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Head cheese

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File:Headcheese Elizabeths.jpg
Head cheese, Elizabeth's restaurant, New Orleans

Head cheese (Template:Langx) or brawn is a meat jelly or terrine made of meat.<ref name=":0">Template:Citation</ref> Somewhat similar to a jellied meatloaf,<ref name=":0" /> 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 sandwich. Despite its name, the dish is not a cheese and contains no dairy products. The parts of the head used vary, and may include the tongue but do not commonly include the brain, eyes or ears. Trimmings from more commonly eaten cuts of pork and veal are often used, and sometimes the feet and heart, with gelatin added as a binder.

Variations of head cheese exist throughout Europe and elsewhere, with differences in preparation and ingredients. A version pickled with vinegar is known as souse.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> Historically, meat jellies were made of the head of an animal, less its organs, which would be simmered to produce a naturally gelatinous stock that would congeal as the dish cooled. Meat jellies made this way were commonly a peasant food and have been made since the Middle Ages. Earlier brawns heavily featured spices and herbs, but beginning in the eighteenth century, the amount of seasoning was reduced. Contemporary brawn now features minimal spicing, usually sage, and perhaps a little lemon juice.<ref name=Davidson>Template:Cite book</ref> Head cheese recipes may also require additional gelatin, or more often need to be reduced to set properly.

Etymology

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The English term head cheese is a calque derived from the Dutch word Template:Lang, which literally translates to Template:Gloss.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> The term Template:Lang can be divided into Template:Lang (Template:Gloss) originating from the animal heads commonly used to prepare the dish, and Template:Lang (Template:Gloss) describing the texture, which resembles that of cheese.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Terminology

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The term head cheese is used in North America,<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> potted heid in Scotland,<ref name="McNeill" /><ref name="CSD">Template:Cite book</ref> and brawn elsewhere in Britain<ref name="McNeill">Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite web</ref> and Australia.<ref name=Macquarie>Template:Cite book</ref> The name brawn, coming from German and Old French, has had a variety of meanings, from roasted meat to specific types of food.<ref name=":0" /> At one point, in English, it referred to the meat of the wild boar, then abundant in Great Britain, from which this jellied dish was made.<ref name=Davidson/> The term souse, a corruption of the German Template:Lang, is used for the pickled variety in North America and the West Indies.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

