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Re: Tongue and other

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,

I'm sure it is true what you say about people from other countries, although I

often think that they are stuck on some really healthy foods while Americans

are stuck on donuts and pop and french fries... But I meant that the group was

mostly open-minded born and raised Americans! (That's not an oxymoron is

it?)

Yes, teenagers that eat liver, tongue and are willing to sit around listening to

a

bunch of goofy middle-aged grown-ups! I agree that tongue doesn't have the

same mouth-feel that liver does-but yes, dense and not fibrous.

What other not -your-everyday American foods do you make or have you

tried?

Kathy

What

> > Just a follow-up report on the beef tongue- I'd say a little over 1/2 of it

was

> > eaten. Even though this is a very open-minded group of people, I think my

> > Russian friend ate most of it. She declared it very good, although she said

I

> > didn't really get the presentation right- something about that it is

supposed

to

> > have cooked vegetables like carrots and be in gelatin (difficult to please

is

> > that one!).

>

> I do recall tongue in aspic being a traditional preparation. It's certainly

not

the only one.

> I've noticed in the past that people from other countries are every bit as

stuck on how they were

> raised eating a particular food as Americans are...they're just hung up about

different things so

> it sometimes looks like they're more open-minded.

>

> > One out of two teenagers that were there tried it and said it had the

> > taste of beef and the texture more like liver. All in all, I still consider

it a

> > success and would make it again.

>

> Has that teen ever had liver? I don't think that tongue has a texture even

remotely like liver.

> It's a very dense, small-grained meat, but it doesn't have any of that grainy

texture that liver

> does. Maybe it was just the non-fibrous texture that reminded them of liver.

I sometimes forget

> that many people have fewer points of comparisons when describing food's

textures and flavors...

>

>

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--- realfoodie2003 <realfoodie2003@...> wrote:

> What other not -your-everyday American foods do you make or have you

> tried?

Gizzard, heart, preserved duck eggs, licorice-flavored sweet & salty dried

olives, chewy seaweed

candy, blood sausage (in many forms), mexican brain tacos, tripe, kidneys, sea

urchin, dried whole

tiny shrimp (they look kind of like slightly larger dried mosquitos), squirrels,

acorn-flour

pancakes, acorn battered frog-legs (speared them myself in a local peat field

with a home-made

spear when I was about 13), dog-tooth violet tubers, wild leeks (aka ramps),

fiddlehead ferns,

cattail pollen-flour (I used it in muffins), stinging nettles, king plantain

leaves, fried

dandelion buds, cooked dandelion root (leaves too, but that's not that

uncommon), lambs-quarters

(another wild green), wild salsify root, wild sunflower root (jerusalem

artichoke), wild burdock

root, whole fish egg-sacs cooked like dumplings in soup, various raw beef things

(tartar,

carpaccio, thai laab, ethiopian kitfo), alligator.

That's all that comes to my mind at the moment, and some of those aren't all

that

strange...depending on where you're from. The only things in that list that I

didn't really like

were the seaweed candy, the dried olives and the preserved duck eggs.

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>

> Gizzard, heart, preserved duck eggs, licorice-flavored sweet &

salty dried olives, chewy seaweed

> candy, blood sausage (in many forms), mexican brain tacos, tripe,

kidneys, sea urchin, dried whole

> tiny shrimp (they look kind of like slightly larger dried

mosquitos), squirrels, acorn-flour

> pancakes, acorn battered frog-legs...

You're quite the epicurean. :o)

~Joe

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