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Oh, come on Mick,
don't knock it until you've tried it!
I also read about it in this mornings paper, and looking to buy some just to try it, it sounds interesting, something that one needs to experience.
Neill
Prevention is better than cure, - do it right the first time!
The more I learn, the more I realise how little I know
Oh, come on Mick,
don't knock it until you've tried it!
I have tried Vegemite - I don't think the taste could be hidden in any food. I think you guy's down under rave about it just to get us on the other side of the globe to try it
Gudday Mick
I read he reviews and one stuck in my mind, it basically said it was much like salted caramel and for that reason I'd give it a go even though I don't like Vegemite.
As for Balut, no way I can even talk myself into having another one. I've been in Philippines and eaten one and they come up easier than they go down. Very embarrassing
Regards Dave
Measure twice
Cut once
Fit in position with largest hammer
Gudday Mick
I've been in Philippines and eaten one and they come up easier than they go down. Very embarrassing
Regards Dave
You ate one? You are a deadset legend.
The tucker at the feast of Santo Nino was brilliant today. No Balut, thank goodness.
Considering there was nearly the entire Filipino population of South Australia there, there wouldn't have been enough duck eggs in the state anyway.
The other thing that was missing this year was the cooked pig's blood.
Last year, I passed it by because I thought it was cooked squid ink, and I didn't think to ask anyone what it really was. I later found out it was the blood from the BBQ'd pig, and I wished I'd tried it. Maybe next year.
I gotta ask my mate's wife about the rice. It was some long grained type I've never had before.
Gudday Mick
I'm a Scott by heritage so black pud which is basically pig blood soaked into barley and made into a sausage. The family don't like it but what tha. Me and my bro get together ... Fried with eggs .. Our wife's hate us.you will not get a kiss for days!
I've travelled in S/E Asia for years. They say the Chinese will eat anything with four legs ... Except the table and the chairs.
The rest of S/E Asia don't count legs. If it swings through the forest, crawls or slithers on the forest floor, its food.
And you think you would not eat the little dried shrimp and little fish in the S/E Asia markets .... Think again. It ill come up with the street food .
With philipino food just eat ... And ask later ...as you probably have found out , it is made with sharing in mind. Things like Balut are well just like feeding Vegemite to foreigners !
I still remember that Balut to this very day... I've never been so embarrassed , I hope it was the Sam mig.
Regards dave
Measure twice
Cut once
Fit in position with largest hammer
Blah...I'll leave that grossness on the shelf with durian.
Gudday
Well you are well travelled. You know about the the durian ? Have you really tried one? The king of fruits they call them. They are the Stilton, the blue vein, of the fruit world. I would have thought you would have appreciated them.
Allthough the MRT the Mass rail transport in singapore has banned them for many years....not everyone likes the odour
Regards dave
Measure twice
Cut once
Fit in position with largest hammer
My family emigrated from Prussia, a province (state?) called Silesia.
(I don't bother to explain to visitors that not all white Aussies are convict stock. Sorta looks like you are sensitive about it, the old "methinks he doth protest too much", so I give it a miss.)
Silesia got given to Poland in the carve-up after WWII, but it was pretty much a German state until then.
So I'm no stranger to blutwurst.
We never made it ourselves, we settled for making ham, bacon and mettwurst. I wouldn't know where to lay my hands on some decent blutwurst now, but I recommend the butcher at Moonta if you want white pudding. Delightful.
Speaking of wurst, I wrote an email to Kalleskes the other day.
Had a grizzle about how their wurst is starting to be just like everyone else's and how I reckon the vacuum packing is interfering with the way it matures.
They said that they vacuum pack it because the supermarkets require it. BUT, if I want it straight out of the smoker, just turn up early Wednesday mornings at the factory door. How cool is that?
I was delighted. I knew they were the best wurst makers around!
I used to love it when Dad's wurst was so fresh you could just about spread it on your sandwich with a knife.
So the other day I was surfing the net looking for recipes, and be buggered if I didn't find an article on german sausage that said that mettwurst is a spreadable breakfast meat. Reckon one wednesday soon I'll be at the factory door when Kalleskes open the smoker.
Gudday
Well you are well travelled. You know about the the durian ? Have you really tried one? The king of fruits they call them. They are the Stilton, the blue vein, of the fruit world. I would have thought you would have appreciated them.
Allthough the MRT the Mass rail transport in singapore has banned them for many years....not everyone likes the odour
Regards dave
I know about Durian. I have tasted Durian. I will never eat Durian again.
My wife is the real foodie....I just tasted it so I could say I did. We had it on Canal st in NYC ( chinatown)
The durian is also banned from many hotels in Asia. They are certainly an aquired taste and when it comes to pungency they are right up there with the biggest of the blue cheeses. Makes Vegemite seem very tame indeed.
As for the convict stock. South Australia was never a penal settlement and was settled by free men including many religious refugees from Europe. My knowledge of SA history is sketchy but that was a proud boast of some people I spoke to while visiting the fair state. It does have some interesting international food traditions. I will be back to enjoy some more of them. Even bung fritz has its place in the world.
Gudday
Fritz , balony , palony, Devon, I tend to think its the same thing. My boys used to love the stuff. Dad used to cook slices of it on the BBQ for them on a Sunday morning. The outer edges stick to the hot plate and the middle puffs up and the whole thing sets in that sorta hat form. Eggs and "hats"for them was a super food when your under 10.
As for pizza topping... Well.. I don't think I would try it on them. But if I cooked some hats with eggs recon they would eat it!
Regards dave
Ps recon Ill try that on them next time there are home!
Last edited by cobblerdave; 01-26-2014, 04:27 AM.
Reason: Add ps
Measure twice
Cut once
Fit in position with largest hammer
Gudday
Fritz , balony , palony, Devon, I tend to think its the same thing. My boys used to love the stuff. Dad used to cook slices of it on the BBQ for them on a Sunday morning. The outer edges stick to the hot plate and the middle puffs up and the whole thing sets in that sorta hat form. Eggs and "hats"for them was a super food when your under 10.
As for pizza topping... Well.. I don't think I would try it on them. But if I cooked some hats with eggs recon they would eat it!
Regards dave
Ps recon Ill try that on them next time there are home!
Tried 'em all. Similar but not the same.
The big thing, I think, is the "bung" in the bung fritz.
The bung is a certain section of a sheep's gut that is stuffed to make the bung fritz.
You simply cannot beat real skins on any sort of sausage. None of this processed collagen crap.
Best not to think about the filling.
My mate, who clearly doesn't like fritz at all, reckons fritz is made from the bits of the animal that can't be used any other way. i.e. he reckons it's the eyelids, lips and arseholes. No taste, that man.
Yesterday, being Australia Day, a barby was mandatory. The sausages came from a source that shall remain nameless, but involved real skins and beef from a local steer.
Best snags I've had for yonks. To my knowledge, there is now not a single butcher in my home town that uses real skins anymore. Tragic.
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