By country

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Europe

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  • Austria: Head cheese is known as Template:Lang, Template:Lang or Template:Lang in the most western regions. Depending on the region, it is often served with a light dressing (vinegar, sunflower seed oil or pumpkin seed oil, sliced onions).
  • Bulgaria: The meal Template:Lang (Template:Lang) is prepared from pig's heads (primarily the ears), legs, and often tongue. The broth is heavily seasoned with garlic before cooling.
  • Cyprus: made with pork and known as Template:Lang, a word possibly derived from the English word gelatin. It is often seasoned with lemon juice.
  • Czech Republic: The Template:Lang or sulc (from German Template:Lang) is made from pig's heads or legs boiled together, chopped, mixed in their broth, poured into a pan, and left in the cold to solidify. Other ingredients may include onion, pepper, allspice, bayleaf, vinegar, salt, carrot, parsley, root celery, and sometimes eggs. A similar product, tlačenka, is basically Template:Lang with some more meat, chopped liver, and various offal, poured into a prepared pig stomach and left to solidify under the weight. Template:Lang is generally thicker than Template:Lang, and commonly is eaten with chopped onions and sprinkled with vinegar.
  • Estonia: Template:Lang is similar to the German or Croatian dish (the name is a loan, as well), but usually is less seasoned and is made from higher quality meat. Template:Lang tends to be a rather loose form of head cheese with higher aspic to meat ratio and the aspic soft enough that the dish would usually start to slightly fall apart/melt if left at room temperature (harder variants do exist). Sometimes carrots or greens are added. It is a traditional Christmas dish, but is sold in stores year round. The traditional Template:Lang is made from pork using its gelatinous parts. Beef, poultry, and fish variants are also available. Template:Lang might be served with diluted vinegar to be poured over. Horseradish or strong mustard are also common accompaniments.
File:Sülze001.jpg
German Template:Lang
File:SaurerPresssack.jpg
Template:Lang
When using only pure meat of highest quality (i.e., without fat, gristle or meat of lower quality) it is called Template:Lang (Template:Gloss).
File:Schwartenmagen-hausmacher-w.jpg
German Template:Lang in a tin as it is sold as a type of Template:Lang, i.e. homemade sausage
  • Greece: In Greece and among Greeks of the diaspora, it is known as pichti (Template:Lang) and usually incorporates vinegar.
  • Hungary: A variant of head cheese, Template:Lang, or Template:Lang (pork cheese or pork head cheese), is made of mixed meat slices (especially from the head of the pig,<ref>June Meyers Authentic Hungarian Heirloom Recipes Cookbook</ref>) spices, paprika, and pieces of bacon cooked in spicy stock. The chopped meat is stuffed into the pig's stomach, similar to Scottish haggis, pricked with needles, then pressed down with weights to remove excess fat and make it tight and compact. Often it is smoked like sausages or ham.
  • Ireland: brawn is considered a rare delicacy and is made from pig's head. It dates from at least the early 19th century CE.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref><ref>Template:Cite news</ref>
  • Italy: In Genoa, a similar cold cut goes by the name of Template:Lang, literally Template:Gloss, but it is possible to find it throughout all of central and northern Italy, where it is called Template:Lang, or simply Template:Lang, Template:Lang in Tuscany, or – in some northern regions – Template:Lang (Template:Gloss). In central Italy (Lazio, Umbria), it is common to put orange peel pieces in it, or to serve it in a salad together with oranges and black olives. In the Campania region, the head and foot, called 'o pere e 'o musso, is boiled, left whole and sliced, served with lupini beans and fresh lemon. A version in aspic from Sicily known as Template:Lang includes the head, feet, skin and ears, flavored with bay leaf, pepper, vinegar and lemon.
File:LatvianHeadCheese.png
Sliced Latvian head cheese
  • Latvia: Template:Lang is a similar Latvian food consisting of meat in gelatin, often with vegetables, such as carrots, and celery added to the resulting colloidal suspension. Horseradish or vinegar can be poured over the Template:Lang when serving it.
File:Ash camembert, head cheese, terrine de campagne.jpg
Camembert, head cheese, and terrine de campagne
  • Luxembourg: Template:Lang is essentially the same as in the neighbouring Germany and France, made from pork, and commonly eaten on buttered bread (optionally with mustard). A specialty are varying kinds of pastries filled with Template:Lang that are made with aspic containing Riesling wine, most famously Rieslingspaschtéit.
  • Romania: Two versions include Template:Lang Template:Gloss or, especially in Transylvania, Template:Lang (Template:Gloss, akin to the Hungarian Template:Lang), which looks like a wide, Template:Convert sausage and the marginally similar piftie. It is the same dish as Serbian and Macedonian pihtije, in which the ingredients are poured into a bowl and refrigerated. Template:Lang is not necessarily head meat, but can be different kinds of meat, boiled with garlic and bay leaves. It is prepared by boiling pig's feet to make a soup, as feet contain more gelatin than any other part of the pig. The mixture is then cooled to make a jelly. Usually, garlic is added.
  • Serbia: Head cheese in Serbia is called Template:Lang, and it is particularly popular in northern Serbia, Vojvodina. While each village has its special recipe, with particular seasoning or special cuts of meat added, the basic Template:Lang is made with pig's tongue, heart, kidneys, skin and meat from the head. The meat is seasoned with paprika, salt, black pepper and garlic. Preparation consists of boiling the ingredients, filling the pig's stomach with them, and boiling the whole filled stomach again. Once the boiling is done, Template:Lang is then pressed under weight, and smoked for several days.
  • Slovakia: A special variety of head cheese, called tlačenka (pressed one), is popular in Slovakia. It is made of pork stomach stuffed with offal and leftover parts of pig's heads and legs. It is seasoned with garlic, paprika, black pepper, and other ingredients and usually smoked. It is traditionally served with sliced onion, vinegar, and bread.
Huspenina (also called Template:Lang, meaning Template:Gloss) is similar to a certain extent, but made with less meat and more gelatine. It is more similar to aspic, pork jelly, or hladetina.
File:Potted heid.jpg
Potted heid, a Scottish version of head cheese
  • Sweden: Known as Template:Lang, a few variations are available with different meats, spices, and preparation methods, the most popular being Template:Lang (jellied veal), Template:Lang (pressed pork and veal brawn), and Template:Lang (rolled and pressed side of pork). Common seasonings are onions, white pepper, allspice, cloves, salt and bay leaves, and occasionally carrots and herbs are added to the ingredients. Template:Lang is often regarded as a seasonal food eaten at the julbord at Christmas.
  • Switzerland: The recipe is known as Template:Lang, and it is typically made with chopped ham or pork.
  • Ukraine: known as Template:Lang, Template:Lang or Template:Lang, head cheese is usually a combination of a variety of pork meats made into a pressed loaf.
    • Volhynia and Polisia historical regions have a specific variant of the dish, called Template:Lang, which is made to be especially meaty, filled to the brim with cured pork.

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  • United Kingdom: In England and Wales, head cheese is referred to as brawn or (in Yorkshire and Norfolk) pork cheese. In Scotland, it is known as potted heid (potted head of beef, pork, or sheep); the similar potted haugh or hough is made from the shank of the animal.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Africa

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South Africa: Known as Template:Lang in Afrikaans and brawn in South African English. It is often flavoured with curry.

Asia

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Iran: A common breakfast dish is known as Template:Lang. Template:Lang is served in special restaurants known as Template:Lang. It consists of cooked sheep's head marinated in its oil and cinnamon. Iranians eat it as a heavy dish from about 5:00am.

