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Definition of Liver pudding
1. Noun. Sausage containing ground liver.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Liver Pudding
Literary usage of Liver pudding
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The American Journal of the Medical Sciences by Southern Society for Clinical Investigation (U.S.) (1837)
"a drachm of finely powdered arsenic, mixed with three-quarters of an ounce of
liver pudding, was given to a dog four months old, and immediately afterwards ..."
2. Eclectic Journal of Medicine by John Bell (1838)
"Immediately afterwards, a mixture of two ounces of haematite with seven ounces
of liver pudding was offered to him, the whole of which he devoured, ..."
3. The English Art of Cookery, According to the Present Practice: Being a by Richard Briggs (1788)
"A liver pudding hailed. GET the liver of a (heep, when you kill one, and cut it
as thin as you can, and chop it, mix it with as much fuet ..."
4. The British and Foreign Medical Review Or Quarterly Journal of Practical (1837)
"On the 24th of March, 183(5, at nine o'clock in the forenoon, a drachm of arsenic,
mixed with an ounce of liver pudding, was given to a dog four months old, ..."
5. Text-book of Meat Hygiene: With Special Consideration of Antemortem and by Richard Heinrich Edelmann, John Robbins Mohler, Adolph Eichhorn (1919)
"Used for summer sausages and liver pudding. Middles—Large Intestines.—Beef middles
two to two and a half inches in diameter, stuff thirty pounds of meat to ..."
6. Fifty Years in a Maryland Kitchen by B. C. Howard, Jane Grant Gilmore Howard, James B. Herndon, Herndon/Vehling Collection (1881)
"liver pudding. Take all the livers and kidneys of the hogs, put in all the little
waste ... liver pudding. Three heads of the hogs; eight good-sized livers, ..."