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I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see it
served at any restaurant. |
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bob wrote:
> On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 04:47:05 -0000, magnanimously > proffered: > >> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see >> it served at any restaurant. > > Try a good Mexican restaurant. Menudo is one of the dishes I've tried > at a friend's home. The flavour was great, but I found the texture of > the tripe a bit challenging. An acquired taste. It's sort of "rubbery" but it's tasty! I love Menudo. I buy it canned because I don't have Mexican neighbors. And even at the Mexican restaurant down the street they don't have it on the menu; you have to ask for it "special". It is known as a hangover cure Nice hot spicy stew. Jill |
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On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 00:37:08 -0500, "jmcquown"
> magnanimously proffered: >bob wrote: >> On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 04:47:05 -0000, magnanimously >> proffered: >> >>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see >>> it served at any restaurant. >> >> Try a good Mexican restaurant. Menudo is one of the dishes I've tried >> at a friend's home. The flavour was great, but I found the texture of >> the tripe a bit challenging. An acquired taste. > >It's sort of "rubbery" but it's tasty! I love Menudo. I buy it canned >because I don't have Mexican neighbors. And even at the Mexican restaurant >down the street they don't have it on the menu; you have to ask for it >"special". It is known as a hangover cure Nice hot spicy stew. > >Jill The first time I ate Menudo was at Bill Alvarez's home when we were high school pals. His mother made it as a special treat for Bill's gringo friend. I didn't realise then that Menudo is usually served for special occasions and family gatherings. I ate it not knowing that I was eating tripe. Nevertheless the texture was not something I liked because, as you've said, it was rubbery. Having grown in my food tastes since then, I've tried it again in restaurants (both in California and Mexico) and I still don't like it. Funny - because I can eat calamari non-stop, and people say that's rubbery too. Of course, now that I don't eat red meat, all that's irrelevant. Pass the calamari ... -- una cerveza mas por favor ... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ Wax-up and drop-in of Surfing's Golden Years: <http://www.surfwriter.net> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~ |
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Joseph wrote on Sat, 28 Jul 2007 23:10:20 -0700:
??>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I ??>> never see it served at any restaurant. ??>> I've only tried tripe once or twice, mainly in Chinese restaurants. IMHO, it's just not worth the trouble. The flavor isn't much and it takes a lot of chewing. Given the time it takes, it might be a good way to deceive yourself that you've had a lot of food :-) James Silverton Potomac, Maryland E-mail, with obvious alterations: not.jim.silverton.at.verizon.not |
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![]() > wrote in message ups.com... >I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see it > served at any restaurant. > I love Honeycomb Tripe....My Mother used to make it up and serve in a white a sauce with parsley... I tried cooking some about 12 months ago..from a recipe I got from the newsgroups..Cut up into serving size pieces.. It was Grilled (The USA equivalent of 'Broiled')...I put it under a hot griller element in the oven and grill it for a few minutes with a little butter ..It is tender and very nice to eat.. At first I thought it would not be edible, and I had some tripe in the refrigerator and decided to give it a try...It was great..I now do it occasionally ...Very tasty Bigbazza (Barry) Oz |
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In article >, wrote:
