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Although technically offal, lights are rarely used in English-speaking culinary traditions, with the exception of the Scottish national dish haggis. In Malaysia, slices of beef lights (paru, literally "lung" in Malay) are coated in flour and turmeric powder, deep-fried, and sold in packets at street markets. These are a very popular snack eaten ...
Cow lung is a type of offal used in various cuisines and also as a source for pulmonary surfactants. In Peru it is known as bofe , and in Nigeria as Fùkù . In Indonesia , Paru goreng (fried cow lung) is a popular type of Padang food , and Nasi kuning can be made with cow lung.
Offal is a common relish enjoyed by people of all cultures. Beef and goat offal dishes include the stomach, hooves (trotters), shin, intestines, liver, head, tongue, pancreas, lungs, kidneys, udders, and, very rarely in certain communities, testicles.
Fuqi feipian. Fuqi feipian (Chinese: 夫妻肺片; pinyin: fūqī fèipiàn; lit. 'husband and wife lung pieces') is a popular Sichuan dish, served cold or at room temperature, which is made of thinly sliced beef and beef offal.
Fuqi feipian or 夫妻肺片 — spicy and "numbing" (麻) Chinese cold dish made from various types of beef offal, nowadays mainly thinly sliced tendon, tripe, and sometimes tongue. Gopchang jeongol – a spicy Korean stew or casserole made by boiling beef tripe, vegetables, and seasonings in beef broth. Goto – Filipino gruel with tripe.
Pork intestine with blood cake soup. The broth is boiled from a mix of offal including liver, heart, intestines, kidney, stomach, tongue, lungs, pig blood curd, as well as pork meat slices, strips of salted vegetables, meatballs, minced garlic, pork bones, celtuce, Chinese parsley and a sprinkle of chopped onion leaves and white pepper.
Kokoretsi or kokoreç is a dish of the Balkans and Anatolia (Asia Minor), consisting of lamb or goat intestines wrapped around seasoned offal, including sweetbreads, hearts, lungs, or kidneys, and typically grilled; a variant consists of chopped innards cooked on a griddle. The intestines of suckling lambs are preferred.
In the cuisine of modern Rome quinto quarto (lit. ' fifth quarter ') is the offal of butchered animals. [1] The name makes sense on more than one level: because offal amounts to about a fourth of the weight of the carcass; because the importance of offal in Roman cooking is at least as great as any of the outer quarters, fore and hind; and because in the past slaughterhouse workers were partly ...