Witamy! This Blog has been on the web for almost four years and this is our 100th post. During that time, and during all of the
visits we have made to Polish Heritage Festivals, the most frequently asked
questions revolve around Czarnina –
the classic Polish Duck Blood Soup. So
many folks remember it from their childhood and this is one dish that you
either love or hate – there’s no in between.
Over the years Czarnina has
become one of legendary memories that grows with age (just like that huge fish
that got away) but I suspect the legend has overshadowed the actual taste…duck’s
blood?? Really?
Even though I can’t
get my head (or taste buds) comfortable with the notion of sipping the blood of
a duck, even cooked, we would have included it in our book, if the ingredients
were easier to find. I called our
favorite butcher and was told that fresh ducks were readily available, but only
cleaned and dressed. I checked in the
local international grocery stores, and found frozen cow’s blood but no duck
blood. With all the regulations on
commercial food handling, I’m guessing that no one will guarantee the freshness
and safety of the blood. I suppose one
could get fresh blood directly from a farmer...if one knew a farmer…but I
don’t.
A couple of years
ago we posted this recipe for “mock” Czarnina
which was adapted from a very old traditional recipe and it generated a lot of
hits on this website. So we’re posting
it again for your pleasure and culinary enjoyment. The recipe avoids real duck blood but it still
gets a lot of flavor from prunes and from fresh or smoked neck bones, either
pork or some variety of fowl – whatever you can get. Try it and let us know how it worked.
Ślepo Czarnina – Bloodless (or Blind) Duck Blood Soup
Serves 8
·
3 pounds meaty fresh or smoked neck
bones, pork, turkey, duck, etc.
·
1 pound dried prunes, pitted
·
1 stalk celery
·
1 sprig parsley
·
1 bay leaf
·
5 whole allspice
·
2 whole cloves
·
¼ cup raisins
·
1 small tart apple, chopped
·
1/4 cup vinegar or lemon juice
·
½ to 1 tablespoon sugar
·
2 cups light cream
·
4 tablespoons all-purpose flour
·
Salt and pepper to taste
1. If using fresh neck bones, blanch, drain and rinse them. Place blanched or smoked neck bones in a large
pot or Dutch oven. Cover with water. Bring to a boil, skimming off any foam
that rises to the top.
2. While the bones are coming to a boil, make a small bag from
cheese cloth (or a clean cotton hankie) and place in it the celery, parsley,
allspice and cloves. Add it to the soup
pot, reduce heat, add vinegar and bay leaf and simmer, partially covered, for 1
hour.
3. Add prunes and season slowly with sugar, salt and pepper
(go easy on the salt if using smoked neck bones). Bring back to a boil, reduce heat and simmer
slowly, partially covered, for 1 hour or until meat falls off the bone. Remove the neck bones from the pot.
4. Taste again and adjust the seasonings, plus vinegar or lemon
juice, to your own palate. Add the
seasonings slowly, and keep tasting. The
broth should have a slightly sweet note from the plums and sugar, but with a soft
contrasting tartness from the vinegar or lemon juice. Remove meat from bones and return the meat to
the pot.
5. Turn off the heat, cool soup and then refrigerate until fat is
congealed on top for easy skimming and removal.
6. Just before serving, in a medium bowl, “cream” the cold soup by adding
a few ladles of cold soup and slowly whisking in the flour and cream; and whisking
(or blending) until very smooth and all the flour lumps are gone. Pour this mixture back into the soup pot and
heat gently until soup is thickened and any raw flour taste is cooked out.
Serve over noodles,
if desired. Smacznego!
PS: there are several regional versions that make great use of fruit in
the soup. Pictured is one such version
with pears and fresh plums.