[snip] >The first time I ate Menudo was at Bill Alvarez's home when we were >high school pals. His mother made it as a special treat for Bill's >gringo friend. I didn't realise then that Menudo is usually served for >special occasions and family gatherings. I ate it not knowing that I >was eating tripe. Nevertheless the texture was not something I liked >because, as you've said, it was rubbery. > >Having grown in my food tastes since then, I've tried it again in >restaurants (both in California and Mexico) and I still don't like it. >Funny - because I can eat calamari non-stop, and people say that's >rubbery too. Yeah... Vulcanised rubber! (Tripe is good true organic rubber. ![]() >Of course, now that I don't eat red meat, all that's irrelevant. But... but... all the tripe I've seen here in Oz is white. [Tripe and onions in a white sauce is a great feed, but I find it's better if someone else cooks it.] >Pass the calamari ... Out to the cat. Cheers, Phred. -- LID |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article . com>, > wrote: > >> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see >> it served at any restaurant. > > Google for "Menudo". > Use beef instead of pigs feet. > > It's better. What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band |
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jmcquown wrote:
> Omelet wrote: >> In article . com>, >> wrote: >> >>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see >>> it served at any restaurant. >> >> Google for "Menudo". >> Use beef instead of pigs feet. >> >> It's better. > > What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL > > Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band OOOPS, meant I'm NOT talking some boy band. Gonna have menudo for lunch (the stew with tripe, not the boyz) |
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In article >,
"jmcquown" > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > In article . com>, > > wrote: > > > >> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see > >> it served at any restaurant. > > > > Google for "Menudo". > > Use beef instead of pigs feet. > > > > It's better. > > What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL Nah. I've seen if fixed both ways. :-) I just think that calves feet are tastier than pigs feet, and are very available around here. > > Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band <g> I like the concept but I still have yet to make it. I'd skip the Hominy. Can't STAND that stuff! I've got calves feet thawed in the 'frige right now, but that's for making calves foot jelly. Dad loves the stuff and it seems to make him feel more energetic. Even he has noticed it. Gotta hard boil the eggs first before I start on it so they have time to cool and get peeled. -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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In article >,
"jmcquown" > wrote: > jmcquown wrote: > > Omelet wrote: > >> In article . com>, > >> wrote: > >> > >>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see > >>> it served at any restaurant. > >> > >> Google for "Menudo". > >> Use beef instead of pigs feet. > >> > >> It's better. > > > > What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL > > > > Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band > > OOOPS, meant I'm NOT talking some boy band. Gonna have menudo for lunch > (the stew with tripe, not the boyz) <lol> I will try menudo one day, but I'll substitute fresh corn for the hominy. -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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jmcquown wrote:
> > It's sort of "rubbery" but it's tasty! I love Menudo. I buy it canned > because I don't have Mexican neighbors. And even at the Mexican restaurant > down the street they don't have it on the menu; you have to ask for it > "special". It is known as a hangover cure Nice hot spicy stew. It is a hangover cure, however it is a preventative cure. You have to eat a big bowl of it before you start drinking. (Actually, any big bowl of brothy soup will prevent or greatly reduce a subsequent hangover.) I've eaten menudo both made fresh in Mexican restaurants and canned. I find the texture of Juanita's brand canned menudo much better than anything I've gotten in a restaurant. It's not rubbery at all. The nicest pieces have a gelatinous texture. I think the canning process greatly tenderizes them. One good trick after dumping the contents of the can into a pot is to sort through it and remove all the gnarly pieces. I throw those away, though when I had cats I'd wash off the spicy broth and let the cats eat them. For some reason, the local restaurants that offer it usually only offer it on weekends. |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > "jmcquown" > wrote: > >> jmcquown wrote: >>> Omelet wrote: >>>> In article . com>, >>>> wrote: >>>> >>>>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never >>>>> see it served at any restaurant. >>>> >>>> Google for "Menudo". >>>> Use beef instead of pigs feet. >>>> >>>> It's better. >>> >>> What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL >>> >>> Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band >> >> OOOPS, meant I'm NOT talking some boy band. Gonna have menudo for >> lunch (the stew with tripe, not the boyz) > > <lol> > > I will try menudo one day, but I'll substitute fresh corn for the > hominy. You'll lose a lot in the translation if you don't use golden hominy. Just sayin' ![]() |
