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Offal dishes

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dolma
Dolma is a family of stuffed dishes largely associated with Ottoman cuisine. It mainly includes vegetables and leaves, and occasionally seafood, offal, fruits, and meats, that are hollowed out or wrapped, then filled with a mixture of rice, minced meat, herbs, and spices. The leaf-wrapped type can be specifically known as sarma, but colloquially dolma is used for both.
haggis
thumb|Haggis on a platter at a Burns supper thumb|right|A serving of haggis, neeps, and tatties
yakiniku
, meaning "grilled meat", is a Japanese term that, in its broadest sense, refers to grilled meat cuisine.
chicken foot as food
type of offal
þorramatur
thumb|Left (from top to bottom, left to right): Hangikjöt, [[Hrútspungar, Lifrarpylsa, Blóðmör, Hákarl, Svið. Right: Rúgbrauð (dark brown in color), Flatbrauð]] thumb|Lifrarpylsa: liver sausage, cooking in a pot thumb|right|Harðfiskur: wind-dried fish right|thumb|Svið: boiled sheep's head, served here with mashed potatoes and mashed turnips
suya
Suya, also known as Tsire, is a traditional Hausa (Nigerian) smoke-grilled spiced meat on skewer. Suya is generally made with thin-sliced spiced beef, lamb, goat, ram, or chicken arranged on wooden skewers. Organ meats such as kidney, liver and tripe as well as other types of meats and seafood (shrimp) are also sometimes used. Suya is most popular as evening street food or snack, restaurant appetizer, and as accompaniment with drinks at bars and night spots.
pölsa
thumb|200px| Pölsa served with a fried egg and pickled beetroot Pölsa is a traditional northern Swedish dish that is a close relative to Scottish haggis. The main ingredients are beef sinew, liver, heart, lung, onion, and barley, mixed with stock, black pepper, and marjoram. Sometimes ground beef or minced pork is added. It is usually served with mashed or boiled potatoes and pickled beetroot, and sometimes a fried egg. ==Background== The Norwegian and Danish word pølse means sausage and even if the two dishes don't look the same, the two words are related. Pölsa is simply a traditional variet
pyeonyuk
Pyeonyuk () is a traditional Korean dish, which consists of thinly sliced meat that has been boiled and pressed. Either beef or pork may be used to make the dish.
horumonyaki
Horumonyaki () is a kind of Japanese cuisine made from beef or pork offal. Kitazato Shigeo, the chef of a yōshoku restaurant (one that specializes in Western-derived cuisine) in Osaka, devised this dish and registered a trademark in 1940. It was originally derived from yakiniku. The name horumon is derived from the word "hormone", with the intended meaning of "stimulation", as in the original Greek. The name horumon is also similar to the Kansai dialect term hōrumon (), which means "discarded goods". Horumonyaki has a reputation for being a "stamina-building" food.
Drob
220px|thumb|Lamb Drob Drob, fully named Drob de Miel (Lamb Drob) or Drob de Paște (Easter Drob), is a traditional Romanian dish of lamb offals (liver, lungs, spleen, heart, kidney), green onions, herbs (dill, parsley, garlic, lovage), eggs (boiled or fresh), and bread soaked in water or milk. The boiled offals are chopped and mixed with all the other ingredients and seasoned with salt and pepper. The caul of the lamb is stretched over a loaf pan and filled with the mixture.
scrapple
Scrapple, also known by the Pennsylvania Dutch name ( in English; compare Panhas), is a traditional mush of fried pork scraps and trimmings combined with cornmeal and wheat flour, often buckwheat flour, and spices.
Balkenbrij
thumb|Balkenbrij, potato and carrot
Salceson
thumb|Salceson thumb|Salceson czarny (black) Salceson is a type of meat found in Polish cuisine and other Central and Eastern European cuisines. There are several varieties of salceson which depend on the ingredients.
fuqi feipian
Spicy Sichuan beef dish
Coda alla vaccinara
Italian stew using oxtail
Tripoux
Tripoux (or Tripous) is a French dish made with small bundles of sheep tripe, usually stuffed with sheep's feet, sweetbreads and various herbs and garden vegetables. There are a number of variations on this dish, but they generally all involve savoury ingredients held together with sheep tripe and braised over low heat.
Rigatoni con la pajata
traditional Italian pasta dish
Frìttuli
traditional pork dish from Calabria, Italy
jokpyeon
Jokpyeon () is a dish in Korean cuisine prepared by boiling cow's trotters and other cuts with high collagen content, such as cow's head, skin, tail and pig's head in water for a long time, so that the stewing liquid sets to form a jelly-like substance when cooled. The dish largely depends on cow's trotters, which explains its name that consists of jok (; "foot") and pyeon (; "tteok"). Jokpyeon is sometimes classified as muk, a Korean jelly category made from grain starch, due to the similar appearance and characteristics.
Garnatálg
right|300px is a traditional dish from the Faroe Islands. It is made by kneading intestinal fat from sheep into lumps, which then get air dried in (outhouses where the wind can blow through) and fermented. is served sliced and melted, often as a sidedish for fish, particularly (fermented semidried fish). It can also be served over potatoes.
Muzhuzhi
Muzhuzhi () is a traditional Georgian pork aspic. What makes muzhuzhi unique is that it's prepared from two components (legs and tails, and lean pork meat), which are processed in slightly different ways and then combined into one dish after being cooked. Both parts of the muzhuzhi are lightly marinated in wine vinegar infused with tarragon and basil. The vinegar should make up one-tenth of the volume of the broth poured over the finished muzhuzha. The dish is served cold a day after preparation, garnished with green onions and herbs. Muzhuzhi exists in both hot and cold versions.
Inihaw
Inihaw ( ), also known as sinugba or inasal, are various types of grilled or spit-roasted barbecue dishes from the Philippines. They are usually made from pork or chicken and are served on bamboo skewers or in small cubes with a soy sauce and vinegar-based dip. The term can also refer to any meat or seafood dish cooked and served in a similar way. Inihaw are commonly sold as street food and are eaten with white rice or rice cooked in coconut leaves (pusô). Inihaw is also commonly referred to as Filipino barbecue or (informally) Pinoy BBQ.