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  2. Blood as food - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_as_food

    Blood as food is the usage of blood in food, religiously and culturally. Many cultures consume blood, often in combination with meat . The blood may be in the form of blood sausage , as a thickener for sauces, a cured salted form for times of food scarcity, or in a blood soup . [ 1 ]

  3. Blood soup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_soup

    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; Yawarlukru, An Ecuadorian speciality from the highlands region

  4. Black soup - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_soup

    Black soup was a dish in the cuisine of ancient Sparta, made with boiled pork meat and blood, using only salt and vinegar to flavour. The soup was well known during antiquity in the Greek world, but no original recipe of the dish survives today. [1]

  5. Dinuguan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dinuguan

    Dinuguan served with puto (Filipino rice cake). Can also be eaten with tuyo (fried dried fish). The most popular term, dinuguan, and other regional naming variants come from their respective words for "blood" (e.g., "dugo" in Tagalog means "blood," hence "dinuguan" as "to be stewed with blood" or "bloody soup").

  6. Blood sausage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blood_sausage

    A blood sausage, also known as a blutwurst sausage, is a sausage filled with blood that is cooked or dried and mixed with a filler until it is thick enough to solidify when cooled. Most commonly, the blood of pigs, sheep, lamb, cow, chicken, or goose is used.

  7. Drisheen - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Drisheen

    Drisheen (Irish: drisín) is a type of blood pudding made in Ireland. It is distinguished from other forms of Irish black pudding by having a gelatinous consistency. It is made from a mixture of cow's, pig's or sheep's blood, milk, salt and fat, which is boiled and sieved and finally cooked using the main intestine of an animal (typically a pig or sheep) as the sausage skin.

  8. Hematophagy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hematophagy

    Cow blood mixed with milk, for example, is a mainstay food of the African Maasai. Many places around the world eat blood sausage . Some societies, such as the Moche , had ritual hematophagy, as well as the Scythians , a nomadic people of Eastern Europe , who drank the blood of the first enemy they killed in battle .

  9. Black pudding - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_pudding

    Black pudding is a distinct national type of blood sausage originating in the United Kingdom and Ireland. It is made from pork or occasionally beef blood, with pork fat or beef suet, and a cereal, usually oatmeal, oat groats, or barley groats.