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| General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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"Food Snob" schreef in bericht ups.com... I have searched, but to no avail. Not that I want to prepare or it it. I'm just curious. --Bryan If you can read German, here's one (braising): http://www.viceland.com/germany/v1n7/htdocs/braised.php Seems to be a German version of this: http://www.viceland.com/int/v13n3/ht...php?country=au Which didn't come up through Google, but did through Yahoo. I've seen it spelled Boshintang, too.And maybe searching for "dog stew" would work |
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Jke wrote:
"Food Snob" schreef in bericht ups.com... I have searched, but to no avail. Not that I want to prepare or it it. I'm just curious. --Bryan If you can read German, here's one (braising): http://www.viceland.com/germany/v1n7/htdocs/braised.php Translated: http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.viceland.com%2Fgerman y%2Fv1n7%2Fhtdocs%2Fbraised.php&langpair=de%7Cen&h l=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&prev=%2Flanguage_tools "2 Pound dog meat ... the pieces of the front like also the hind legs are wonderful" You learn something new every day. -- Reg |
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Reg wrote: Jke wrote: "Food Snob" schreef in bericht ups.com... I have searched, but to no avail. Not that I want to prepare or it it. I'm just curious. --Bryan If you can read German, here's one (braising): http://www.viceland.com/germany/v1n7/htdocs/braised.php Translated: http://translate.google.com/translate?u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.viceland.com%2Fgerman y%2Fv1n7%2Fhtdocs%2Fbraised.php&langpair=de%7Cen&h l=en&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8&prev=%2Flanguage_tools "2 Pound dog meat ... the pieces of the front like also the hind legs are wonderful" You learn something new every day. Did you read all the comments below the recipe? One said, " WHY THE **** WOULD YOU WANT TO CAUSE MAN'S BEST FRIEND PAIN WHEN THERE ARE PERFECTLY GOOD COWS WHO ARE ALREADY DEAD DOWN AT THE SUPER MARKET. " -- Reg --Bryan |
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Food Snob wrote:
I have searched, but to no avail. Not that I want to prepare or it it. I'm just curious. I posted one some months ago. Here it is: Boshintang, the famous Korean dog meat soup. The recipe, complete with an introduction, is from http://www.angelfire.com/id/croon/korea/. Victor Dog Soup is called, Gaejang, Gajangkuk, or Gujang, Gujangaeng, Guyoukgeng. It has been called Bosintang from the later part of 1940, but during the period of the 1988 Olympic games, it was banned to use the name of Bosintang, so its name was replaced by Youngyangtang, Sacheoltang, Mungmungtang. But nowadays, the name of Bosintang is widely used instead of Youngyangtang. Bosintang is made by boiling dog meat with thin soy paste, tearing it into pieces, putting ingredients such as green onion, leek, stalk of taro, brake into broth, and boiling it again to make Bosintang. In Kyungsang province, to get rid of the smell, perilla purple are put in the soup. Perilla are also used for ridding the smell. Taste of perilla is similar to that of dog, and it becomes a good match to dog meat. Side dishes of dog meat are Kimchi, fresh peppers, and cucumbers. Adding a glass of Soju(liquor) enhances the taste. The standard amount of ingredients for one portion: (1) Ingredients 100g of boiled dog meat 500g of gravy 20g of green onion 10g of a leek 10g of perilla leaves 100g of taro stalk soaked in water. (2) Sauce 8g of salt 2g of mashed garlic 3g of perilla 2g of red pepper 2g of mashed ginger a little amount of pepper. (3) Cooking instruction After boiling the meat with gravy and stalk of taro for some time, boil again after putting vegetables and other ingredients into it. Before eating, sprinkle pepper on it and put into an earthen bowl. The stalk of taro is to be kept in cold water one or two days to get rid of its smell and taste. |
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