Cathy2 wrote:Rene G wrote:Cathy2 wrote:New ingredient to muse about: Beef Marrow Guts at $1.99 a pound. This is the marrow extracted from the bone.
Are you sure? Marrow gut usually refers to a part of an unweaned calf's stomach. It's an essential ingredient of sonofabitch stew. See Frank X Tolbert's A Bowl of Red for plenty of background on this Texas delicacy.
I left my camera in the car on this occasion. It did not look like a stomach, though it did look like a tube. I then looked at a wikipedia definition:This last item, the "marrow gut", was a key ingredient. Davidson quotes Ramon Adam's 1952 Come An' Get It: The Story of the Old Cowboy Cook, which reports that this is a tube, between two of the calf's stomachs, filled with a substance resembling marrow, deemed edible only while the calf is young and still feeding on milk. This marrow-like substance was included in the stew and, according to Adams, was "what gave the stew such a delicious flavor." Davidson says this "marrow gut" probably was the passage leading to the abomasum as well as the abomasum itself (said to have a "distinctive flavour of rennin-curdled milk").
ReneG, it appears you have made a correct ID. I simply reacted to the name, seeing the tube, then assumed it was extracted bone marrow. Do you have an overwhelming desire to make this charmingly named stew? I think I could arrange it!
Morzello, a Calabrian stew of bovine offal with tomatoes and the region’s famous chili peppers, is the meal that Valentina Raffaelli and Luca Boscardin remember most from their research for their cookbook Scarti d’Italia, or Italian Scraps. It’s eaten as a sandwich in a ring-shaped bread called pitta, the book explains, often “with the fans on to counter the Calabrian summer heat and the intense spiciness of the sauce.” The couple was invited to enjoy the dish with great ceremony by the Antica Congrega Tre Colli, which works to preserve the city of Catanzaro’s traditional cuisine.
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lougord99 wrote:Maybe I am wrong, but it seems to me that H-mart in Niles is presenting more and more of their produce in pre-packaged plastic wrapped packages.
Today, I went to H-mart because I mistakenly thought Fresh Farms did not have head-on shrimp. While I was getting the shrimp, I thought I would pick up a lemongrass stalk. No, only 4 to a package and every package had at least 1 stalk that looked past its prime. This was not isolated, but the standard in the produce section.
ronnie_suburban wrote:lougord99 wrote:Maybe I am wrong, but it seems to me that H-mart in Niles is presenting more and more of their produce in pre-packaged plastic wrapped packages.
Today, I went to H-mart because I mistakenly thought Fresh Farms did not have head-on shrimp. While I was getting the shrimp, I thought I would pick up a lemongrass stalk. No, only 4 to a package and every package had at least 1 stalk that looked past its prime. This was not isolated, but the standard in the produce section.
Yes, yes, yes. The practice seems fairly common there now. I've almost completely stopped buying produce there and I shop there a lot less often. It does seem like they're trying to intentionally hide the poor condition of some of it by shrink wrapping it. And geez, who needs 4 stalks of lemongrass? I buy one stalk at a time at Fresh Farms and for just about everything I make, that's more than enough. Iirc correctly, a 4-pack at H Mart was nearly $8. 1 stalk at Fresh Farms was about $0.99.
I posted it elsewhere but for me, it's just H-Mart now. There's nothing "super" about it.
=R=
jlawrence01 wrote:ronnie_suburban wrote:lougord99 wrote:Maybe I am wrong, but it seems to me that H-mart in Niles is presenting more and more of their produce in pre-packaged plastic wrapped packages.
Today, I went to H-mart because I mistakenly thought Fresh Farms did not have head-on shrimp. While I was getting the shrimp, I thought I would pick up a lemongrass stalk. No, only 4 to a package and every package had at least 1 stalk that looked past its prime. This was not isolated, but the standard in the produce section.
Yes, yes, yes. The practice seems fairly common there now. I've almost completely stopped buying produce there and I shop there a lot less often. It does seem like they're trying to intentionally hide the poor condition of some of it by shrink wrapping it. And geez, who needs 4 stalks of lemongrass? I buy one stalk at a time at Fresh Farms and for just about everything I make, that's more than enough. Iirc correctly, a 4-pack at H Mart was nearly $8. 1 stalk at Fresh Farms was about $0.99.
I posted it elsewhere but for me, it's just H-Mart now. There's nothing "super" about it.
=R=
It is common in most Asian markets in the Western states and for good reasons. Why do I want to buy produce that has been handled by every auntie in the county? Why do I need to wait ten minutes while someone holds a beauty contest to select the best five rambutans out of hundreds?
If I find that I received bad produce, I take it back to the store for a refund.
jlawrence01 wrote:It is common in most Asian markets in the Western states and for good reasons. Why do I want to buy produce that has been handled by every auntie in the county? Why do I need to wait ten minutes while someone holds a beauty contest to select the best five rambutans out of hundreds?
If I find that I received bad produce, I take it back to the store for a refund.
I'll pile on. Thinking about how produce is grown, the slight extra dirt and microbes from customers aren't going to make much difference. The extra packaging adds cost, ultimately adding to price, and adds plastic to the dump. And that picker you're waiting for is doing you a favor: 95 rejected rambutans you don't need to look at. It's worse with packaged produce, looking for a package where every piece is good.jlawrence01 wrote:Why do I want to buy produce that has been handled by every auntie in the county? Why do I need to wait ten minutes while someone holds a beauty contest to select the best five rambutans out of hundreds?
tjr wrote:I'll pile on. Thinking about how produce is grown, the slight extra dirt and microbes from customers aren't going to make much difference. The extra packaging adds cost, ultimately adding to price, and adds plastic to the dump. And that picker you're waiting for is doing you a favor: 95 rejected rambutans you don't need to look at. It's worse with packaged produce, looking for a package where every piece is good.jlawrence01 wrote:Why do I want to buy produce that has been handled by every auntie in the county? Why do I need to wait ten minutes while someone holds a beauty contest to select the best five rambutans out of hundreds?
lougord99 wrote:Where do you buy your galangal ?
lougord99 wrote:It has a very different flavor than ginger and most advice that I see says that they cannot be used interchangeably.
The only dish that I use galangal for is Tom Yum Goong soup, which I make fairly regularly. I have always bought it at H-Mart and been disappointed. I will try Talard next time.
I'm pretty certain at least one of the two Fresh Farms in Niles carries it, because I've definitely seen it. Knowing my luck on the minor differences between the two, I'd go to the wrong one first when looking. I'll confirm the next time I go to each.cilantro wrote:Ideally, Talard. But in a pinch, you do sometimes luck out and find relatively fresh pieces at H Mart. Not too many other options that I’m aware of….lougord99 wrote:Where do you buy your galangal?