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In article >,
Steve Wertz > wrote: > On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 12:27:57 GMT, James Silverton wrote: > > > I've only tried tripe once or twice, mainly in Chinese > > restaurants. IMHO, it's just not worth the trouble. The flavor > > isn't much and it takes a lot of chewing. Given the time it > > takes, it might be a good way to deceive yourself that you've > > had a lot of food :-) > > If it took a lot of chewing then it hasn't been cooked long > enough before the final dish. Tripe always requires long > simmering - usually before adding to the final dish for the final > cook. > > -sw Cheat. Pressure cook it. -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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> wrote:
> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see it > served at any restaurant. "Ethnic" tripe dishes, not specifically American ones, I'd say. Americans can be of any ethnicity, of course, or can be just interested in the dishes. Menudo (spicy Mexican tripe soup) comes to mind at once (only the southern Mexican rendition, as it omits the inedible hominy), as well as such Italian dishes as trippa alla fiorentina (or alla romana, alla genovese etc.), the Ligurian sbira or the Lombardian büsêca (variously spelt and traditionally made with three kinds of tripe), the French tripes à la mode de Caen or the Lyonais gras double, the Spanish callos a la madrileña, the Greek patsás, the Turkish iskembe çorbasi, the Bulgarian shkembe chorba, the Polish flaki, the German saure Kutteln, the Caribbean/Latin-American mondongo, the Korean gopchang jeongol, various and sundry Chinese, Vietnamese, and Filipino tripe dishes, too numerous to mention by name. Then there is, of course, the venerable English (Lancastrian) tripe and onions. Here is a very good recipe for the latter, as well as its extension, gratin of tripe. The recipes are from the great Fergus Henderson's "Nose to Tail Eating". Victor Tripe and Onions To feed four Do not let the tripe word deter you, let its soothing charms win you over and enjoy it as do those who always have! 1 litre milk 3 white onions, peeled and roughly chopped a healthy pinch of mace blades 2 kg white honeycomb tripe (which comes from the second stomach, the reticulum, of the ox), cut into 4 cm x 11 cm strips sea salt and pepper 150 g unsalted butter 200 g plain flour In a pot large enough to fit all the ingredients, place the milk, onions, and mace. Bring to a boil and reduce to simmer for 20 minutes. Then add the tripe and season cautiously with salt and pepper (you can add more later). Bring up to a gentle boil and reduce again to a simmer for a further 45 minutes to 1 hour, checking the tripe's giving qualities with a sharp knife. Be careful, as, if cooked too long, tripe will just melt away. Now, in another pan, melt the butter and add the flour. Cook this, stirring to avoid browning, until it smells biscuity. Continue stirring vigorously (a whisk might be useful here) and add a couple of ladles of the liquor from the tripe pot. Once thoroughly mixed and smooth, return this mixture to the tripe. Stir in thoroughly and simmer for a further 15 minutes to allow the dish to thicken slightly. Adjust seasoning to taste and serve hot, using a slotted spoon, with mashed potatoes. Visually, as well as gastronomically, there is a great serenity to a plate of tripe and onions. Gratin of Tripe To serve four Follow the previous recipe to its conclusion except instead of serving the tripe and onions with mashed potato, decant the tripe and its sauce into 4 ovenproof dishes (I think this is the only time I recommend individual dishes, but this recipe works well this way and everyone loves their own little gratin). Cover with a layer of fine white breadcrumbs made with yesterday's bread, dot with little knobs of butter and place the dishes in a very hot oven until the tripe liquor is bubbling away. If the crust has not browned at this point, stick the dishes under the grill. When the dishes are golden brown they are ready to serve. The eaters will each need a spoon as well as the usual tools, and advise them to stick their napkins in their collars to protect their fronts as, unlike Tripe and Onions, which is given structure by mashed potato, so helping the journey from the plate to the mouth, tripe gratinéed, without this structural aid, is very sloppy. |
