The plate hits the table and the room splits in two.
Half the faces lean in, fascinated.
The rest recoil.
Because there, next to the eggs and bacon, is that dark, glistening slice nobody can ignore: black pudding. It looks simple.
Black pudding begins with the one ingredient that makes people hesitate: blood. Dried pig’s blood is blended with fat and cereal—usually oats or barley—then seasoned with warming spices like nutmeg, cloves, and herbs that turn something austere into something deeply savory. Stuffed into natural casings, it joins a global family of blood sausages: Spanish morcilla, French boudin noir, German blutwurst. What started as sheer necessity—refusing to waste any part of a slaughtered animal—evolved into regional pride and comfort food, from greasy spoon breakfasts to fine-dining plates crowned with seared scallops and crumbled black pudding.
Its reputation still unnerves many, and that’s understandable. Yet beneath the shock lies a food born of resourcefulness, carrying centuries of technique, frugality, and flavor. Try it once with an open mind, and it stops being a dare. It becomes a story you’re suddenly part of.
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