WIZEB wrote:Talking about black pudding I'm heavily into chorizo at present.
Chop it up, cook it in the oven and it gives a nice bit of a crunch to a green salad.
Nice.
Our local French deli sells a beautifully soft chorizo – cooks wonderfully. Makes a lovely frittata with some finely-chopped shallot.
On black pudding, I don't often buy it, simply because it's usually very dry – and I can get 'Bury-style' here. I do wonder if that's because most if not all British black pudding is now made with pasturised blood and not the proper, raw stuff.
I love the French version,
boudin noir (or the very lightly spiced Catalan version) which is much softer. We'll have the latter a few times in August when we're over there. As with the chorizo, it can make a very nice frittata – and just simply grilled, with some sliced apple, gently fried in butter, on the side.
It would also be remiss of me not to mention
himmel und erde, which is a traditional German dish of black pudding, mash, fried onions and apple sauce – which I have actually eaten in Berlin. The name refers to the two types of apple in the dish – the 'apple' coming from the tree ('himmel' – heaven) and the potato coming from the earth ('erde'), as 'Erdapfel' (earth apple) is old German slang for potato – which itself brings to mind the French 'pomme de terre' for potato.
Fascinating stuff, this.
The Spanish have a nic little black pudding as a tapas dish too.
It's a global dish.