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Crunchy on the outside with the batter, but testicle texture was used as the model for chicken nuggets.
The tundra oysters I made this fall tasted more or less like chicken nuggets.
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Crunchy on the outside with the batter, but testicle texture was used as the model for chicken nuggets.
They're priceless to the buck!Under a buck?
That’s cheap
Richard, there are likely only one in a dozen of us who know what a pasty is and even fewer who have had the pleasure, so you might have to share your best recipe for that Cornish treasure.Shank, I put in the slow cooker for around 5 hours, then strip the meat with a fork (like you would with pulled pork) mix with bbq sauce and put it in a bap with caramelised onions.
The skirt, I never save it in deer, but the easiest way, separate the eosophagus from the rear of the windpipe, break all the connective tissue into the chest cavity, into the guts, gently release the stomach and start pulling, the feed tube should pull through, empty the guts etc out of the deer and then you can see the undamaged skirt.
I do buy beef skirt, it is fantastic in pasties!
Cheers
Richard
Much the same here ever since hunting and harvesting game went from supplementing the household food larder to being a sport to test man's primal instincts less and less value has been placed on all portions of edible meat on an animal and all too many birders just take the easy part and feed the varmints with the remainder just because it was a bit of trouble. Much more generous bag limits in recent years have added to that trend. I was brought up to believe if you threw away any reasonably edible portion then you weren't paying the animal the respect it deserved.Haven't tried the cured and slow cooked in fat method but its on the shortlist! We cook them in the crockpot or pressure cooker until the meat is fork tender, shred/pull, and use in all kinds of recipes. Most of the hunters around here breast out their geese and toss the legs and thighs in the ditch. Then again they do the same thing with turkey legs, duck legs, pheasant legs.... However of all the legs, the geese are the best combo of hassle free and meat yield.
Can't believe you have been to Mousehole (pronounced Muzzle!) and tasted the best pasties in the world.Richard, there are likely only one in a dozen of us who know what a pasty is and even fewer who have had the pleasure, so you might have to share your best recipe for that Cornish treasure.
Mention a pasty to me and I visualize an image of the harbour at Mousehole.
Yes, and it's worth pointing out that Butte has a heritage of those coming from Ireland and other places in the British Isles. So it's a Montana British import.Can't believe you have been to Mousehole (pronounced Muzzle!) and tasted the best pasties in the world.
I do have a recipe from an award winning pasty maker, but I am sworn to secrecy!
Of course Montana does have their own company, but looking at the recipe for the dough, it is slightly wrong, and it's the technique that is also crucial!
Just to give you some history, they originated in my neighbouring county of Cornwall, England, although if truth be told the Cornish regard themselves as Celts, well some hard liners do, and Celts are Scottish, Irish, Wales, Isle of Man and some other European parts....now get making your pasties!Yes, and it's worth pointing out that Butte has a heritage of those coming from Ireland and other places in the British Isles. So it's a Montana British import.
Thank-you!
Oh, man! Halibut cheeks sautéed in butter. There's a taste treat!Salmon bellies and halibut/ lingcod cheeks.
Most will think they are scallops. That tender and good.Oh, man! Halibut cheeks sautéed in butter. There's a taste treat!
we have always looked at shanks as a pain in the neck. but now they are rapidly becoming some of our favorite meat, my wife has a crock pot shank recipe that is out of this world. the same with the neck meat, done right in the crockpot they are incredible.
Nothing like a good pasty. Trouble for me us finding rutabaga.