Hog Head Cheese (Souse) Sandwich
After hog butchering, nothing went to waste — including the head. Head cheese (called 'souse' in Appalachia) is a terrine made from the meat of a hog's head, set in its own natural gelatin. Sliced thick and placed on bread with mustard, it was a prized cold lunch. The flavor is rich, porky, and faintly tangy from the vinegar used in preparation. A November tradition after the first cold snap.
After hog butchering, nothing went to waste — including the head. Head cheese (called ‘souse’ in Appalachia) is a terrine made from the meat of a hog’s head, set in its own natural gelatin. Sliced thick and placed on bread with mustard, it was a prized cold lunch. The flavor is rich, porky, and faintly tangy from the vinegar used in preparation. A November tradition after the first cold snap.
Ingredients
- 1 hog’s head, cleaned and split (or 2 lbs pork trotters + 1 lb pork jowl as substitute)
- 1 large onion, quartered
- 4 cloves garlic
- 2 bay leaves
- 1 tbsp whole black peppercorns
- 1 tsp red pepper flakes
- ½ cup apple cider vinegar
- Salt to taste
- Sage and thyme to taste
- Thick-sliced bread and yellow mustard for serving
Directions
- Scrub the head thoroughly. Soak in cold salted water overnight to draw out blood. Rinse.
- Place in a large pot. Cover with cold water. Bring to a boil, skimming foam.
- Add onion, garlic, bay leaves, peppercorns, and red pepper. Reduce to a simmer.
- Cook 3–4 hours until all meat is falling from the bones.
- Remove head. Let cool slightly. Pick all meat from the bones — ears, cheeks, snout, tongue. Nothing wasted.
- Strain the cooking liquid. Return 2 cups of it to a pot.
- Chop or shred the meat finely. Return to the pot with reserved liquid.
- Add vinegar, sage, thyme, and salt to taste. Adjust seasoning — it should be savory and faintly tangy.
- Pour into loaf pans or small crocks. Press down firmly to remove air pockets.
- Refrigerate until completely solid (several hours). The natural gelatin will set everything firmly.
- Slice thick and serve on bread with yellow mustard.
Notes
Hog head cheese season was November after the first hard freeze — cold weather was needed for hog butchering and for the souse to set. Every mountain family had their own recipe, often with different spice ratios. Store-bought head cheese from a butcher counter works for anyone not butchering their own hogs.
Source: ClaudeBilly — Historically Accurate 1970s Appalachian Lunches