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Stuffed Stomach - For Me, the Epitome of all the Stuffed Foods

posted on: Nov 28, 2018

By: Habeeb Salloum/Arab America Contributing Writer

Even though, year after year, our family enjoyed a bounty of stuffed vegetables during late summer and early autumn, it was the time when the frost came and my father killed a few sheep or a steer for our winter meat to which I always looked forward.  An outside shed was our food freezer and, from these animals, we had meat all winter long. Yet, it was not the meat dishes that I anticipated, but the thought of our yearly feast of stuffed tripe and intestines that would make my mouth water.

My mother would spend hours scrubbing and cleaning the stomach and intestines of the sheep and/or steer, preparing them for stuffing.   First, she would scrub with soap the outside, then turn them inside out and repeat the procedure. This she would do a number of times until the stomach and intestines were very clean.  The cleaned stomach and intestines were then soaked in salt and vinegar and placed in the cool shed ready to be stuffed the next day.

As was usual in doing most farm chores, us children would also give a hand.  We would bring the hot water that my mother had boiling on the stove and carry the remains from the stomach and intestines to the manure pile behind the nearby barn.  It was a task which I did not detest for I knew that soon we would be feasting on stuffed stomach and intestines.

In the evening my mother would soak the chickpeas – readying them for the stuffing.  In the morning, she would drain, then split the chickpeas by placing them on one half of a towel.   She would then fold the other half of the towel over the chickpeas, then roll with a rolling pin. This would loosen the skin and split each chickpea into two.  She would then discard the skin and place the split chickpeas into a bowl, ready to mix with the other ingredients to make a stuffing.

That morning as the stuffed stomach and intestines were being cooked, their aroma would make my hunger pangs increase by the minute.   By the time the dish was ready, I was in a dream world mesmerized by my thoughts of the mouth-watering meal.  It was a annual meal which I will always remember.

In the ensuing years, I have often prepared this dish, sans the work of cleaning the stomach and intestines.  Today, in large cities, one can find in many meat markets cleaned lamb stomachs, ready for stuffing. No more does a cook have the arduous task of cleaning.  As a friend of mine remarked, “Thank God for our modern meat markets!”

Stuffed Sheep Stomach

If one can find cleaned intestines in the meat markets, the same stuffing as used for the stomach may be utilized.  The intestine should be twisted, sausage size, and cooked with the stomach.

1 sheep stomach, scraped, then scrubbed with soap and very thoroughly washed

6 teaspoons salt

4 tablespoons vinegar

1 teaspoon allspice

1 teaspoon garlic powder

4 tablespoons butter

1/2 pound lamb or beef with a little fat, cut into 1/2 inch cubes

4 large onions, finely chopped

2 cups split chickpeas or 2 cups cooked chickpeas

1 1/2 cups rice

1 teaspoon pepper

1/2 teaspoon nutmeg

1/2 teaspoon cinnamon

4 tablespoons toasted pine nuts

Cut stomach into 4 pieces then rub with 4 teaspoons of the salt.  Place in a bowl, then add vinegar and cover with water. Allow to stand overnight then drain and thoroughly wash, then dry.

Mix allspice and garlic powder, then rub both inside and outside the stomach pieces.  Sew into bags with an opening then set aside.

Melt butter in a frying pan then sauté meat over medium heat until it begins to brown.  Stir in the remaining 2 teaspoons of salt, 3/4 of the onions, and remaining ingredients, then set aside as a stuffing.

Stuff stomach bags then sew openings.  Place in a large saucepan along with the remaining 1/4 of the onions, then cover with water to about three inches above the stomach bags and bring to boil.  Cook for 1 hour over medium heat or until the stomach is well cooked, adding more water, if necessary, to keep the stomach covered.

Serve hot along with the ‘stomach water’ as a soup, after adding spices to taste.