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Livermush is composed of pig liver, pig head parts such as snouts and ears, cornmeal and seasonings. [1] [2] [3] It is commonly spiced with pepper and sage. [1]The meat ingredients are all cooked and then ground, after which the cornmeal and seasoning is added. [4]
Hash is considered a stew or gravy. [10] The primary ingredients in hash are pork, offal, onions, and seasonings which are slowly stewed together. [3] [11] Traditionally, hash was made by stewing the ingredients in an iron kettle over a wood fire, a method which is still used by some restaurants and hash houses.
'Hashed Beef, Plain' at The Household Cyclopedia – A recipe for hashed beef from an 1800s cookbook; Scandinavian Hash recipe Archived 2002-05-09 at the Wayback Machine; BBQ Hash Recipe at about.com Archived 2011-07-16 at the Wayback Machine – Recipe for BBQ Hash and Rice; Hash – Chapter full of hash recipes from Mrs. Owens' Cook Book (1903)
This work is as much of an autobiography as it is a cookbook, in that it contains as many personal recollections as it does recipes. The most famous culinary experiment is a concoction called "Hashish Fudge". Made from spices, nuts, fruit, and cannabis, Hashish Fudge quickly became a sensation in its own right. In the recipe, Toklas says it is ...
A 1797 description records that potatoes were "peeled, or rather scraped, raw; chopped, and boiled together with a small quantity of meat cut into very small pieces. The whole of this mixture is then formed into a hash, with pepper, salt, onions, etc., and forms a cheap and nutritive dish". [8]
On the Side: More than 100 Recipes for the Sides, Salads, and Condiments That Make the Meal. Simon & Schuster, 2004. ISBN 0-7432-4917-8. The Junior League of Charleston. Charleston Receipts. Wimmer Brothers, 1950. ISBN 0-9607854-5-0. Lewis, Edna and Peacock, Scott. The Gift of Southern Cooking: Recipes and Revelations from Two Great American ...
John Martin Taylor, also known as Hoppin' John, is an American food writer and culinary historian, known for his writing on the cooking of the American South, and, in particular, the foods of the lowcountry, the coastal plain of South Carolina and Georgia. [1]
Fried grasshoppers, pork liver and beef stomach and intestine soups, coconut balls, stretched squid, stuffed mackerel, wasp larvae, stir-fried stingray, mole crabs, wasabi-, chili-, and tom yum-flavored cashews and cashew apple juice at a cashew factory, red weaver ants, forest lizards, fish stomach sauce, deep-fried fish skin, horseshoe crab ...