
Head Cheese
After thoroughly cleaning a hog's or a pig's head, split it in two with a sharp
knife; take out the eyes, take out the brain, cut off the ears, and pour
scalding water over them and the head and scrape them clean. Cut off any part of
the nose which is discolored so as not to be scraped clean; then rinse all in
cold water and put into a large kettle with hot (not boiling) water to cover it,
and set the kettle (having covered it) overthe
fire; let it boil gently, taking off the scum as it rises; when boiled so that
the bones leave the meat readily, take it from the water with a skimmer into a
large wooden bowl or tray; take from it every particle of bone, chop the meat
small and season to taste with salt and pepper, and if liked, a little chopped
sage or thyme.
Spread a cloth in a colander or sieve, set it in a deep dish and put the meat
in, then fold the cloth loosely over it, lay a weight on which may press equally
the whole surface ( a sufficiently large plate will serve); let the weight be
more or less heavy, according as you may wish the cheese to be fat or lean; a
heavy weight by pressing out the fat will of course leave the cheese lean. When
cold take the weight off, take it from the colander or sieve, scrape off
whatever fat may be found on the outside of the cloth, and keep the cheese in
the cloth in a cool place, to be eaten sliced thin, with or without mustard and
vinegar or catsup.
After the water is cold from which the head was boiled, take off the fat from it
and whatever may have drained from the sieve or colander and cloth, put it
together in some clean water, give it one boil, then strain it through a cloth
and set it to become cold, then take off the cake of fat. It is fit for any use.