Cooking & Baking
Related: About this forumHas anyone made scrapple?
I made some turkey scrapple and it was tasteless and a lot softer than I expected. I just used a cup of regular cornmeal to 4 cups of liquid. Is there some other product that might give a better result?

ATL Ebony
(1,097 posts)Tried turkey sausage and bacon -- both taste like cardboard to me. Try adding your own/additional seasonings to the sausage; i.e. sage, red pepper flakes, a little sea salt & pepper may also help, if your diet allows.
pscot
(21,044 posts)and I just went with an online recipe. Definitely need more salt. Cornmeal must be a flavor sink. I put in a jalapeño and some onion and garlic. They disappeared without a trace.
BigmanPigman
(52,897 posts)meat ingrediants. If I were you, I would treat the the turkey as a replacement for a regular recipe which includes the traditional ingredients. You may also need to add more fat for flavor.
sir pball
(4,993 posts)I keep the heads from our suckling pig in the freezer at work, once I get enough I usually run a batch for a brunch special. I simmer them for a couple of hours in just enough water to cover; the resulting stock is so gelatinous it's syrupy even when it's hot. That's a crucial part of.making good scrapple - you don't want so much cornmeal that it's like polenta so you need a liquid that will set up pretty firm by itself.
I'd suggest getting chicken or turkey bones and making your own ultra-rich stock, or failing that throw in some unflavored gelatin into the mix. Three sheets per quart of liquid should do.
pscot
(21,044 posts)
Not many people these days eat scrapple, and even fewer make it (it sounds like some of the other responders thought it was a sausage product) - i admire your tastes!