried garlic, and spices (including cloves and cumin), as well as wine in the pig's blood. The morcela is a smoked sausage, is black and has a glossy surface, while its dark interior is marbled with fat. There is also a type of black chouriço, also a smoked blood sausage because it is made with pig blood together with pig meat. It is called ''chouriço de sangue''. Places like Melgaço and several other localities in Northern Portugal, as well as in Beiras and Alentejo, are famed for its production.<ref name="Fernandes"/><ref>{{Cite web |title=CHOURIÇO DE SANGUE: O QUE É E COMO FAZER |url=https://alheiras.com/chourico-de-sangue-o-que-e-e-como-fazer/ |website=alheiras.com|date=8 August 2020 }}</ref> Sweetened blood sausage (''chouriço doce'') is also made, as in southern Brazil.
==== Spain ==== thumb|''{{ill|Morcilla de Burgos|es}}'', a blood sausage made with rice fillers. It is consumed in Spain. Spanish ''morcilla'' has many variants. The most well-known and widespread is ''morcilla de Burgos'' which contains mainly pork blood and fat, rice, onions, and salt, and is produced in two varieties: cylindrical and gut-shaped. In Albacete and La Mancha, the ''morcilla'' is filled with onions instead of rice, which completely changes the texture. In Extremadura the creamy ''morcilla patatera'' includes roughly mashed potatoes. In the northern regions and the Canary Islands there is a sweet variety known as ''morcilla dulce''. Other varieties introduce breadcrumbs, pine nuts, and almonds, and vary the proportions of the other ingredients or flavourings, some of them considered delicacies.
There are other similarly famous kinds being made in Asturias (slightly darker and smaller, used for bean and chickpea stews) and León (without rice, grilled & spread on toasted bread). Other less popular varieties may add cumin to the pudding mixture, but this is not a standard practice. The cooking method for consumption is typically frying, stewing, grilling or roasting, often in served in slices and either as a side dish or on its own. There are many derivative foods made from morcilla, such as omelettes, stuffed red pepper, puff pastry, pizza, flavoured nachos, croquettes, and a range of fillings for different dishes.
In Galicia, blood pancakes are called filloas.{{citation needed|date=December 2020}}
==== Malta ==== The Maltese blood sausage is known as {{lang|mt|mazzita}} (plural: {{lang|mt|mazzit}}). It was first described in the 1750s in Giovanni Pietro Francesco Agius De Soldanis’s ''Damma tal-Kliem Kartaginis mscerred fel fomm tal Maltin u Ghaucin'', listing words of Carthagenese oriġin spoken widely across mainland Malta and the island of Gozo.<ref name=":1">{{Cite web |last=Ellul |first=Daniel |date=2024-03-27 |title=Blood sausage is back on the menu |url=https://timesofmalta.com/article/blood-sausage-mazzit-back-menu.1089803 |access-date=2024-03-27 |website=Times of Malta |language=en-gb}}</ref> The production of blood sausages in Malta was temporarily halted in 2004 when Malta joined the European Union, as no adequate machinery was available in the country to ensure that the blood was handled according to EU standards. However, it was reintroduced on the local market in 2024, when appropriate equipment was procured by the state-run slaughterhouse to gather the blood in appropriate sanitary conditions.<ref name=":1" />
=== Western Europe ===
==== Belgium, Netherlands and Luxembourg ==== In Belgium and the Netherlands, exist 2 varieties one called ''bloedworst'' and the other is called ''beuling''. <br> ''Bloedworst'' is a big sausage {{convert|4|in|mm|adj=mid|-diameter}} with white chunks of suet, which is sold in slices of roughly {{convert|0.5|in|mm|adj=mid}}.<ref name="radio 2">{{cite web|access-date=2020-10-19|title=Zwarte pens vs. Bloedworst |url=https://radio2.be/de-inspecteur/zwarte-pens-vs-bloedworst|language=nl |website=Radio 2}}</ref> It is generally pan fried; sometimes apples are cooked alongside or on top of the pieces. It is also eaten with apple sauce, brown sugar, syrup or red cabbage. As a cold cut, thin slices are eaten as a sandwich topping. <br> ''Beuling'' also called ''Zwarte pens'' (as opposed to the white variety that is referred to as ''Witte pens'') are individual blood sausages the size of a banana, the filling of which is uniform.<ref name="radio 2"/> <br> Both are made of blood, from predominantly cows or pigs, sometimes sheep or horse blood are used in specialty products. The blood is mixed with breadcrum, wheat- or potatoflour, or any combination thereof, and fatty parts of the head, belly and organ meat such as lung, tongue, heartmuscle, and spleen.<ref name="worstlog">{{cite web|access-date=2024-06-07|title="Worstlog"|url= https://www.worstlog.com/2007/11/12/bloedworst-maken/|language=nl}}</ref>
The Luxembourg träipen includes green cabbage, and is served pan fried with apple sauce. It was eaten in church in the Middle Ages during Carnival and is still consumed for breakfast, baked with apples and topped with apple syrup, during Carnival in the Dutch province of Limburg.{{Citation needed|date=July 2014}}
==== France and southern Belgium ==== In France and Wallonia (south Belgium) ''boudin noir'' is traditionally prepared in ''charcuteries'', shops that prepare mainly pork products (and sometimes duck and game), but also sell smoked and dried sausages, pâtés, and terrines, along with prepared salads. It is usually called ''boudin noir'' and is often made with cream with apples or onions as a filler. It is generally served with either cooked apples, mashed potatoes or both, and is appreciated by combining either the apples or mashed potatoes with each bite of ''boudin'', which has been gently heated and browned in butter. In France also, there are many different regional ''Boudins Noirs'' such as the large ''Boudin du Béarn'' with pork meat pieces usually eaten cold. The French ''Confrérie des Chevaliers du Goûte-Boudin'' (Brotherhood of the Knights of Blood Sausage Tasting) in Mortagne-au-Perche in southern Normandy holds an annual contest of international blood sausage specialities. Boudin is considered the emblematic staple of the French Foreign Legion, and gives its name to the Legion's anthem.
