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So trivial, yet it really ticks you off.

Harp

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,508
Location
Chicago, IL US
Not if it's cooked right. ;)

Okay, admittedly, my previous post is more opinion/matter of taste than fact. Add to that the fact that I've never been to Texas and, therefore, have never tasted "authentic" Texas barbecue. But I've also never--ever--tasted a barbecue sauce that I preferred over the flavor of properly barbecued beef or chicken. They're always too sweet, or too "smoky", or too something, they're always too much of a mess, and they obscure the flavor of the meat. I much prefer a few light seasonings and/or marinade and the proper amount of time on the grill.

Chicago barbecue:D spare ribs-had em with and without sauce-it all depends upon individual preference I suppose.
Kansas City claims to be top dog but regional pride aside the best is where the heart is.:)
 
Messages
12,005
Location
Southern California
Chicago barbecue:D spare ribs-had em with and without sauce-it all depends upon individual preference I suppose...
I've been to Chicago a number of times but, now that you mention it, the only barbecue I've had there was cooked on a relative's back yard grill. Any recommendations for the next time I'm there? :D
 

Hat and Rehat

Call Me a Cab
Messages
2,444
Location
Denver
Chicago barbecue:D spare ribs-had em with and without sauce-it all depends upon individual preference I suppose.
Kansas City claims to be top dog but regional pride aside the best is where the heart is.:)
In general, I think KC is a little over rated. Arthur Bryant's though is worth waiting in line for.
I have taken up the Carolina custom of infusing it with vinegar.
No complaints so far!

Sent from my LM-X410(FG) using Tapatalk
 

Tiki Tom

My Mail is Forwarded Here
Messages
3,393
Location
Oahu, North Polynesia
Obviously we are not tip-toeing around vegans and vegetarians in this thread. Around here a favorite is whole roasted (or deep fried! :)) ham hock. They call it Schweinhaxe up north, but locally it is called Stelze. Best served with a cold beer, good mustard, and freshly grated horseradish (Kren).

images
 

Harp

I'll Lock Up
Messages
8,508
Location
Chicago, IL US
I've been to Chicago a number of times but, now that you mention it, the only barbecue I've had there was cooked on a relative's back yard grill. Any recommendations for the next time I'm there? :D

Le Colonial, a French-Vietnamese house in the Rush Street district where the grilled salmon is excellent
and shrimp is served with coconut sauce. ;)
 
Messages
10,930
Location
My mother's basement
Obviously we are not tip-toeing around vegans and vegetarians in this thread. Around here a favorite is whole roasted (or deep fried! :)) ham hock. They call it Schweinhaxe up north, but locally it is called Stelze. Best served with a cold beer, good mustard, and freshly grated horseradish (Kren).

images

It’s hard to beat ham hocks and beans, an almost staple item on our working-class dinner table when I was a kid. My version typically includes carrot, onion, and celery.

Most recipes call for discarding the big chunks of fat after cooking, but I say to hell with that, much as my cardiologist might disagree. That’s where the flavor is.
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,775
Location
New Forest
Growing up in post war Britain, we had meat shortages because of rationing. It wasn't until 1954 that rationing was lifted and even then the scarcity of quality meat forced the price up beyond the budget of most working class families.

The most consumed meat on our menu, and probably that of many other families, was rabbit. Mother would stew it with garden grown root vegetables and serve it with suet dumplings. Later as a variety of different meats became available, rabbit was long forgotten, and it didn't help when I learned that they were rodents. Later, I found out that rabbits were no longer classified as rodents but were in fact lagomorphs. It still didn't help, nor did the the myths that went about. Rabbit was often sold chopped up in small cubes ready for stewing, schoolchildren would say that it was chopped up to disguise other animal meat, like cats and dogs. As a ten year old that really tugged at the heart strings.
 

LizzieMaine

Bartender
Messages
33,715
Location
Where The Tourists Meet The Sea
We ate a lot of lobster when I was growing up, and I grew to hate it. Lobster in Maine in the 1960s and 70s was not a coveted luxury food, except to suckers from out of state. For locals it was the food of last resort, something you bummed off some guy you knew who worked as a sternman because you couldn't afford anything else. A lobster supper served with boiled dandelion greens was one step up from raiding garbage cans.