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Mark Thorson wrote:
> For some reason, the local restaurants that > offer it usually only offer it on weekends. Where's that, Mark? I wonder if it's regional. I'm in L.A., and I don't *think* I'm used to seeing anything about weekends-only on the menus. -- Blinky RLU 297263 Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://blinkynet.net/comp/uip5.html |
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Blinky the Shark wrote:
> Mark Thorson wrote: > >> For some reason, the local restaurants that >> offer it usually only offer it on weekends. > > Where's that, Mark? I wonder if it's regional. I'm in L.A., and I > don't *think* I'm used to seeing anything about weekends-only on the > menus. Menudo often isn't *on* the menu. You have to ask the server for it (and usually only on weekends because that's when everyone is hung over LOL) |
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jmcquown wrote:
> Blinky the Shark wrote: >> Mark Thorson wrote: >> >>> For some reason, the local restaurants that >>> offer it usually only offer it on weekends. >> >> Where's that, Mark? I wonder if it's regional. I'm in L.A., and I >> don't *think* I'm used to seeing anything about weekends-only on the >> menus. > > Menudo often isn't *on* the menu. You have to ask the server for it (and > usually only on weekends because that's when everyone is hung over LOL) Guess I've only been noticing it when it *is* on the menu... ![]() -- Blinky RLU 297263 Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://blinkynet.net/comp/uip5.html |
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Victor Sack wrote:
> > wrote: > >> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see it >> served at any restaurant. > > "Ethnic" tripe dishes, not specifically American ones, I'd say. > Americans can be of any ethnicity, of course, or can be just interested > in the dishes. Menudo (spicy Mexican tripe soup) comes to mind at once > (only the southern Mexican rendition, as it omits the inedible hominy), > as well as such Italian dishes as trippa alla fiorentina (or alla > romana, alla genovese etc.), the Ligurian sbira or the Lombardian büsêca > (variously spelt and traditionally made with three kinds of tripe), the > French tripes à la mode de Caen or the Lyonais gras double, the Spanish > callos a la madrileña, the Greek patsás, the Turkish iskembe çorbasi, > the Bulgarian shkembe chorba, the Polish flaki, the German saure > Kutteln, the Caribbean/Latin-American mondongo, the Korean gopchang > jeongol, various and sundry Chinese, Vietnamese, and Filipino tripe > dishes, too numerous to mention by name. Then there is, of course, the > venerable English (Lancastrian) tripe and onions. > > Here is a very good recipe for the latter, as well as its extension, > gratin of tripe. The recipes are from the great Fergus Henderson's > "Nose to Tail Eating". > > What happened to the American Pepper Pot? The Austrian Kudlfleck? |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
> On 29 Jul 2007 05:56:29 GMT, Default User wrote: > > > wrote: > > > >> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never > see it >> served at any restaurant. > > > > It's an ingredient in some versions of pepper-pot soup. > > > > I keep meaning to buy some tripe and make up a batch, it's a soup I > > enjoy. > > I'll be making this tomorrow once my hunk 'o tripe thaws, Thanks > for the idea. Yahoo. Brian -- If televison's a babysitter, the Internet is a drunk librarian who won't shut up. -- Dorothy Gambrell (http://catandgirl.com) |
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margaret suran wrote:
> Victor Sack wrote: >> > wrote: >> >>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see >>> it served at any restaurant. >> >> "Ethnic" tripe dishes, not specifically American ones, I'd say. >> Americans can be of any ethnicity, of course, or can be just >> interested in the dishes. Menudo (spicy Mexican tripe soup) comes >> to mind at once (only the southern Mexican rendition, as it omits >> the inedible hominy), as well as such Italian dishes as trippa alla >> fiorentina (or alla romana, alla genovese etc.), the Ligurian sbira >> or the Lombardian büsêca (variously spelt and traditionally made >> with three kinds of tripe), the French tripes à la mode de Caen or >> the Lyonais gras double, the Spanish callos a la madrileña, the >> Greek patsás, the