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2762. Ronski - 3/20/2005 1:13:20 AM

Snowowl,

That train trip is a wonderful gift. We want to do that someday, too.

As for tripe, the most I can take of it is in little, practically unnoticeable bits in "pepper pot" soup.

But I'm not big on organ meats generally, except for their disguised presence in chopped chicken liver, liver dumpling soup (a Czech-German staple), and pates.

2763. Ronski - 3/20/2005 1:51:54 AM

Here's another from our trip, fading sun on the rim of Mt. Temple:

2764. Ronski - 3/20/2005 1:55:38 AM

And another, as sunset neared, of the mountain and frozen lake.

2765. wonkers2 - 3/20/2005 3:30:48 AM

Nice pictures, ronski!

2766. Ronski - 3/20/2005 3:53:20 AM

Thanks.

2767. PelleNilsson - 3/20/2005 7:18:22 PM

Yes, Ronski, ver nice pictures. But you have yet to promulgate on the important subject: anchovy

Snowowl. the cravings hit me too so last night I made a pizza with tomato, olives and anchovy. I woke up thirsty twice.

2768. Ronski - 3/20/2005 9:16:06 PM

Yes.

Anchovies should be used somewhat sparingly in my opinion, but they should be used often.

My partner makes a nice chopped salad, almost finely chopped, with a -- what else -- salad chopper (a hand-held tool). Ingredients are a variety of dark greens, sweet peppers, red onions, carrots (can be grated into it), and anchovies, finished off with garbanzo beans and cubed swiss cheese. Oil and vinegar to taste, but it must contain some good balsamic.

And then, of course, anchovy paste goes nicely mixed in just about every dish short of desert. I put it in almost every red pasta sauce. I must try it in an alfredo type sauce, too, someday.

2769. Ronski - 3/21/2005 12:58:22 AM

Oo - oo, I also meant to say that when fixing swordfish (one of those things we are now instructed to eat very rarely), grill it on one side, then turn over, and as you grill the other side, place a cross of flat anchovies on the surface (or crosses, if large enough). Sprinkle with fresh lemon juice, and serve quickly.

Dee - lish!

2770. Macnas - 3/21/2005 9:07:42 AM

Anchovies, for gods sake people, stop the insanity!

Tripe, I've had it a few times, it's alright if cooked right, but only alright. If its not cooked right, it tastes like eating lumpy pasta thats been steeped in ditch water.

2771. alistairconnor - 3/21/2005 11:10:54 AM

I have eaten andouillette, which is a sort of tripe sausage.

OK, but not something I'd kill for.

I don't eat a lot of meat, but given a choice, I'll choose liver or kidneys over just about anything.

but for many years afterwards Ray would still visit once a week for his tripe.

A moving story, Snow... one imagines the end of that relationship : "I thought he loved me for myself, but no, he loved me for my mother's tripe!"

2772. Neato - 3/21/2005 11:35:23 AM

Liver and kidneys : yum yum pigs bum!

2773. thoughtful - 3/21/2005 2:48:42 PM

thanks for the rockies shots...reminds me of our trip up that way....started in seattle, went up to victoria island then took the train from vancouver to jasper then went to lake louise, banff and ended the trip in calgary. It was wonderful. I find the canadian rockies far more beautiful than say the colorado rockies. Really something.

2774. PelleNilsson - 3/21/2005 4:20:47 PM

We like liver. We usually make it as liver anglais, thinly sliced liver and bacon, first fried and then sautéed in cream with capers added.

I like kidney too, but Christina doesn't because she worked at a dialysis clinic in her youth. So we never have it.

2775. alistairconnor - 3/21/2005 4:42:42 PM

Well. My brother in law's a hepatic surgeon, so I guess my sister doesn't cook liver too often.


He often has to fly to the other end of the country at no notice, remove the liver from a warm cadaver, fly back with the organ in a cool box, transplant it into the receiver...

... then go home for dinner.

2776. robertjayb - 3/21/2005 6:34:27 PM

It is far from fine dining but no less a personage than jexster will attest to the exellence of the liver and onions served at Luby's cafeterias in this part of the U.S. A side of fried okra is recommended.

2777. ronski - 3/21/2005 7:11:44 PM

Two sides of fried okra are even better, served with anything, or by themselves alone.

2778. PelleNilsson - 3/21/2005 7:22:06 PM

What is okra?

2779. ronski - 3/21/2005 7:52:47 PM

Okra is a plant originally from Africa and grown widely in the southern U.S. The seed pods, when still green, are eaten either stewed, usually with tomatoes, or breaded and deep fried.

2780. thoughtful - 3/21/2005 7:55:51 PM

Okra:



2781. robertjayb - 3/21/2005 8:07:48 PM

It is an essential ingredient of gumbo. Speaking of which, we just had second-day gumbo for lunch.

Yum. Burrrp...



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