Moderators: Jenise, David M. Bueker, Robin Garr
Jenise wrote:So where do the rest of you stand? Love them, hate them, you'd use them to impart gelatine to a stock but otherwise wouldn't eat one? Let's talk.
Mark Lipton wrote:where do people stand on the issue of chicken feet, often found in dim sum parlors?
Matilda L wrote:My father used to enjoy pigs' trotters and I remember eating them with him when I was a child. They're not something I'd seek out now. Doesn't gross me out but there are other things I'd rather eat.
I'll content myself with aural pig feet: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qhfPP-YUEMQ
Frank says:
i suppose that down in Oz, you appreciate what those old blues songs meant by "jelly roll" or "pig foot"?
Bill Spohn wrote: BTW, you describe sauce gribiche as aggressive and I wouldn't have normally considered it as such. But then I do Dijon mustard vinaigrettes all the time and see nothing aggressive about them either. Wouldn't think gribiche is your cuppa tea, BTW, as it is really just a mayo based relish sauce.
Mark Lipton wrote: I recall having pickled pig's feet in LA on a couple of occasions, but never when particularly sober.![]()
Jenise wrote:Mark Lipton wrote: I recall having pickled pig's feet in LA on a couple of occasions, but never when particularly sober.![]()
Best line in this whole thread.Ditto, menudo?
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