Slaughter (Zabíjačka)
On of the annual (or semi-annual) traditions in Slovakia is something called zabíjačka or slaughter. It’s the closest thing we have to the American Thanksgiving. The difference is that instead of killing a turkey, we eat a pig.
The whole ritual starts in late March, when people living in a village buy a pig (prasa). The small 30lb piglet is then fattened all summer long, and finally slaughtered once it gets to a respectable 200lbs. Of course, nowadays many folks do not have the yard (nor the patience) to raise a pig. As such, it is quite common to purchase an already pre-fattened pig. And if the family is small, to purchase just a half or a quarter of the porker.
Cleaning the Pig
Unlike with the case of Thanksgiving, there is no set “slaughter” date. However, there are two main slaughter seasons: in November (about a month before Christmas) and then again before Easter. On the day of slaughter (or the delivery of the pig), the whole family, friends and neighbors get together. The dead pig is placed on a wooden board, and a heat lamp is used to burn off all the hair. Then hot water is poured all over the pig to wash it. Finally, the head is chopped off and the belly is cut open.
The internal organs are then removed, including the intestines (črevá). Typically one woman would wash the intestines while another went about preparing lunch. The intestines have to be washed thoroughly, since they are to be used later as casings for sausages and hurky. They are rinsed off some 20 times, and then left to soak in water containing dissolved lemon, chopped onions and black pepper. The internal organs are cooked up into a soup (polievka or vývar) that is served for lunch. Small kidney dumplings (pečeňové halušky, dumplings made out of kidney meat mixed with flour) are mixed into it. And for the main course, there is baked meat (pečené mäso).
Making Sausages
The real fun started after lunch: making of sausages. Men cut up the meat, grind it up, mix it with the various spices and filled the intestines. Meat from the lunch soup is used to make jaternica (rice sausage) and tlačenka (meaning “pressed meat” but known as head cheese). Other pig parts (including the feet and the tail) are turned into studenina and huspenina, dishes I have no desire to learn the recipe for. Finished sausages are left hanging from a stick overnight and then put in the smokehouse the following morning. Of course, all this involved plenty of drinking and merry good time. Dinner typically consisted of the sauerkraut soup (kapustnica) and more baked meat.
Smoking Meat
The smokehouse (udiareň) was a little wooden shed with a metal roof. It contained several horizontal sticks from which the meat could be hung. Several cinder blocks or bricks were placed on the bottom, and fire was started between them. A metal sheet with multiple holes punctured in it was placed over the bricks. The purpose of this sheet was to evenly distribute the smoke coming from the fire. Various types of wood were used, but my grandma used the plum (slivka) tree. The fire was kept low to produce a lot of smoke. The sausages were left in the udiareň for about 4 days.
While the sausages were smoking, the other meat was covered with salt and left to marinate in a wooden tub (korýtko). The juices that the meat let out were periodically poured again over the meat. Bacon (slanina) was treated the same way. It was also often seasoned with caraway. Meats were then smoked for some 5 or 6 days, until the bacon got yellow and the meat got golden. Smoked meat (údené mäso) was stored in a dark pantry (komora) where it would keep all winter long.











Do you have personal zabíjačka stories and traditions to share? Do you have related photos you would not mind sharing with the public? Leave a comment or email me the photo. Thanks!
Oh God, I have stories (though no pictures, as it was way in old times)
I participated in many zabíjačky … let me see, one is coming so clear to my mind. It was some 55 years ago, and my family friend was ready to “do the thing”, and the men were drinking all night getting ready, and in the morning they went to a pig pen to get a good and big pig. And the man in charge said ” you stand back, I’ll shoot it and then we do the thing … like haul her up drain the blood and any other stuff that some folks may find disgusting”
Oh well, being drunk, he discharged his gun (never mind it was illegal to have any gun at that time in Slovakia) and pig just shook it off and ran … over three fences in the neighborhood … and then it expired, and they dragged that pig for two hours to get it back, to set it up and do a proper thing.
We do stupid things when drunk and we drink a lot in Slovakia.
