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A roasted goose with head and neck A dish of roast goose. The meat, liver and other organs, fat, skin and blood are used culinarily in various cuisines. [1] The meat has a distinctive flavor. [2] Goose eggs are also used culinarily, but unlike chicken eggs are only available seasonally; in the UK goose eggs have a fall-to-early-winter ...
Roast for 15 minutes, then reduce the oven temperature to 350° and roast for 3 1/2 hours, until an instant-read thermometer inserted into the stuffing registers 160° and the thigh registers 165°.
In Guangdong and Hong Kong, roast goose is a variety of siu mei, or roasted meat dishes, within Cantonese cuisine. It is made by roasting geese with seasoning often in a charcoal furnace at high temperature. Roasted geese of high quality have crisp skin with juicy and tender meat. Roast goose are normally served with plum sauce to augment its ...
Potatoes cooked in different ways. The potato is a starchy, tuberous crop.It is the world's fourth-largest food crop, following rice, wheat and corn. [1] The annual diet of an average global citizen in the first decade of the 21st century included about 33 kg (73 lb) of potato. [1]
A type of dripping from Yorkshire, United Kingdom, where it is known as "mucky fat" Dripping, also known usually as pork dripping or beef dripping, is an animal fat produced from the fatty or otherwise unusable parts of cow or pig carcasses. It is similar to lard, tallow and schmaltz.
In Germany, the primary Christmas dishes are roast goose and roast carp, although suckling pig, duck, or venison may also be served. Typical side dishes include roast potatoes and various forms of cabbage such as kale, Brussels sprouts, and red cabbage. In some regions, the Christmas dinner is traditionally served on Christmas Day rather than ...
The potatoes can be cooked around the meat itself, absorbing the juices and fat directly (as in a traditional Cornish under-roast). [6] However, many cooks prefer to cook the potatoes and the Yorkshire pudding in a hotter oven than that used for the joint and so remove the meat beforehand to rest and "settle" in a warm place.
Schmaltz (also spelled schmalz or shmalz) is rendered (clarified) chicken or goose fat.It is an integral part of traditional Ashkenazi Jewish cuisine, where it has been used for centuries in a wide array of dishes, such as chicken soup, latkes, matzah brei, chopped liver, matzah balls, fried chicken, and many others, as a cooking fat, spread, or flavor enhancer.