Originally posted by RivkahChaya
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Merry Christmas, Ho, Ho and er...oh yeah : Ho
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Thanks for that link Robert...god the mention of winkles had my tastebuds going...my mother used to take my brother and I down to Black Rock (now sadly under the marina in Brighton) where we used to go winkling in the rock pools in anticipation of a feast later on...they were beautiful...
So many old dishes have sadly gone...I loved sweetbreads floured and then fried - virtually disappeared in the last twenty years...(I used to have a friendly butcher who stocked them specially for me, but supermarkets have all but killed off the old fashioned butchers and indeed old fashioned butchery); now if someone set up a gourmet restaurant for that sort of dish, I bet they'd make a bomb!
I really don't understand the modern prejudice against offal...liver and bacon's a beautiful dish...similarly steak and kidney...and stuffed heart is to to die for! I do usually draw the line at lights, but even those I'll eat in haggis...I can see I've not so elegantly diverted the thread off-topic so I'll reiterate my earlier Christmas greetings to everyone on casebook!
Every good wish
Dave
PS the other two tubs have now succumbed and I am replete!
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Hi Dave
The main thing is, enjoy your food and who cares if it's fashionable. My favourite is sausages. People sometimes say to me "if you only knew what goes into sausages..." But I don't want to know. I like sausages. I've always liked sausages. And I will continue to eat sausages.
I remember every Christmas Eve my mother or grandmother used to boil up the giblets. I've no idea why, but it ponged a bit.
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Sorry. I guess it was the combination of "jellied" and "eel." I still haven't worked up the courage to Google it. I'm a vegetarian, so anything meaty doesn't make my top 10, but I'm guessing that if this is something like "a type of fish in aspic," it wouldn't sound so strange.
Of course, I was raised with gefilte fish, and I still think it looks like tumors.
Everyone have good holidays. My husband will be working, probably, and then we'll get Chinese carry-out, because we like it that they're opened.
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Christmas Gruel
The main thing is, enjoy your food and who cares if it's fashionable. My favourite is sausages. People sometimes say to me "if you only knew what goes into sausages..." But I don't want to know. I like sausages. I've always liked sausages. And I will continue to eat sausages.
I remember every Christmas Eve my mother or grandmother used to boil up the giblets. I've no idea why, but it ponged a bit.
As regards sausages you and me both mate...especially seeing as I live so close to O'Hagans...oh god THE Sausage Mecca is down the Witterings...the only other place that ever came near (in my experience anyway) was a little butchers (who's name I sadly can't recall) in Upper Beeding, West Sussex...
Tell me...have you ever tried Hogs Pudding? (aka White pudding) ... a wonderful west country dish...If you like sausages, then fried slices of hogs pudding will genuinely send you frantic with desire for more...
The giblets were generally boiled up with the bones and skin to make either stock or soup...I still do this routinely with any bird, usually to make soup ... my wife (very vocally) disapproves, but I notice she never turns down an offer of a bowl of soup or whatever...
Every good wish
Dave
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Sorry. I guess it was the combination of "jellied" and "eel." I still haven't worked up the courage to Google it. I'm a vegetarian, so anything meaty doesn't make my top 10, but I'm guessing that if this is something like "a type of fish in aspic," it wouldn't sound so strange.
Quite right...and fish in aspic is just about right too...the eels (unboned) are cut into short lengths and boiled in a little water, usually with vinegar and other (sometimes secret) ingredients added...the eels are naturally gelatinous, so as the mixture cools, a jelly forms and sets...
One of my stepdaughters briefly dated a seafood seller...for a while we enjoyed the leftover proceeds of his failures...I can recall once eating a whole bowl full of jellied eels...something like a bucket (or gallon) of same...
Oh glory...(oh greed too - no wonder I now have angina!).
And the prawns...Despite loving them, we tired of them fast...we've always had lots of cats...I'd guess we had about six at the time, but they too actually got sick and tired of eating prawns and started turning them down...cockles and mussels we had aplenty...There are times you wish you could channel your childrens desires...this was one of them...
Happy Christmas somehow doesn't seem appropriate but Shalom Rivkah...
All the very best
Dave
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Hi Dave
No, never had that, but I think I'll steer clear of the garlic anyway.
I wish they still sold Kunzel cakes (also known, I think, as boaters or floaters?) They were gorgeous, but then the buggers found out I liked them and stopped making them.
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Hi Robert
http://www.doyouremember.co.uk/memory.php?memID=4728
Was that your recollection of Kunzel Cakes? I'm afraid my Sussex upbringing didn't include this delicacy. Hogs Pudding...garlic? que? I don't think garlic was a particularly prominent ingredient...Either way don't disregard it mate...if you get the chance go for it!
In our neck of the wood, floaters are the dumpling-like accessories that float on top of certain casseroles...boaters are unknown and bloaters are fish...which do you mean?
Merry Christmas
Dave
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Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostErm no...these are regular eels...jellied...as consumed by generations of Londoners...and delicious too...
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jellied_eels
All the best
Dave
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Hello you all!
These talks remind me of some having with my friends.
I lived in a small farm til I was 19 and found the pig to be the most fun domestic animal. I face many times the following question: "Then, how you could eat the pig?"
Well, it was just a part of life and circulation...
All the best
Jukka"When I know all about everything, I am old. And it's a very, very long way to go!"
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Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostHappy Christmas somehow doesn't seem appropriate but Shalom Rivkah...
All the very best
Dave
FWIW, even after I was management, I always worked Christmas hours for people, I just didn't get extra money for it.
Originally posted by Cogidubnus View PostIn our neck of the wood, floaters are the dumpling-like accessories that float on top of certain casseroles...boaters are unknown and bloaters are fish...which do you mean?
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