==== Germany and Austria ==== thumb|left|Cross-section of German ''Blutwurst'' varieties: smoked with meat (left), dried with bacon (right) thumb|left|Austrian Blutwurst, called ''Blunze'', with pieces of rolls inside The most common variant of German ''Blutwurst'' is made from pork rind, pork blood and regionally different fillers such as barley. Though already cooked and "ready to eat" it is sometimes served warm, similar to the style in France. In the Rhineland, where it is also traditionally made from horse meat, fried ''Blutwurst'' or ''Flönz'' is a constituent of various dishes. In particular in Cologne, the traditional ''Himmel und Erde'' (Heaven and Earth) combines apple sauce, mashed potatoes and ''Blutwurst'' served hot on one plate. In Eastern Germany, hot ''Blutwurst'' mixed together with liverwurst and potatoes is called "''Tote Oma''" ("Dead Grandma").
Other German variants are ''Zungenwurst'', which is ''Blutwurst'' mixed with pieces of pickled ox tongue, and ''Beutelwurst,'' which is pressed in a linen or paper bag (''Beutel''). A variety of ''Blutwurst'', the ''Rotwurst'' from Thuringia (''Thüringer Rotwurst''), has geographical indication protection under EU law, with PGI status. ''Kartoffelwurst'' (potato sausage) is a post-World War II variety popular in the Palatinate, a reduced fat version of ''Blutwurst'' using potato cubes instead of bacon.
In Austria it is often prepared in a dish known as ''Blunzngröstl'', which consists of pan-fried potatoes and blood sausage. This is usually served with freshly grated horseradish.
===Symbol of Carnival=== Many Roman Catholics celebrate Mardi Gras, the last day of carnival, (Literally meaning Carne Vale, farewell to Meat in Italian) with rituals involving the blood sausage. For example, in Spain, they celebrate carnival with ''judías con morcilla'' (morcilla is a type of blood sausage) followed by the funeral of the sardina.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://barcelona-home.com/blog/most-well-known-carnivals-in-costa-brava-region/|title=Most well-known carnivals in Costa Brava region|date=23 March 2016}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal| pages = 20| last = Guitar| first = Lynne| title = The Origins of Carnival--}}</ref> Likewise, in Belgium and the Netherlands, the Bloodsausage is a symbol for Carnival (most likely following the invasion of Spain during the Eighty Years' War).<ref>{{Cite book| title = De Aarde en haar volken – Google Books| year = 1870| publisher = A. C. Krusemen| access-date = 2019-12-21| url = https://books.google.com/books?id=QW_pAAAAMAAJ&q=sardina}}</ref>
François Rabelais in France mentions in his "fourth book" (1552) carnavalesque figures called ''forest-dwelling Blood-puddings'' (Saulcis- sons montigènes, Boudins sylvatiques) as a farce representing the Swiss and German Protestants.<ref>{{Cite web| title = Rabelais's Carnival| access-date = 2019-12-21| url = https://publishing.cdlib.org/ucpressebooks/view?docId=ft596nb3q0&chunk.id=d0e4166&toc.id=&brand=ucpress}}</ref>
=== Additional varieties === Other varieties of blood sausage include ''blodpølse'' (Norway and Denmark), ''tongenworst'' (with added pigs tongues) (Netherlands), ''krvavica'' (Balkans), ''krovianka'' (Belarus, Russia and Ukraine), and ''vėdarai'' (Lithuania).
==Gallery== <gallery mode="traditional" widths="300" heights="300"> File:Morcela, botifarra e salsichas.jpg|Blood sausage (black sausage) Iberian Peninsula style File:Korean food-Sundae-01.jpg|Blood sausage Korean Peninsula style </gallery>
== See also == {{portal|Food}} {{Div col}} * Blood soup * Breakfast roll * Boerewors * Commonwealth Black Pudding Throwing Championships * Drisheen * Full breakfast * List of sausages * Red pudding * Sliced sausage * White pudding {{Div col end}}
== References == {{reflist}}
== External links == {{Commons category|Blood sausages}} * [http://www.englishbreakfastsociety.com/black-pudding.html The Black Pudding.] A history and guide by The English Breakfast Society. * [http://goodfood.uktv.co.uk/recipe/black-pudding/ Black pudding recipe] from uktv food
{{Blood as food}} {{Puddings}} {{Sausage}} {{Irish cuisine}} {{Vietnamese cuisine}} {{Authority control}}
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