Blood soup
Dinuguan, a blood soup from the Philippines | |
Type | Soup |
---|---|
Main ingredients | Blood |
Cookbook: Blood soup Media: Blood soup |
Blood soup is any soup that uses blood as a principal ingredient. Examples of blood soups include:
Blood soups
- Chicken and duck blood soup, a blood soup popular in Shanghai
- Chornaja Poliwka, Belarusian soup made of duck, goose or pig blood and clear broth
- Czernina, or Duck Blood Soup, a Polish soup made of duck, goose or pig blood and clear broth[1]
- Dinuguan, a soup from the Philippines made of pig blood and blood sausage
- Duck blood and vermicelli soup, a traditional delicacy in Nanjing
- Fritada, a special type of soup prepared from goat (cabrito) blood, prepared in Monterrey, Mexico
- Juka, a Lithuanian blood soup from the Dzūkija region
- Mykyrokka, a traditional soup dish in Middle-Finland
- Pig's organ soup, a soup from Malaysia and Singapore that contain pig's blood in the form of cubes; this practice has since ceased in Singapore following the outbreak of Japanese Encephalitis (Pig Virus) among pigs reared in nearby Malaysia in 1999, but the Malaysian version retains its authenticity.
- Prdelačka, a traditional Czech pork blood soup made during the pig slaughter season[2]
- Saksang, a savory spicy dish from the Bataks of Indonesia made with pork or dog meat stewed in blood with coconut milk and spices
- Schwarzsauer, a German blood soup with various spices cooked in vinegar-water and a sort of black pudding made with vinegar.
- Seonjiguk, a Korean soup made with thick slices of congealed ox blood and vegetables in a hearty beef broth, known as a hangover cure
- Svartsoppa, a soup consumed in Scania with goose blood (or sometimes pig blood) as the main ingredient
- Tiết canh, a Vietnamese duck blood soup
- Yaguarlocro, An Ecuadorian speciality from the highlands region
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Blood soups. |
- ↑ Pang, Kevin Pang; Borrelli, Christopher (October 27, 2011). "There will be blood. Chicago Tribune. Accessed November 2011.
- ↑ Czech Radio (February 9, 2007). Recept pro tento den. Accessed March 2012.
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