After that it was the business as usual but not so good, as you are suppose to drain the blood early. But we did, and there went the whole “sacrament of zabíjačka” making “krvanvicka” (blood sausage), making sausages to smoke or preserve in jars, using every bit of that pig for some purpose, smoke it for the winter or pickle it, or boil it and store it away in a cold cellar.
Darn, happy times, we kids had our mouth greasy from eating all that stuff , and bellies were full
Interesting that I have a similar memory, just the pig did not make it that far. The men drank before, during and after zabijacka. Hard to believe they are still do in it. Where is AA when you need it.
By the way (BTW), I really like the Zabijacka post and Miro’s post. Thanks so much.
AHOJ GUYS JOE K HERE IN BOJNICE …. VISITING FROM THE USA
I TOO WAS INVITED TO A ZABIJACKA….INTERESTING…. NOW I KOW WHY …SOMEOF THE LOCALS BY FROM THE STORE….TESCO OR KAUFLAND…ETC
MY EXPERIENCE WAS ALSO INTERSETNG BUT THE ONE MEMORY WAS WHEN I HAD TO OLD THE PIGS HEAD FOR MY “FRIEND” SO HE COULD CHOP IT IN HALF AND DO WHATEVER WITH THEE BRAINS ETC AND OF COURSE ALSO REMOVE THE LEAD… OF COURSE HE HAD BEEN DRINKING THE SLIVOVICE…. ETC . THE HATCHET/ WHATEVER “BIG THING ” IT WAS DID THE JOB ….AMAZING THE KINDS OF INVENTED TOOLS THAT FARMERS USE FOR THIS THING…I THOUGHT A HAND SAW WAS USED FOR WOOD ONLY ….. AND THIS CLEEVER WAS BIG ENOUGH TO FELL A TREE
ANYHEWWWWWWWWWWW I STILL HAVE MY THUMBS AND THEY WORKIN A NICE WAY HE HAD A STEADY HAND!!!!
ALL IN ALL EVEYONE WAS RESPECTFUL OF THE WHOLE DAY AND THE TASK AT HAND AND IT WAS A GOOD TIME ….THEN ALMOST “ALL” THE PIG WENT HOME IN THE TRUNK OF A SMALL CAR END OF STORY….THE REAL WORK WAS YET TO COME WHAT TO DOWITH AL THIS STUFF…?????
PS ….. I AM JUST COOKING SOME SAUSSAGE WITH RICE AND PORK FROM MY FRIENDS “ZABIJACKA” …. I WATCHED FROM A DISTANCE THIS TIME
GREAT SITE AS USUAL JOE K FROM THE USA
What a great post! This must be the best description of a zabíjacka I’ve seen (in English).
Well done!
Juraj in Sydney
Thanks Juraj. I had the advantage of being at my grandma’s and thus this is a write up of her recollections. I hoped to include some photos too, but I didn’t get a chance to make it to a “zabijacka” this year.
Lubos, I hope this is not considered spam.
I ran across a person photo album from “zabijacky” in Moravia. It caught my attention because it was a region where my mom was born, and the village was just a couple of miles away.
http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://lh5.ggpht.com/_-uRMzCR_MX4/SUYy6HRWsVI/AAAAAAAAJVs/Qj3RGASBEYo/s160/100_9354.JPG&imgrefurl=http://picasaweb.google.com/cooperovi/Zabijacka&usg=__Kolw7HoKZ_eouLjL5vi83o8G9u8=&h=160&w=111&sz=8&hl=en&start=10&itbs=1&tbnid=faaDwVLf2OZ1XM:&tbnh=98&tbnw=68&prev=/images%3Fq%3Dskvarky%26hl%3Den%26tbs%3Disch:1
It’s really true photo story of “zabijacka”, even when done by “outsider” who may not know about “how it’s done”
there is a home made video, pretty good but not for folks of faint heart, if you don’t like to see “details how it’s done” Heck you have an option … go and buy it in grocery store, after all pigs grow on trees and no killing is required.
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=7324814211584210946#