How to Cook Brains: Slovak Mozgy
When at a Slovak zabijačka (za-bee-yach-ka), a family pig slaughtering, the first food to be cooked is lunch. Without fail, my mother in law makes mozgy, a dish containing the brains and spinal cord.
When planning to blog about zabijačka, I wanted to post exact recipes. This, however, was not possible due to a number of factors, like helping out and taking care of children, but most of all because nobody has any idea of how much of an ingredient they use. If I’m lucky, amounts are given in handfuls, sprinkles, and pours.
“Mami, how much onion did you put in?” I ask.
“Oh, I don’t know, until it looks good. However much the butcher says.” my mother in law answers.
Mozgy is served with bread and homemade pickles, although any fermented vegetable would pair beautifully, like sauerkraut, cauliflower, peppers, or cucumbers.
For lunch, everybody stops and sits down around the old table in the basement, where my mother in law is cooking on a wood stove. The children scramble onto the bench, the butcher is given the choicest portion and the most comfortable seat. A huge jar of homemade pickles and sliced bread are set atop the cast off flowered plastic tablecloth for everyone to help themselves to.
After the pig is hung and the organs removed, it is cut down the middle of the spine from top to bottom with a saw. Run a finger down the spine to collect the spinal cord, and scoop out the brains.
Subscribe to find out how to make these other dishes from a Slovak pig butchering!
- jaternice: sausages made of rice and organs that you simply pop into the oven to eat for a quick meal. You would never tell there are organs in there.
- tlačenka: head cheese, which is bits of meat, herbs, and garlic held together with gelatin (remember filling those cauldrons with bones?)
- lard and cracklings (and I’ll show you what you can make with the cracklings).
- bacon
- podbradnik: literally meaning under the chin, it’s basically fat smeared in garlic and paprika.
- black pudding: barley is cooked with broth and blood to a pudding consistency.
- klobasa: Slovak style smoked sausages.
- liver pate
- baked meat, which is supper, although at this point I usually just want a salad.
- 5 med onions
- cooking fat
- paprika
- 2 kg (4.5 lbs) fatty meat, ground
- spinal cord and brains
- caraway
- salt, pepper
- 5-6 eggs
- Cut onions roughly, cook on slow with fat until caramelized, about 20 min, in a wide pot.
- Sprinkle on paprika, stir and immediately add ground meat. Paprika quickly burns and turns bitter. Sorry, I don't know how much, but Slovaks use a fair amount. The ground meat is fresh from the pig and can be any part.
- Grind spinal cord and brains, add to pot.
- Add salt, pepper, and caraway to taste.
- When the meat is cooked through, beat 5-6 eggs in a bowl and add to meat mixture, stirring as you pour.
- Serve with fermented vegetables or pickles.
Shared at The Art Of Homemaking, Thank Goodness It’s Monday, Wildcrafting Wednesday, Homestead Blog Hop, Homeacre Hop
Gabriela Stevens
Mar 23, 2015 @ 16:03:10
I have many nice memories from our “zabijacka”. Pig brains and eggs scramble was one of my favorite.
Naomi
Mar 23, 2015 @ 21:25:30
So glad to hear it was a favourite of yours! I really like it too.
Megan Stevens
Mar 23, 2015 @ 21:19:49
Sounds and looks delicious!!! I love all your descriptions, too, the cultural gathering traditions. So rich. Everyone’s together.
Naomi
Mar 23, 2015 @ 21:26:49
Thanks 🙂 Everyone getting together is what I enjoyed as a child too, even though we butchered sheep much differently, and still enjoy as an adult.
Miwa
Mar 24, 2015 @ 04:12:55
If I didn’t know better I’d think you had a plateful of apple crumble from the picture. This is a much more wholesome brain recipe than the ones I hear about here… Which is mostly for fried brains and the recipes usually include drugs and too much tv.
Naomi
Mar 24, 2015 @ 09:05:29
haha! 🙂
Mónica
Jul 16, 2015 @ 11:14:32
Love your recipes and your stories!
Here in Portugal we also eat the brains mixed with scramble eggs and chives. It´s really good.
Naomi
Jul 16, 2015 @ 16:37:27
Thank you! Maybe it’s a traditional way of eating brains across Europe? I like your tastes 🙂