As a result of starting to read James Joyce's
Ulysses and watching episodes of the
Two Fat Ladies--though, it hardly needs be said, not at the same time--I am intrigued lately by what appears to be a British/Scottish/Irish tradition of eating kidneys for breakfast, specifically sheep or lamb kidneys. (The Two Fat Ladies advise that beef kidneys are too large to be manageable.)
It occurs to me that I've never seen kidneys in a store. But I imagine that Dorfler's in Buffalo Grove--the closest specialty butcher to me, and one that has provided us with some nice lamb on occasion--would be the place to ask for it.
I wonder, are they much like chicken livers? Or much different?
The Two Fat Ladies--Jennifer Paterson, specifically, the dark-haired smoking one--gave a very good demonstration of how to both skin and core (remove that little white paw, as she called it, at the center of) a kidney.
Any suggestions or insights? I'm up for asking Dorfler's for some, just to find out what they're like. I imagine they're meatier than chicken livers but less chewy than gizzards.
Habibi struggled to get past them, but apparently lots of people across the pond consider them great breakfast eats. I'm not that big on breakfast myself, but a breakfast with meat involved appeals to me more than one without, and I do like (dare I say, crave?) a plate of chicken livers, gravy and white rice at times, so I wonder if it would be good to know about what kidneys could contribute.
I have a friend who's a doctor, a retired GP, who gently discourages my consumption of organ meat, and I do feel that iron supplements are inappropriate for most people, but still, I can't help feeling there's something good to be gained from eating some chicken or calf liver once in a while. I don't honestly know if kidneys fall into the same category.
Can someone please tell me: how do they taste?
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