There are still plenty of places today you can get ready-to-cook lobster right off the boat for less per pound than hamburger. And I still hate it.
 
Messages
10,930
Location
My mother's basement
Growing up in post war Britain, we had meat shortages because of rationing. It wasn't until 1954 that rationing was lifted and even then the scarcity of quality meat forced the price up beyond the budget of most working class families.

The most consumed meat on our menu, and probably that of many other families, was rabbit. Mother would stew it with garden grown root vegetables and serve it with suet dumplings. Later as a variety of different meats became available, rabbit was long forgotten, and it didn't help when I learned that they were rodents. Later, I found out that rabbits were no longer classified as rodents but were in fact lagomorphs. It still didn't help, nor did the the myths that went about. Rabbit was often sold chopped up in small cubes ready for stewing, schoolchildren would say that it was chopped up to disguise other animal meat, like cats and dogs. As a ten year old that really tugged at the heart strings.

The way of life you describe is all but extinct now.

Among my modest assortment of paper ephemera (I resist calling it a collection, because that would suggest that I’m a collector, which wouldn’t be the most accurate characterization) are numerous old calendars. The ones made for a rural audience include pages for entering revenue generated by sales of eggs, poultry, other livestock, etc.; breeding charts with expected due dates; expense categories; and so forth.

Farming doesn’t work like that anymore. Dairymen do dairy exclusively, chicken raisers raise chickens exclusively, etc.

My dear old mom married a fellow from a dairy family. He croaked when I was four months old. She was a “town girl,” but she grew up on the outskirts of town, alongside a creek, which provided water for the family’s large vegetable garden. Her dad shot rabbits for the dinner table, and was careful to take only the shots highly likely to reach their targets. Bullets cost money, after all. Hunting and fishing and gardening weren’t hobbies.

They didn’t get indoor plumbing until she was in her teens.
 
Messages
12,005
Location
Southern California
...The most consumed meat on our menu, and probably that of many other families, was rabbit...it didn't help when I learned that they were rodents. Later, I found out that rabbits were no longer classified as rodents but were in fact lagomorphs...
Sounds like a case of splitting hares.

I'm sorry, that bit of word play came to mind and I couldn't resist. :D
 
Last edited:

Edward

Bartender
Messages
25,074
Location
London, UK
My comments weren't a critique, just additional information and discussion. Please don't read too much into it. I too am a fan of old Marantz gear, and old 70s gear in general. As I posted earlier, one of my favorites is my 2230 from 1972. And I agree that sound is in the ear of beholder, and there are far more audiofools than audiophiles.

My favourite audiophile was a guy who workedc with my dad many yearsw ago - long dead now. He used to opine that there was no point spending more than £xx.xx on hifi equipment (the exact amount usually being just about a rung or at most two up from entry-level, audiophile quality gear), "because after that, even if you can measure the difference, the human ear can't hear it -so why bother?" I often think he had a point. It's mind-boggling howm uch you can spend on hifi if you have the mind and the means. I once discussed the difference between vinyl and cd with a guy who'd done all the experiments with that on a pal's expensive system. This system, I kid you not, had a stylus that alone cost four grand....
 

GHT

I'll Lock Up
Messages
9,775
Location
New Forest
Sounds like a case of splitting hares.

I'm sorry, that bit of word play came to mind and I couldn't resist.
There's a lovely fellow that I know who is finding hair loss depressing. He actually looks great when he lets his barber trim what's left close to his head. The evening before the recent festival that we went to, a number of us went to his camper van for drinks and a chit-chat. Admittedly he has cheered up a lot since President Trump's bouffant became the topic of many a political cartoonist, but he still ponders on whether science will find a solution.

I remarked that he could always have a rabbit or two tattooed on his plate might help. Looking at me he waited for the punchline. From a distance they look like hares.
 

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