Botifarra is based on ancient recipes, either the Roman sausage botulu or the lucanica, made of raw pork and spices, with variants today in Italy and in the Portuguese and Brazilian linguiça.[citation needed]
Raw botifarra, botifarra vermella, butifarra roja, butifarra cruda, botifarra crua, or roget. It is also known as llonganissaorlonganiza in many places of the Eastern Spain. This botifarra is usually grilled or barbecued.
Black botifarra, butifarra negraornegret, containing boiled pork blood in the mixture
Botifarra catalana, large botifarra similar to cooked ham. It may contain truffles.
Botifarra d'ouorbutifarra de huevo (lit.'botifarra with egg'), containing egg in the mixture, typical to be eaten on Fat Thursday (dijous gras)
White botifarra, botifarra blancaorblanquet. Its main ingredient is lean meat (carne magra). It does not contain any blood in its mixture.
Botifarra d'arròs (lit.'botifarra of rice'), containing boiled rice together with meat and spices[1]
Obispo (meaning 'bishop') and bull, as well as bisbot negre and bull negre, are thick blood botifarra varieties made with different sections of tripe.[2] Both obispo and black botifarra are versions of black pudding.
Usually white botifarra and black botifarra do not need to be cooked, but they are sometimes boiled as an ingredient of escudella i carn d'olla, a traditional dish made by boiling vegetables and meat; as well as in the Catalan way of cooking fava beans.
Grilled botifarra served with white beans (Catalan: botifarra amb sequesorbotifarra amb mongetes) is a typical Catalan dish.
In South America cooked botifarra of many types are known as butifarra. In the coast of Colombia, butifarra is a dried, shorter, almost round version of the sausage eaten with bolloofyuca and lime juice.[3]InArgentina and Uruguay, butifarra is a very fatty, tender and whitish sausage much more like a cased pate, rioplatense butifarra is made with finely minced pork fat and meat that is cased in a soft sausage casing and boiled. In Paraguay, butifarra is a finely minced fatty chorizo that is commonly prepared in asado.
Butifarra is popular in El Salvador, also known to be found in Bolivia and Mexico.
In Tabasco, Mexico, la butifarra is a short sausage that is very popular with street vendors, made of seasoned mixed ground beef and pork, deep-fried and usually served with a stack of halved tortillas on each side.[4][5]
InPeruvian cuisine, the word butifarra is used for a particular kind of ham sandwich. The Peruvian butifarra sandwich is prepared with jamon del país, which is a regional type of ham, and not a botifarra at all.[6]