Butifarra Soledeñas Explained

Butifarra Soledeñas
Country:Colombia
Region:South America
Course:Main
Type:Sausage
Main Ingredient:Meats

Butifarra Soledeña (sausage of Soledad, Atlántico) is a type of botifarra that has developed into a regional specialty in Colombian cuisine.[1] It is made from ground beef and pork with seasoning and spices. The meat is cut into pieces and boiled. The mixture is encased in intestine and tied off with string into sections. The lengths are boiled. Butifarras Soledeñas are hawked in the street by vendors calling out "buti, buti, buti" while drumming on the metal containers from which they are sold.[1] Butifarras Soledeñas are often offered with fresh squeezed lime juice.

The South American version of botifarra is shorter and almost round. It is a speciality in Colombia in the town of Soledad and also in Barranquilla. Butifarra is a very popular dish eaten with bollo of yuca and lime juice.[2] It is a celebrated tradition of the area.[1] It can be eaten with the casing removed.[1]

The name comes from the words embutido (Spanish for cured sausages and meaning stuffed) and farra (meaning spree or party).[1]

See also

Notes and References

  1. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Rk3pmQjyNrA Documentary on Butifarra Soledeña, in Spanish with English subtitles, 14 May 2012
  2. Web site: La butifarra con sabor soledeño. es. The butifarra with Soledad flavour. September 2008. https://web.archive.org/web/20111209040905/http://barranquilla.vive.in/restaurantes/barranquilla/articulos_rest_barranquil/septiembre2008/ARTICULO-WEB-NOTA_INTERIOR_VIVEIN-4627412.html . 2011-12-09 .