DJH
I'll Lock Up
- Messages
- 6,355
- Location
- Ft Worth, TX
LOVE scrapple. But since i moved from NJ, I cant find it.
Same here. No scrapple sighting since leaving South Jersey/Philly
LOVE scrapple. But since i moved from NJ, I cant find it.
Not just any old corn - grits are made from hominy which has been dried and ground fine. Hominy is corn that has been soaked in a lye solution, then washed to remove the lye. The lye bleaches the corn white and changes the flavor. The grits are boiled up like porridge and served with lots of butter or slathered with gravy. In my book, grits qualifies as one of the foods of the gods. So does that other uniquely American food, scrapple.
I used to use lye to strip ancient coins of millennia of encrustation, down to the protective patina (never bare metal), I had no idea I they did the same thing to maize.
LOVE scrapple. But since i moved from NJ, I cant find it.
Okay, dang it. I have to know.
Is there anything I, as a benighted resident of the American midwest, do, that would approximate what you folks are talking about?
Here's the thing: I open a can of this. Then I drain off the juice (which, if I had a cat, would go into the cat's kibble bow). So.... what *should* I do to those lovely little pinkish strips of smelly yummy fishness? What -- that would be more civilized than just forking it out and into my mouth -- should I do?
I'm so ashamed -- but I don't know any better when it comes to kippers.
Tony
Just stick them on a piece of hot buttered toast, grind over some pepper and make a pot of tea!
Okay, dang it. I have to know.
Is there anything I, as a benighted resident of the American midwest, do, that would approximate what you folks are talking about?
Here's the thing: I open a can of this. Then I drain off the juice (which, if I had a cat, would go into the cat's kibble bow). So.... what *should* I do to those lovely little pinkish strips of smelly yummy fishness? What -- that would be more civilized than just forking it out and into my mouth -- should I do?
I'm so ashamed -- but I don't know any better when it comes to kippers. Tony
Only ever had tinned kippers, but I love the things. I've noticed some folks here mention serving them over buttered toast, which I have yet to try. Any other recommended means of consuming the tasty fish? I've only ever eaten them from the tin, and I suppose I should evolve a little.