What are good ingredients to put into a Scrapple soup stock?
I'll try to make this as focused as possible, so that a reasonable answer can emerge. I have a (loaf?) of scrapple, which Wikipedia describes as:
traditionally a mush of pork scraps and trimmings combined with cornmeal and flour, often buckwheat flour, and spices. The mush is formed into a semi-solid congealed loaf, and slices of the scrapple are then panfried before serving.
I'm fairly new to cooking, so this is a question about soup stocks in general. Given the ingredients, is it possible to create an edible soup stock from it, as one would from other leftover meats? If so, what kind of ingredients would pair well?
Best Answer
I don't think it would work too well to just throw scrapple in a pot and make a soup. You'd be better off trying to make something "inspired" by it, trying to duplicate similar flavors in a soup. I'd try a thick pork soup, almost a stew, with chunks of pork shoulder and cornmeal-buckwheat dumplings, some sage and corriander and plenty of pepper. I'd definitely use a pork stock made from pork bones (and a pig's foot, sawn in half, for extra body), and ramp up the flavor with a ham hock. Maybe simmer some greens in there for the last few minutes to give it some color.
As for what to do with your existing loaf of scrapple, well, slice it, fry it up, and eat with fried eggs and ketchup for breakfast.
Pictures about "What are good ingredients to put into a Scrapple soup stock?"
What goes well with scrapple?
Now onto the good part: Scrapple is absolutely delicious. It's traditionally served as a breakfast side dish, with sweet or savory condiments including ketchup, grape jelly, applesauce, honey, mustard, or maple syrup. It can be mixed with scrambled eggs or simply served between two slices of white bread.What is scrapple called in the South?
Livermush. The Southern version of scrapple has its origin in the Great Wagon Road migration, which brought Pennsylvania Dutch farmers down to the other end of Appalachia.How do you cook scrapple without it falling apart?
So how do you cook scrapple without it falling apart? Start with 1/4 inch slices of scrapple. Pan fry with 1/4 inch of oil in the pan to create a crispy shell, which prevents crumbling. Or bake in the oven for 30-40 minutes, flipping only once to prevent the scrapple from falling apart.How do you make Paunhaus?
How To Make paunhaus aka scrappleSimple Tips for Stocks \u0026 Broths - Kitchen Conundrums with Thomas Joseph
More answers regarding what are good ingredients to put into a Scrapple soup stock?
Answer 2
The purpose of stock is to dissolve collagen out of the meat and bones into gelatin. The liquid is then not so watery, collects a lot of flavor, and can be reduced for sauces if desired, etc.
The problem with the scrapple is that, while it does have a some gelatin, it also has a ton of fat and starch. The fat would melt and have to be skimmed off again. The starch would gelatinize. This would result is not a stock but a gravy.
The solution would seem to be to find recipes where the starch and fattiness would be desirable. The first thing that would come to mind would be a thick stew. I would cube and sear the scrapple before adding it. It might take some experimentation to figure out how long to let it stew to thicken the stew without turning the crapple to mush.
Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.
Images: Cats Coming, jenvit keiwalinsarid, Nataliya Vaitkevich, Nataliya Vaitkevich