Harp
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 8,508
- Location
- Chicago, IL US
Not too long ago, domestic animals have been valuable, not ordinary protein sources here and so the waste has been kept least possible so brain, blood and offal dishes are quite widespread specialties at this end.
In Württemberg it’s brain soup for example, brain sausages in the northern half, blood soups, blood grits with buckwheat and blood sausages... all over the country.
Here in the west you still often get cured tongue as cold cuts at the butcher´s and in Bavaria still ground lungs, udders in a whole...
And I would estimate monkeys to be just very common domestic animals in Asia...
In Frankfurt am Main its Kentucky Fried Chicken; Trysa, cheeseburger and fries; Munich, ham and eggs.
I once asked for a particular waitress-to serve my meal-because she was so lovely.
The proprietor boss shook his head afterward, muttering Amerikaner.
When it came to soup, my maternal grandmother was old school Irish. I recall ox tails, pig feet, neck bones
and such tossed splash into large bubbling pots. I occasionally buy neck bones if the price is right.
The mom and pop grocer in the hood closed and the larger supermarket chain a mile distant charges
double for the same pack. I typically toss the bones in with a pork roast, then knife the meat out.
But overpriced neck bone hardly seems worth the effort. I like your suggest for pig feet with pea soup.
My plebeian palate is simple, basic ingredients, but I am open to some culinary experimentation.