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#91 | |
Mama Tried
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Missouri
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True Son of Liberty |
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#92 | |
Mama Tried
Join Date: Dec 2002
Location: Missouri
Casino cash: $9949903
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True Son of Liberty |
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#93 |
Dirty Bit
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Lake of the Woods
Casino cash: $1236002
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My grandma really never ate any weird stuff that I know of. Beets is about the only thing she ate that I can't stand.
However, nothing went wasted from this lady. We would drive up to her house once or twice a month (she lived in Butler, MO) and have lunch/dinner with her. We'd find things in her refrigerator that had formed their own little colony of life. She'd try to use things that had expired 2 or 3 years prior. Her response was to always cut the mold/green crap off and use the rest. I remember several times where all of us would have terrible stomach problems after eating some of her meals that she'd prepared prior to our arrival. I think it's the reason I have an iron gut today. |
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#94 |
Certified Bourbon taster
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Shawnee KS
Casino cash: $6380157
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I've had buckets of beer in Hermann back when they first started their Oktoberfest, but I don't remember Grandpa drinking anything but Stag or Falstaff from the can (opened w/a churchkey).
One thing my grandparents liked, that I like too is sassafrass tea. We had to go dig up sassafrass saplings 'as the sap started to run' which is late winter. They used to tout it as a health tonic, it's the 'root' that flavors root beer. But they've found one ingredient (saffrole?) that can cause cancer so it's no longer touted as a healthy drink. You can buy 'Pappy's' brand of sassafrass extract - which has had the saffrole removed - and use a little of that with boiling water instead of simmering your freshly dug roots for half an hour or so. Dang, now I want a cuppa this stuff. Might have to go drink a root beer instead. Liver and onions was a lot more popular when I was a kid in the country, we ate it probably twice a month. Doctors used to encourage people to eat calves liver as a way to get minerals and iron (in those days you couldn't buy vitamin pills at Walmart, you had to 'eat weird stuff' if you were low on this mineral or missing that vitamin). My Mom would soak calves liver in milk (or buttermilk) for a few hours before she fried it, took a lot of the blood and 'bad taste' out of it IMHO. I won't eat liver and onions just anywhere, but I like it if it's done 'like mama used to make'.
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A man can never own too much red wine, too many books, or too much ammunition. -- R. Kipling |
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#95 | |
MVP
Join Date: Sep 2000
Location: Denver, CO
Casino cash: $10004900
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#96 | |
Supporter
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: In a shotgun shack
Casino cash: $9895202
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Back when I was a kid in Baltimore, you'd see men carrying a gallon jug up to the corner bar after work for a draft beer fill up. Simpler times. |
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#97 |
In Search of a Life
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: Fayetteville, AR
Casino cash: $7150204
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More evidence of the butchering trend:
http://www.salon.com/food/chefs_and_...utcher_parties ![]() THURSDAY, MAR 11, 2010 11:01 EST Meathead fad? The rock star butcher Sexy tattoos! Butchering parties in trendy bars! The latest hip food trend already faces a backlash BY SARA BRESELOR Andrew Lin Ryan Farr at a butcher party "The first butcher party," Ryan Farr says, "was called 'Hop, Hop, Hop, Into the Burning Ring of Fire.' That was on Easter last year, and we did rabbits." Farr is the star of San Francisco's 4505 Meats, "Home of Revival Butchery," and he is taking his gospel to the barroom. He is one of a handful of young practitioners across the country who are staging bacchanalian "butcher parties," where they bring whole carcasses -- from rabbits to steer -- to bars, hang them up, take them apart, and cook them while wide-eyed partiers wash down the resultant meaty snacks with cocktails and beer. The resurgence of artisan butchery is supposed to be about respect for traditional craft, an emphasis on ethical, sustainable meat eating, and a renewed awareness of where our meat really comes from. Do blood-and-booze-soaked butcher parties cheapen these ideals? Farr doesn't think so. "It's very educational," he says. "You get to see the whole animal, it gets processed in front of you, and then you eat it. And at the same time you get to have martinis or beer. It's just a good time all around." But Tom Mylan, one of the butchers at The Meat Hook in Brooklyn, is not so sure. "It's a real double-edged sword," he says. "It's popularizing and getting people interested in butchering, and I think that's of value. On the other hand, it's one of those things that's so inherently flimsy that it's feeding this sort of fashion trend of butchering." And the gory craft is becoming ever more stylish. In a trend piece, The New York Times called both Farr and Mylan part of a cadre of "Rock Star Butchers," and Mylan says "dozens" of television producers have approached him about a reality TV series based in his shop. "It's a fashion trend of the most hollow and irritating sort," Mylan says. "That sort of hyperbole just doesn't make sense to me." Mylan fears that the people going to butcher parties will tire of it the way they tire of all fads, leading to a "butchering backlash" when people start, as he says, "calling bullshit" on the trend. He says, "Hopefully one out of the 50 people getting drunk at a bar, doing the latest thing, will stay with it and remain interested in it. But on the other hand, I think it's going to lead to self-parody." For people taken in by the fashion of meat handling, it will be "the thing they were into in 2010. Like, 'I was really into indie rock, and then I was into artisanal cheese, and then I got into butchering.'" Farr sees butcher parties less as trendy events than attempts to recapture a more traditional mood around eating meat. "[It's] kind of the same thing as slaughtering an animal on the farm