doublejj
Well-Known Member
Maybe for dinner......Scrambled egg and bacon.
Maybe for dinner......Scrambled egg and bacon.
I had 2 bagels and 2 hotdogs for breakfast
Two scrambled eggs and about 4 oz of salmon sashimi, plus a big glass of the Keemun-y tea my dad sent me. :yum:Linguini and pesto here
That is disturbingly hawt
So would you "eat that"? Can I watch?That is disturbingly hawt
If that is a Kockwurst, (inappropriate remark about what Germans did to Jews)So would you "eat that"? Can I watch?
Probably be pretty boring now that I think about it... I mean you are a bear and all. Probably just throw the whole thing in your mouth and swallow... maybe interesting after all.
SH420
Hot paprika sounds great for a smoking rub.I found some hot style and used it plus some regular paprika in my dry rub I use for smoking. I put some cayenne in it also so I didn't notice any added heat, but the flavor is good.
As soon as I find a suitable slab, I'll make some and post pics.Better than most. Not as salty. This was just my first try at making bacon but I'll be making more in the future.
I bought some pork shoulder at Smart Food Service. They came two shoulders to a pack. I used one to make pulled pork and I ground one to make sausage. This was the fat cap that has some meat in it. It's much cheaper than pork belly. But after it's cured, smoked, and cooked I couldn't tell the difference. That Hungarian Paprika Bacon sounds really good. My grandmother was Hungarian and used to make something similar many decades ago when she was still alive. I might have to give that a try next time. But now that you've brought up Hungarian Bacon I think I'll make cabbage rolls for dinner tonight.
I always use the sweet Hungarian paprika when making things like cabbage rolls "Toltott Kaposzta". You can always add more heat but you can't take it away. I like spicy food but I used some hot Hungarian paprika when making cabbage rolls once and it was way too hot. It was like cayenne and if you're using three or four tablespoons in a recipe it can get pretty heated. That was a sweaty dinner and I didn't bother keeping the leftovers. My lady ate as much as she could before surrendering to the capsicum god.Hot paprika sounds great for a smoking rub.
It's not a good substitute for sweet in Hungarian dishes though.
Accidentally used it once and it was way too hot.
I use it on nachos though or things you want to be hot.
I had a PB&J for dinner last night, because it just sounded good at the time. It was.Maybe for dinner......
Spicy twicey?I always use the sweet Hungarian paprika when making things like cabbage rolls "Toltott Kaposzta". You can always add more eat but you can't take it away. I like spicy food but I used some hot Hungarian paprika when making cabbage rolls once and it was way too hot. It was like cayenne and if you're using three or four tablespoons in a recipe it can get pretty heated. That was a sweaty dinner and I didn't bother keeping the leftovers. My lady ate as much as she could before surrendering to the capsicum god.
Mama would sometimes get trimmed pork fat at the store and render it til the meaty bits turned into brown crunchy flavor bombs. This was Grammelschmalz, a close second to the finest mid-European bread spread - goose fat.As soon as I find a suitable slab, I'll make some and post pics.
I'm hungry for it, but I only make it every 4 or 5 years because it kills you. Probably why all the Ellis Island generation Hungarians mostly died in their 60's.
They all butchered pigs and made wine, ate and drank that stuff through the depression and were mostly all gone by the 1960's.
It's good though. The local doctor would always stop over to get some and say, 'I know it kills you but I have to have a little taste once in a while'
The good old days that I'll never forget. They would kill a pig and catch the blood for the one kind of sausage. You can't even find that stuff anymore.
I miss the roasting bacon you'd heat over a fruit wood fire and drip on rye bread with tomato, peppers and onions on it. We would call it Hungarian pizza as kids.
It may sound gross to eat bacon grease on bread but it was out of this world good. People would come to those summer bacon roasts like it was something special.
Not at all; sez the descendant of they who invented lardo. Buon appetitoAs soon as I find a suitable slab, I'll make some and post pics.
I'm hungry for it, but I only make it every 4 or 5 years because it kills you. Probably why all the Ellis Island generation Hungarians mostly died in their 60's.
They all butchered pigs and made wine, ate and drank that stuff through the depression and were mostly all gone by the 1960's.
It's good though. The local doctor would always stop over to get some and say, 'I know it kills you but I have to have a little taste once in a while'
The good old days that I'll never forget. They would kill a pig and catch the blood for the one kind of sausage. You can't even find that stuff anymore.
I miss the roasting bacon you'd heat over a fruit wood fire and drip on rye bread with tomato, peppers and onions on it. We would call it Hungarian pizza as kids.
It may sound gross to eat bacon grease on bread but it was out of this world good. People would come to those summer bacon roasts like it was something special.
I think it's worse the second time. Plus it can mess with your system leaving you afraid to stray too far from appropriate facilities to relieve yourself.Spicy twicey?
When I was growing up my mother always had a container of bacon grease/pork fat that she used to cook with. She saved it all just like her mother did before her. We didn't have no PAM spray it was pork fat and it was good. I still cook eggs in bacon fat. There was always a chunk of salt pork in the refrigerator as well.Mama would sometimes get trimmed pork fat at the store and render it til the meaty bits turned into brown crunchy flavor bombs. This was Grammelschmalz, a close second to the finest mid-European bread spread - goose fat.
I never waste bacon fat. It is our preciousss.I think it's worse the second time. Plus it can mess with your system leaving you afraid to stray too far from appropriate facilities to relieve yourself.
When I was growing up my mother always had a container of bacon grease/pork fat that she used to cook with. She saved it all just like her mother did before her. We didn't have no PAM spray it was pork fat and it was good. I still cook eggs in bacon fat. There was always a chunk of salt pork in the refrigerator as well.
Sounds a lot like a southern favorite. Fatback.Mama would sometimes get trimmed pork fat at the store and render it til the meaty bits turned into brown crunchy flavor bombs. This was Grammelschmalz, a close second to the finest mid-European bread spread - goose fat.
ChicharronesSounds a lot like a southern favorite. Fatback.
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This was a regular at my dads breakfast table. I did not like the crunchy part.