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New Hog Hides - yet another simple project that got out of hand.
You see, I had this Thai hog hide salad recipe that needed to be updated.

http://www.clovegard...sgm_pigskin1.html

Well, as long as I was updating that one, why not update the other one too?

http://www.clovegard...sgm_pigskin2.html

But that reminded me that I had this really great recipe for Chicharrónes in Tomatillo Sauce that needed updating even worse - so lets do that one too.

http://www.clovegard...xmm_pigrind1.html

So as long as I'm doing all that, how about learning how to make my own Chicharrónes - and write that up too?

http://www.clovegard...xam_chicher1.html

And so long as we have all this - hadn't we better have a supporting data page on pig skins?

http://www.clovegard...red/ap_skinz.html

Oh yes - and lets review that tomatillo sauce too . . . .

More to come.

New re: "salt being the main health complaint"
Have you written about salt before? I don't mean about the varieties, I mean the legitimacy (or lack thereof) of the health concerns.
--

Drew
New At this time I have not done enough study . . .
. . to write about salt and cardiovascular health with confidence - particularly since recent studies indicate it's a lot more complex than was previously thought, and much more variable by individual.

I will probably do that study in conjunction with a page on types of salt in the fairly near future. I have been gathering a few samples for that page.

In my collection are some cheap cardboard boxes of salt from Russia (the one color printing ink (green) isn't even waterproof). I tell people it was mined in Siberia by exiled intellectuals using primitive hand tools (I'm pretty sure it is from a salt mine, not the ocean, but I'm not sure if intellectuals are actually involved).

One thing I do know about salt though, is that all salt isn't the same, as some food commentators maintain. It's mostly sodium chloride, but for natural salt pickling it is very important to use sea salt and only sea salt. Some of the minor salts in seawater are very important to the process and these are refined out of table salt.

Sea salt costs a lot in gourmet packaging, but can be had cheaply in bulk plastic bags from Korean markets - and if there's anyone who knows something about natural salt pickling it's the Koreans.

As for Iodine in salt, I need to do more study on that point too. Many shun it, but it turns out Iodine is very important for aspects of health other than the well known thyroid problems - and it is in critically short supply in many regions.

I've done a very quick taste comparison between iodized and non-iodized and didn't notice any difference, but I'll be doing that more carefully soon. I'm wondering if some people's claims about the taste of iodine in salt are psychosomatic or real.



New Our bodies need a lot of trace elements.
Iodine, Magnesium, Phospor, Sulphur, Copper ... the list is lengthy.

Wade.

Q:Is it proper to eat cheeseburgers with your fingers?
A:No, the fingers should be eaten separately.
New Can I, once again, point out ...
I am so jealous of the markets you have access to.

And by the way, when are you going to start freaking selling something on your site? It's not "done", but it never will be. It's time to pull the trigger.
--

Drew
New I have no idea what markets I have access to.
This city covers more than 1500 square miles (in LA and Orange Counties). Much of it is commercial and encompasses large enclaves of just about every ethnic group you could think of - with more on the way.

It would take half a lifetime to adequately survey the markets in this city, and by then you'd have to start over because so many would have changed.

I visit a few markets that serve me very well, and add a new one now and then for special items or ethnic cuisines.
New Send me the packets
Don't label them.

I hate iodine salt. Or so I thought. Do a doubleblind study and find out.
New I take tincture of iodine in water every now and again
New When do your projects *not* get out-of-hand? :-)
But a salt page would be interesting.

FWIW, I'm just concluding an interesting experiment. I've shunned "low-fat" foods and avoided vegetable oils, particularly canola. That means real butter and full-cream milk in the fridge, peanut oil to fry in when butter won't do and even cream on my breakfast from time-to-time. It also means salt in the water when cooking and lowering sugar as much as I reasonably can.

Been doing this for about 8 weeks, now. Had a cholesterol test last week (one of those hand-held machines that takes a drop of blood). It came up "Lo". :-) And I'm fairly sure I'm not gaining weight, either. Got a full blood test on the way, though, when I can get to a pathology lab.

Wade.

Q:Is it proper to eat cheeseburgers with your fingers?
A:No, the fingers should be eaten separately.
New It was pretty amusing . . .
I lived on mostly pork rinds for a week, in all the different forms - and lost weight.

Mexican lad:   "How much chicharrónes?"
Me:   "3/4 pound."
Mexican lad (noticing I was a white guy):   "You know they weigh almost nothing - that's quite a lot".
Me:   "Yes I know, I bought that much here two days ago".
Mexican Lad:   "Let me get a bigger bag."

New pig skin page - prepared in in numerous
New Thanks, fixed.
New huh, around here slightly different
fresh pork skins fat removed. Cut about the size of a thumbnail. Toss in vat of boiling oil (400 degrees) shit explodes remove from oil. All of the local flea markets make these fresh.

I remember static wasnt too fond of them, maybe it was because they were the Tom's Louisiana hot sauce brand.
New I don't remember those.
I remember refusing the whale snacks. But the hot sauce would have put me off, yes. :-)

Wade.

Q:Is it proper to eat cheeseburgers with your fingers?
A:No, the fingers should be eaten separately.
New no you took a bite of those, then wished you didnt :-)
New Yup, that's the problem with doing them that way.
They explode, splashing oil everywhere - a big clean-up mess on the stove (and the floors if you didn't spread newspapers).

Doing them the way my recipe says, there is no explosion and no splatter whatever - they just quietly puff up, nice and light and fluffy - no mess, almost no clean-up.

Of course it's even easier if you have a dehydrator and don't have to use the oven to dry them.
     Hog Hides - yet another simple project that got out of hand. - (Andrew Grygus) - (15)
         re: "salt being the main health complaint" - (drook) - (6)
             At this time I have not done enough study . . . - (Andrew Grygus) - (5)
                 Our bodies need a lot of trace elements. - (static)
                 Can I, once again, point out ... - (drook) - (1)
                     I have no idea what markets I have access to. - (Andrew Grygus)
                 Send me the packets - (crazy)
                 I take tincture of iodine in water every now and again -NT - (boxley)
         When do your projects *not* get out-of-hand? :-) - (static) - (1)
             It was pretty amusing . . . - (Andrew Grygus)
         pig skin page - prepared in in numerous -NT - (SpiceWare) - (1)
             Thanks, fixed. -NT - (Andrew Grygus)
         huh, around here slightly different - (boxley) - (3)
             I don't remember those. - (static) - (1)
                 no you took a bite of those, then wished you didnt :-) -NT - (boxley)
             Yup, that's the problem with doing them that way. - (Andrew Grygus)

Gerbils! Gerbils and Peruvian Flake!
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