Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective

Medisterpølse

Type of Scandinavian sausage From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Medisterpølse
Remove ads

Medisterpølse, medisterkorv or simply medister is a Scandinavian specialty food consisting of a thick spiced sausage made of minced pork and suet (or lard), stuffed into a casing. It is slightly sweet-tasting, and the finely ground meat is seasoned with chopped onion, allspice, cloves, salt and pepper.[1][2][3] It is a traditional dinner sausage in Danish and Norwegian cuisine, somewhat similar to British Cumberland sausage.[4]

Thumb
Pieces of fried medister, of approx. 5 cm.

The word medister is derived from a combination of med and ister, respectively meaning 'pork' and 'suet'. It was first used in print in a Swedish housekeeping book from the early 16th century. The sausage recipe has changed since then as the meat filling used to be hand-chopped with a knife, while today it is chopped very finely by machine, giving the sausage a different texture. It is made in one very long piece and then cut up after cooking, before serving. In contrast to many other types of sausage, medister is kept fresh and only cooked or fried during the final preparation. For this reason medister must be kept cool (or frozen) until preparation.

Remove ads

See also

References

Loading related searches...

Wikiwand - on

Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.

Remove ads