and eating it right there," he says. "It doesn't happen as often as it used to." He admits that some patrons miss the point. "There are always going to be people who are just coming to see a show," he says. "They usually are the ones that are getting drunk and pushing people around for chicharrones and hot dogs. But that's anywhere, you know?" He says that the majority of partygoers, though, come with questions about the craft and a desire to learn, and he encourages them to attend his intensive training sessions later. "The classes are for the hands on, face-to-face educational part. The parties are to have fun and to educate people at the same time, but it's not in a scholastic environment," he says. "You know, people are doing shots." But this, according to Mylan, is exactly the problem. "It's kind of sending a message like, animals are like strippers, or animals are like whores." He doesn't consider himself overly pious about butchering -- his upcoming "Date Night Butchering" class at Brooklyn Kitchen, called "Lambs of Love", will feature "libations befitting a Saturday night"-- but he sees the bar parties as crossing a line. "It's not like we don't have fun at our classes, because we do," he says. "We drink beer. It's just not at a bar; it's not this group spectacle thing." Bringing the animals and knives into a bar suggests transgression, a general sense of macho naughtiness that seems to undermine nouveau butchering's emphasis on respect for the animal. Many who trumpet the trend towards artisanal meat production note that some former vegetarians and vegans attend butchering classes, willing to eat meat that they take from the creature themselves. The point for many is having a personal relationship to meat rather than seeing it as a product under glossy plastic wrap. The point is to remember that it was a life. Hanging a steer from the rafters at a bar and cutting it while people slug bourbon and take pictures with their iPhones seems only tenuously connected to this concept. Still, Farr urges doubters to look at the bigger picture. "I think it's disrespecting an animal when it's in a huge plant with ten thousand other animals, just going through a line, getting cut and going into Cryobags and Styrofoam," Farr says. "Packing a thousand pigs into a farmhouse that's supposed to hold 800 animals -- that's disrespectful." He feels passionately that, no matter where he does it, "showcasing a beautiful animal that somebody raised," preparing it well, and using the entire animal is an expression of reverence. "I have the utmost respect for anything that I handle, be it a whole hog or a vegetable that came out of the ground, because I know the farmers and I know the ranchers," Farr says. And to him, the parties fill a gap in the public's relationship with meat -- getting to know their butcher. "Because that's the connection that was lost when the big corporations took over the meat industry," Farr says."There was no connection between the meat and the butcher." Artisan butchery, still limited mostly to communities of food enthusiasts with money to spend on high-quality products, is not in itself a solution to our country's issues with meat, but Farr and Mylan are actively trying to untangle the knots of industrial meat production. They may disagree about details, but both men are remarkably passionate and articulate. They encourage debate and offer meat eaters thoughtful, and crucial, options. "There needs to be something different," Farr says, "because there's a lot of bad meat out there."
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In this world of sin and sorrow there is always something to be thankful for; as for me, I rejoice that I am not a Republican. - H. L. Mencken |
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#98 |
Take a Chill Pill
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: South Carolina
Casino cash: $5990295
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Just had a Mustard and Butter sandwich. Very light butter and light mustrd. The old man wasn't that crazy, it actually tasted good.
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#99 |
Unsparing
Join Date: Aug 2008
Casino cash: $10004900
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Buttermilk.
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1. Merciless, severe. 2. Given freely and generously. 100% refusal to overrate 20 year Head Coaches with ZERO ****ing rings as a Head Coach. CP's Official Professor of 'Dem Blues for 2019/2020! |
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#100 |
Most Valuable Poster
Join Date: Oct 2003
Casino cash: $8993042
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This thread is barftastic
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#101 |
MVP
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: West of the Equator
Casino cash: $-1820099
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My mom was 40 and my dad 41 when I was born. Their parents were older (in that day and age) when they were born, so I only knew my mom's mom. My grandma was 76 when I was born and lived to 94. She ate all kinds of stuff I didn't like from the old country (Sweden). I think it was more nostalgic for her rather than great food. Pickled herring, hardtack, etc.. She never turned down a great burger or steak, though. Heh! It always puzzled me that she woke up at 5 am and ate two pieces of dry toast with black coffee and had nothing else until dinner.
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#102 |
Valiant 'The Thread Killer'
Join Date: Jun 2001
Location: Kansas City
Casino cash: $4522380
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Did he grow up in the great depression?? Most had to be creative with their meals and have big gardens to survive during the depression and WWII..
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#103 |
Take a Chill Pill
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: South Carolina
Casino cash: $5990295
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#104 |
Banned
Join Date: Mar 2009
Casino cash: $10004900
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The so called civilized world is full of pussies
we turn up our noses at stuff people had to eat or starve but being pansy puts alot of people to work |
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#105 |
C.H.I.E.F.S
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: **** your face
Casino cash: $10005055
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My grand mother would only drink goat milk.I wouldn't try it for years and after I did,I was very sorry it took me so long to try it.very good IMO,but I haven't had any in years.
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