Ryynimakkara
{{Short description|Finnish sausage}}
{{One source|date=October 2024}}
Ryynimakkara ({{literal translation|groat sausage}}) is a type of sausage in Finnish cuisine containing groats. Ryynimakkara has barley groats, about one fifth of its weight, lowering its meat and fat content.{{cite web|url=https://kotiliesi.fi/ruoka/ryynimakkara/|title=Ryynimakkara on nostalginen makumuisto lapsuudesta|first=Hanna|last=Kuusisalo|work=Kotiliesi|date=11 May 2020|access-date=13 October 2024|language=fi}} Also, the fat content is considerably lower than other sausages, usually between 10 and 15%. In some traditional recipes ryynimakkaras are prepared with no meat at all.
The closest relatives to the ryynimakkara are the potato sausage (perunamakkara) from the Häme region of Finland, which has potato instead of the barley groats, blood sausages (verimakkara) and the black sausage (mustamakkara) from Tampere. The use of groats in the ryynimakkara is similar to the British black pudding although its appearance is different, being a thick and small sausage. Also, the Scottish traditional food haggis have some similarities to ryynimakkara, although instead of intestines it is made in the stomach of a sheep.
See also
References
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External links
- [http://www.makkara.info Makkaraportaali] {{in lang|fi}}
{{sausage}}
Category:Meat and grain sausages
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