Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Spiedies are local to Binghamton in the central Southern Tier of New York, [1] and somewhat more broadly known and enjoyed throughout Central New York. [citation needed] A spiedie consists of cubes of chicken, pork, lamb, veal, venison, beef, or tofu. The meat is marinated overnight or longer, then grilled on spits over a charcoal pit.
Sloppy joe meat being prepared with Manwich sauce. Early and mid-20th century American cookbooks offer plenty of sloppy joe-type recipes, though they go by different names: Toasted Deviled Hamburgers, [4] Chopped Meat Sandwiches, [5] Spanish Hamburgers, [6] Hamburg a la Creole, [7] Beef Mironton, [8] and Minced Beef Spanish Style.
Arrosticini (rustelle or arrustelle in the local dialects; also known as spiedini or spiducci) is a class of traditional dishes of skewered grilled meat characteristic of Molisana and Abruzzese cuisine. [1] They are typically made from mutton or lamb cut in chunks and pierced by a skewer.
About Wikipedia; Contact us; Contribute Help; ... Pages in category "American meat dishes" ... Spiedie; Swiss steak
Our spiedies were always of lamb, and were always cooked using spiedie irons--steel skewers.--Mockingbird0 05:24, 21 September 2008 (UTC) Right on Mockingbird0. The reason the skewers were steel was because the steel would transmit the heat into the center of the meat. This was critical for leaner meat such as venison and lamb.
The meat is then minced or chopped and stuffed in "baijimo", a type of flatbread. An authentic baijimo is made from a wheat flour dough with yeast and then baked in a clay oven, but now in many parts of China, baijimo is made in a frying pan, [ 2 ] giving a taste that diverges significantly from the clay oven-baked version.
This page was last edited on 9 September 2020, at 13:46 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
During cooking, the meat is brushed with melted butter or oil, to make it crispy. Gradually, the lamb is brought close to the hot embers, so that the flesh takes on an amber color. The cooking time varies according to the weight of the animal, typically about a quarter of an hour per kilogram.