Turkish iskembe çorbasi, the Bulgarian shkembe >> chorba, the Polish flaki, the German saure Kutteln, the >> Caribbean/Latin-American mondongo, the Korean gopchang jeongol, >> various and sundry Chinese, Vietnamese, and Filipino tripe dishes, >> too numerous to mention by name. Then there is, of course, the >> venerable English (Lancastrian) tripe and onions. >> >> Here is a very good recipe for the latter, as well as its extension, >> gratin of tripe. The recipes are from the great Fergus Henderson's >> "Nose to Tail Eating". >> >> > What happened to the American Pepper Pot? The Austrian Kudlfleck? Goodness! I'd forgotten all about Pepper Pot! Thanks for bringing that up! I'll have to make some next weekend! Sorry, I'm not familiar with Kudlfleck... I'll look into it ![]() Jill |
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Steve Wertz wrote:
> On Sat, 28 Jul 2007 23:10:20 -0700, Joseph Littleshoes wrote: > > >>Cut the cooked gras double or ordinary tripe into rectangles, coat with >>made mustard then pass through flour, beaten egg and fine white bread >>crumbs. Deep fry in very hot oil until crisp and golden brown. Serve >>accompanied with sauce vinaigrette or sauce gribiche. > > > I made this after you posted about it a few years ago. It was... > interesting. The mustard was too overpowering for me. > > -sw Its not something i make a lot of, in fact the first time was on a dare, but for mustard, one could substitute any sort of spicy paste, a garlic chilli paste might be good, possibly something with horseradish? Perhaps a more mild commercial mustard like Guldens or grey poupon? -- JL |
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In article >,
"jmcquown" > wrote: > Omelet wrote: > > In article >, > > "jmcquown" > wrote: > > > >> jmcquown wrote: > >>> Omelet wrote: > >>>> In article . com>, > >>>> wrote: > >>>> > >>>>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never > >>>>> see it served at any restaurant. > >>>> > >>>> Google for "Menudo". > >>>> Use beef instead of pigs feet. > >>>> > >>>> It's better. > >>> > >>> What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL > >>> > >>> Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band > >> > >> OOOPS, meant I'm NOT talking some boy band. Gonna have menudo for > >> lunch (the stew with tripe, not the boyz) > > > > <lol> > > > > I will try menudo one day, but I'll substitute fresh corn for the > > hominy. > > You'll lose a lot in the translation if you don't use golden hominy. Just > sayin' ![]() I understand... but I seriously HATE the texture of Hominy!!! Always have. -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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![]() "Steve Wertz" > wrote in message ... > On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 13:45:28 -0700, Mark Thorson wrote: > >> For some reason, the local restaurants that >> offer [menudo] usually only offer it on weekends. > > It's traditionally only eaten on weekends. Not much, if any, > demand for it on weekdays. It is supposed to be a hangover cure. |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, "jmcquown" > > wrote: > >> Omelet wrote: >> > I will try menudo one day, but I'll substitute fresh corn for the >> > hominy. >> >> You'll lose a lot in the translation if you don't use golden hominy. >> Just sayin' ![]() > > I understand... > > but I seriously HATE the texture of Hominy!!! Mmmmmmm......hominy lightly browned up by frying in the meat drippings[1]. Mmmmmmmm. ![]() [1] Or some bacon grease. -- Blinky RLU 297263 Killing all posts from Google Groups The Usenet Improvement Project: http://blinkynet.net/comp/uip5.html |
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On Jul 28, 10:46 pm, The Golfer's Wife <> wrote:
> On Sun, 29 Jul 2007 04:47:05 -0000, wrote: > >I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never see it > >served at any restaurant. > > I cant speak for American restaurants but I have had absoluely > delicious tripe in Spain and France and a number of really good Asian > restaurants. I wonder how they cooked in Asian restaurant. Back home (SE Asia), one way was a salad that's very tasty. I can't remember all th ingredient but know that line juice, was used along with raw (but rinse) onions, fried garlic, roasted yellow lentil powder and probably cilantro,. It's extremely tasty but I am not sure that's becasue the tripe there was extremely fresh. > I like tripe but it is an acquired taste and am the > only person in my family who likes it. I cook it for myself > sometimes and make something else for the others! Do you buy from the regular grocery store or some special place. I am not sure whether I'd still like the version I mentioned but it'd be interesting to try. > > Cheers > > The Golfer's Wife |
