boudreaulicious wrote:I would suggest purchasing a long, long extension cord and moving that crock pot to the furthest spot on your property that you can. Then pray for neighbors with a strong sense of humor or no sense of smell.
pairs4life wrote:
Bro. David, you, or someone, is doing way, way, more than rinsing those chitterlings prior to serving them at the picnic.
seebee wrote:pairs4life wrote:
Bro. David, you, or someone, is doing way, way, more than rinsing those chitterlings prior to serving them at the picnic.
That's a banner quote right there.
For your recipe, Mr. Hammond, we always had some whole peppercorns for the cook, and if I had to guess, chicken stock seemed to be part of the liquid. Never a heavy chicken flavor in the liquid, and never too salty. Maybe like half water, half stock. Ours always had some more savory flavors going on than vinegar, and red pepper. If you wanna get the basic, unfiltered, unadulterated, pork ass flavor though, your recipe is prolly good.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
I would also look at youtube to watch others process their chitterlings. Whenever I am doing something new, I check out demos there. I learned from their mistakes sometimes, too.
Regards,
David Hammond wrote:I did watch one with Chris Koetke from Kendall. In that video, they added BBQ sauce, which I think might be a good idea.
seebee wrote:David Hammond wrote:I did watch one with Chris Koetke from Kendall. In that video, they added BBQ sauce, which I think might be a good idea.
No disrespect, but I'm guessing Chris K from Kendall is not African American. BBQ sauce sounds so, so wrong. However, that got me thinking. Cooked chitlins, then charred on a grill, with some BBQ sauce glazed on might be interesting.
boudreaulicious wrote:I truly wish I could have been there to witness every step of this process. Priceless. All but the broken rib part which I'm sorry interfered with what must have been a very interesting experience
seebee wrote:David Hammond wrote:I did watch one with Chris Koetke from Kendall. In that video, they added BBQ sauce, which I think might be a good idea.
No disrespect, but I'm guessing Chris K from Kendall is not African American. BBQ sauce sounds so, so wrong. However, that got me thinking. Cooked chitlins, then charred on a grill, with some BBQ sauce glazed on might be interesting.
Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
I'm not Chinese, though I cook it rather well.
If you had both watched the video, Dwight Evan's of Moo & Oink is a brother. The source is reliable to your thinking.
Regards,
pairs4life wrote:Unfortunately, I won't be able to taste them to know.
zoid wrote:Well now when your wife comes home and says "This coffee tastes like shit" you'll know why.
David Hammond wrote:zoid wrote:Well now when your wife comes home and says "This coffee tastes like shit" you'll know why.
The coffee is always pretty bad when I commandeer the coffee maker.
This was really strong coffee, and to the last drop, I could still taste pig guts.
pairs4life wrote:Cathy2 wrote:Hi,
I'm not Chinese, though I cook it rather well.
If you had both watched the video, Dwight Evan's of Moo & Oink is a brother. The source is reliable to your thinking.
Regards,
Girl, "every brother, ain't a brother"and BBQ on chitlins sounds gross. Unfortunately, I won't be able to taste them to know.
seebee wrote:The issue for me would be the texture. Chitlin texture doesn't seem like it would go well with bq sauce. It just sounds so, so, wrong. Plus, the sauce sweetness plus the funk from the grays doesn't seem right. As someone on here once said, I want to be able to TASTE my offal. Simple hot sauce is just my way to roll with wrinkles. I don't easily turn my nose up at food / flavor combinations, either.
David Hammond wrote:seebee wrote:The issue for me would be the texture. Chitlin texture doesn't seem like it would go well with bq sauce. It just sounds so, so, wrong. Plus, the sauce sweetness plus the funk from the grays doesn't seem right. As someone on here once said, I want to be able to TASTE my offal. Simple hot sauce is just my way to roll with wrinkles. I don't easily turn my nose up at food / flavor combinations, either.
Sweetness plus funk doesn't sound good, I'd agree, but isn't the TASTE somewhat covered by the hot sauce?
David Hammond wrote:seebee wrote:The issue for me would be the texture. Chitlin texture doesn't seem like it would go well with bq sauce. It just sounds so, so, wrong. Plus, the sauce sweetness plus the funk from the grays doesn't seem right. As someone on here once said, I want to be able to TASTE my offal. Simple hot sauce is just my way to roll with wrinkles. I don't easily turn my nose up at food / flavor combinations, either.
Sweetness plus funk doesn't sound good, I'd agree, but isn't the TASTE somewhat covered by the hot sauce?
Binko wrote:Out of curiosity, what is it you didn't like about currywurst? It's basically just a smoked sausage served with curry ketchup and a bit of generic curry powder. I find it interesting to lump that in with stinky tofu and chitterlings.
Binko wrote:when I saw "currywurst," I was actually assuming that it was going to be a sausage spiced with curry-type flavors on the inside, not basically a knockwurst in curry-flavored ketchup.
David Hammond wrote:Binko wrote:when I saw "currywurst," I was actually assuming that it was going to be a sausage spiced with curry-type flavors on the inside, not basically a knockwurst in curry-flavored ketchup.
And a "sausage with curry-type flavors on the inside" is the way it's presented at Paulina market and elsewhere in Chicago.