China: In certain parts of Northern China, such as Beijing, 'pig head meat' is cooked and thinly sliced and served at room temperature. In southern China, Template:Lang (Template:Lang) is made by boning and pickling pig trotters with brine and alum. The meat is then rolled, pressed and eaten cold.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref> In northeastern China, a jellied pork skin dish is often made and served with a spicy soy sauce and vinegar mixture with crushed garlic and red chili powder.<ref>Template:Cite web</ref>

Korea: In Korean cuisine, a similar dish, pyeonyuk (Template:Lang), is made by pressing meat, usually from the head of the pig. It is eaten as anju (dishes associated with alcoholic beverages) and usually served to funeral visitors.

Vietnam: In Vietnam, Template:Lang is a similar cold cut dish made around Tết for New Year celebrations. It is a dish popular in the North and made of pork belly, pig's ears, garlic, scallions, onions, wood ear mushrooms, fish sauce, and cracked black pepper. Traditionally, Template:Lang is wrapped in banana leaves and compressed in a wooden mold until the gelatin in the pig's ears bind it together.

File:Khoanh giò thủ.jpg
A piece of Template:Lang

Australia

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In Australia, it is known as brawn or Presswurst. It is usually seen as something of an old-fashioned dish, although various large firms, such as D'Orsogna, Don Smallgoods and KR Castlemaine produce it.

Caribbean

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Souse is pickled meat and trimmings usually made from pig's feet, chicken feet or cow's tongue, to name a few parts.<ref>Sinful alterations ruin boxed chocolates [Ontario Edition] March 27, 2002 page D.04 Toronto Star</ref> The cooked meat or trimmings are cut into bite-sized pieces and soaked in a brine made of water, lime juice, cucumbers, hot pepper, salt and specially prepared seasonings. Usually it is eaten on Saturday mornings, especially in St. Vincent and Barbados. In Trinidad and Tobago, it is served or sold at most social gatherings, such as parties, all-inclusive fetes and sporting competitions.

Latin America

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Head cheese is popular and is usually referred to as Template:Lang in Chile and Colombia. In Peru, Ecuador, Bolivia, and Costa Rica, it is also known as Template:Lang. It is known as Template:Lang in Uruguay and Argentina. In Panama, it is known as sous (from Caribbean English souse), made with pig's feet and prepared the same way as in the Caribbean; it is a dish from the Caribbean coast, where most of Panama's West Indian community resides.

In Brazil, head cheese is popular among the gaucho population and is commonly known as Template:Lang Template:Gloss. In the German-colonized cities, such as Pomerode and Blumenau, it follows the German recipe and is known as Template:Lang.

In Mexico, it is known as Template:Lang and is usually spiced with oregano, vinegar, garlic, and black pepper.<ref>The People's Guide to Mexico By Carl Franz, Carl Franz, Lorena Havens, Steve Rogers, Lorena Havens</ref>

North America

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Alberta, Canada: the typical jellied meat available in stores is labelled "head cheese", whether or not it is actually made from the head. The large Eastern European community in the province also has a (declining) tradition of making jellied meat at home, usually from pigs' feet, and this is called Template:Lang in the local dialect of the Ukrainian language.

Pennsylvania, United States: In the Pennsylvania Dutch language, head cheese is called souse. Pennsylvania Germans usually prepare it from the meat of pig's feet or tongue and it is pickled with sausage.

Wisconsin, Illinois, Michigan, and other portions of the Upper Midwest, United States: Head cheese and sulze are both made from pork snouts and tongues, but head cheese often uses larger chunks of smoked meat, while sulze generally uses unsmoked, chopped meat and has added vinegar and pickles.

Louisiana, Mississippi, Alabama, and other portions of the Deep South, United States: The highly seasoned hog's head cheese is very popular as a cold cut or appetizer. A pig's foot provides the gelatin that sets the cheese, and vinegar is typically added to give a sour taste. It is a popular Cajun food and is often encountered seasoned with green onions. It is called in Louisiana French Template:Lang. In Mississippi, Alabama, and other Southern states, it is encountered in a spicy form known as souse or less spicy hog's head cheese.

Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada: Throughout Newfoundland, brawn is typically made from wild game such as moose and caribou.

Ontario, Canada: Commercial, processed versions made with pork are sold in the deli section in some grocery stores in Ontario, such as in the German 'heimat' of Waterloo Region.

Quebec, Canada: Called Template:Lang, it is commonly available in grocery stores and butcher shops along with cretons and Template:Lang.

Prince Edward Island, Canada: Now uncommon and seen as old fashioned. It was common before 1970 and often referred to as potted head or potted meat.

New Brunswick, Canada: A spread similar to cretons made from pork head and Boston butt and seasoned primarily with onion, salt, and summer savory, is often referred to as head cheese.

See also

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References

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