Scrapple?

Scrapple

My Dad, Quaker, introduced me this when I was a kid. Delicious. If you eat hotdogs, scrapple is natural. Tried it up, Brown, man, good stuff!
 
Yep,,,Pennsylvania Dutch delicacy and it’s name tells you what it is! :eek:
My dad liked so as a kid I grew up having to eat it! :rolleyes:
Use to eat it with KARO syrup on it.....;)
Will never eat it again!:D
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Just loves me some scrapple! Two eggs, sunny side up with a side of hash, new potatoes with diced onions and the whole loaf of scrapple. Had it yesterday morning as I knew I wanted to take a good nap so I could make it thru the super bowl. Fond of Spam cooked the same way scrapple is cooked.
 
Served out my hitch in SE Pennsylvania. Was introduced to scrapple and gravy on french fries.
 
My mom made that, Scrapple, for breakfast when we were kids as a side to eggs. I thought it was pretty good, actually. Never occurred to me to ask what was in it, and nowadays I eat, with pleasure, all sorts of ethnic stuff that some guys gag on.

As Shoulda says above, at our house, growing up, it was “eat what’s put before you.” And there was no leaving the table, either, until you were excused by Dad. (Onions were tough, when I was a little guy. Love ‘em now.) And Mom would make desserts, which you had to eat all your dinner to enjoy.

My parents would admonish us, “Think of all the starving children in India,” when we would balk at dinner. And while we knew better than to say it, we’d think, along with every other red blooded American kid in a similar predicament, “Then ship this stuff off to ‘em already!”)

My wife did not grow up that way, and when my kids were small, she’d give ‘em a break when they did not want to eat something at dinner. She was raised differently. Took me a long while to adjust to that.
 
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“Think of all the starving children in India”

For my mother, it was "Europe." But that was right after WWII. I don't think that ploy is used much today.
 
"Think of all the starving Armenians" here. But my folks were Great Depression era so it must have been something their folks told them as a result of the post WWI Turk genocide. We had no idea where the heck Armenia was!
 
Allan Sherman, the comedian/singer back in the 1960s, had a routine for this situation. He said, "My mother used to tell me 'Clear your plate, there's children starving in India.' So I cleaned by plate, 4, 5, 6 times a day. The children in India were still starving, and I got fat."
 
My wife is a Pennsylvania gal, loves everything about PA, Penn State & the Nittany Lions, Scrapple, etc.

But I just had to put my foot down on the scrapple-No scrapple in this house!

She doesn't listen to me.

Happy life needs a happy wife. I am glad to hear Mrs. straightshooter1 does not heed your demands.
After this tread I will be buying a block of Habbersettes (sp?) next shopping trip. The only brand I see in St Pete's publix markets.
 
SPAM is a much better version. Where I live, the local supermarket (Southern Chain) sells souse, chitterlings, neck bones, chicken feet, pig ears and all of the other "parts".
Remember, Scrapple has the words Scrap and **** in it.........

I'll take my pecan bacon or the fresh local sausage made from nothing but pork shoulder any day.
 
To those of you who were never in the military I would say, based on me seeing and smelling it (never ate it...never will), reminds me of the Army's version which we called SOS (sh** on a shingle). No thanks, I'll pass.
 
To those of you who were never in the military I would say, based on me seeing and smelling it (never ate it...never will), reminds me of the Army's version which we called SOS (sh** on a shingle). No thanks, I'll pass.


Call me strange but SOS was my favorite food in the service. Actually one of the only things I looked forward to eating. Still make it today.
 
Others may not, but I love good SOS. Always have, as it's soul food to me. But it's not exactly diet food. I worked many years at Randolph AFB and the SOS served at the base golf course clubhouse cafeteria was the best on earth. They usually ran out quickly.
 
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