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margaret suran > wrote:
> What happened to the American Pepper Pot? The Austrian Kudlfleck? They got eaten. Bubba |
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Victor Sack wrote:
> margaret suran > wrote: > >> What happened to the American Pepper Pot? The Austrian Kudlfleck? > > They got eaten. > > Bubba By you? You Monster! |
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margaret suran > wrote:
> Victor Sack wrote: > > margaret suran > wrote: > > > >> What happened to the American Pepper Pot? The Austrian Kudlfleck? > > > > They got eaten. > > > > Bubba > > By you? You Monster! Red herring, as it is obvious you have eaten them yourself. I remember well you serving us Polish flaki soup, with The Vicious Barb fishing out pieces of tripe out of her plate and putting them in yours when you weren't looking. You ate almost a double portion of tripe without even noticing! Bubba |
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Victor Sack wrote:
> margaret suran > wrote: > >> Victor Sack wrote: >>> margaret suran > wrote: >>> >>>> What happened to the American Pepper Pot? The Austrian Kudlfleck? >>> They got eaten. >>> >>> Bubba >> By you? You Monster! > > Red herring, as it is obvious you have eaten them yourself. I remember > well you serving us Polish flaki soup, with The Vicious Barb fishing out > pieces of tripe out of her plate and putting them in yours when you > weren't looking. You ate almost a double portion of tripe without even > noticing! > > Bubba I simply meant that you are a Monster for eating all the Kudlfleck. ![]() And the Pepperpot. Yes, I remember the Polish Flaki, but the store is long gone and I only went there when the Second Avenue Deli was still open. I was really hungry for some, so I had Tripe for dinner tonight. I got it ready made at Agata & Valentino. It is really good there. Marcel had a Loin Veal Chop. He also had Gazpacho and a piece of Cheese Cake. One before and one after the chop. |
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Omelet wrote:
> In article >, > "jmcquown" > wrote: > >> Omelet wrote: >>> In article >, >>> "jmcquown" > wrote: >>> >>>> jmcquown wrote: >>>>> Omelet wrote: >>>>>> In article >>>>>> . com>, >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> I see them at Grocery stores. How do Americans cook it? I never >>>>>>> see it served at any restaurant. >>>>>> >>>>>> Google for "Menudo". >>>>>> Use beef instead of pigs feet. >>>>>> >>>>>> It's better. >>>>> >>>>> What, now you're correcting the Mexican tradition? LOL >>>>> >>>>> Jill <--loves menudo and I'm talking some boy band >>>> >>>> OOOPS, meant I'm NOT talking some boy band. Gonna have menudo for >>>> lunch (the stew with tripe, not the boyz) >>> >>> <lol> >>> >>> I will try menudo one day, but I'll substitute fresh corn for the >>> hominy. >> >> You'll lose a lot in the translation if you don't use golden hominy. >> Just sayin' ![]() > > I understand... > > but I seriously HATE the texture of Hominy!!! > > Always have. Okay ![]() love those. |
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In article >,
"jmcquown" > wrote: > >> You'll lose a lot in the translation if you don't use golden hominy. > >> Just sayin' ![]() > > > > I understand... > > > > but I seriously HATE the texture of Hominy!!! > > > > Always have. > > Okay ![]() > love those. <lol> Can't stand those either. Same reason. Texture! To each her own... -- Peace, Om Remove _ to validate e-mails. "My mother never saw the irony in calling me a Son of a bitch" -- Jack Nicholson |
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margaret suran > wrote:
> I simply meant that you are a Monster for eating all the Kudlfleck. ![]() > And the Pepperpot. Yes, I remember the Polish Flaki, but the store is > long gone and I only went there when the Second Avenue Deli was still open. That really is a shame. :-( > I was really hungry for some, so I had Tripe for dinner tonight. I got > it ready made at Agata & Valentino. It is really good there. How was it prepared? Have you ever eaten at their new Ristorante? I've seen the menu and it is fairly conventional. No tripe is listed, anyway. :-( > Marcel > had a Loin Veal Chop. He also had Gazpacho and a piece of Cheese Cake. > One before and one after the chop. Well it is better than not to have any cheesecake at all. Bubba |
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