wheels wrote:I keep meaning to get some, but Mrs Wheels isn't keen on making BP, and as I need her help to be able to do it, I fear that it's a non-starter.
Phil
Hi Phil, nag her until she does
Since first making them, I couldn't believe how easy they were - far easier than making sausages !
I only make a small batch of about 8 black puddings following Sundodgers(Bricans) recipe for a Bury BP.
I use the following ingredients - 100g dried blood whisked into 700g cold water. 300g blitzed porridge oats (supermarket value brand), 50g pearl barley (Boiled until cooked), 100g onion (or a bit more depending on your taste) sweated off in a bit of lard or pork fat. 100g rusk or dried breadcrumbs (depending what's available). My addition to the recipe is a small amount of either pork or ham rind, cooked until very soft, then cut into tiny pieces so that it 'melts' into the pudding. It give a nice flavour to the pud.
The spices for this quantity are 26g Salt. 6g ground white pepper, 8g ground Allspice, 4g ground Coriander, .6g ground Cumin, .2g ground Cloves, .8g Pennyroyal ( I was using dried Mint from the garden). Be careful with the cloves as they can become dominant, especially seeing as Allspice is in the ingredients. I think the ones I have have gone lighter in weight than normal and ended up with almost a clove a pud ! I've dropped it down to just 2 cloves per batch now.
I find using a caulking gun rather than the sausage-filler works really well. The mix is very easy to fill wide hog casings, but not too tight otherwise they will swell up and burst.
Try mixing up the spices and let Pauline have a sniff - might just change her mind !
"Success is going from failure to failure without a loss of enthusiasm." - Sir Winston Churchill