Monday, February 28, 2011

Button Soup Pork Dinner

a-pol-o-gy
noun,
plural
-gies

1. a written or spoken expression of one's regret, remorse, or sorrow for having insulted, failed, injured, or wronged another
2. a defense or justification in speech or writing, as for a cause or doctrine


Button Soup Pork Dinner

The Button Soup Supper Club's February dinner was based around the least desirable cuts from two hogs, namely:
  • two heads,
  • two tails, and
  • four hind trotters.
These cuts contain pounds (pounds!) of good meat and fat that usually end up in the garbage. With a little effort, they made a dinner for six guests, with lots of leftovers.


A Quick Apology, in the second sense of the word.

The cooking that I am taught in school, and the cooking that I practice in restaurants, is a bit, to speak delicately, narrow. It focuses on a few "choice" cuts of meat, like rack of lamb, breast of poultry, and loin of pork and beef: relatively lean, tender cuts that can be cooked to order over dry heat.

I sometimes joke about how strange Albertan cows must look, as they only yield tenderloins, striploins, and cheeks (as opposed to, say, Vietnamese cows, which give us flank, brisket, tripe, tendon, and a myriad of other delicacies.)

I don't mean to suggest that cooking a filet mignon is a cop out: obviously there are subtleties to the preparation, and pleasure in the consumption
of those choice cuts. But cooking the less desirable "variety cuts" is a different experience entirely. You may have to research and experiment with cooking methods, and you'll most likely spend a great deal more time in the preparation. The meat, however, goes through a remarkable transformation, one much more profound and striking then when you sear a tenderloin. In the end you are sometimes rewarded with a new set of tastes and textures.

Some of the following posts are a little weird, but I want to stress that my goal in writing them isn't to shock or disturb. The posts are rooted in curiosity, as well as a reverence for farmers, pigs, and the culinary heritage that informed the meal.


An interesting thing about the heads, tails, and trotters: though they are rarely used, strictly speaking they aren't offal. Offal is any part of the animal that isn't included in the dressed carcass. When you buy a side of pork, the viscera such as the liver, heart, and kidneys have been removed. Those organs and muscles are the offal. The head, tail, and trotters, however, remain on a dressed side of pork. These cuts are therefore extremely easy to get from vendors at the farmers' market, and insanely cheap to boot (trotters are a buck a piece). Anyways, here is the menu from the dinner. Posts on each course will follow shortly.


Bill of Fare


To Begin
: cured bath chaps with apples, peppergrass, and pumpkin seeds

Soup
: lentils in broth with crisp smoked tail

Main : trotters stuffed with potato and morels, braised cabbage, and apple wine

To End : sugar pie, brown beer with raspberry liqueur, and the last of the season’s rumpot

3 comments:

  1. Can't wait to see the fare as it unfolds. Loved this quote:
    I sometimes joke about how strange Albertan cows must look, as they only yield tenderloins, striploins, and cheeks (as opposed to, say, Vietnamese cows, which give us flank, brisket, tripe, tendon, and a myriad of other delicacies.)
    Full of insight!
    Trotters, tails and head...
    Button Soup Head, Tails, Knees and Toes Dinner!

    ReplyDelete
  2. Can you also add tweet this to your posts?

    ReplyDelete
  3. There's probably a way for me to add "Tweet this," but since it's not one of the ready-made widgets on Blogspot, it's probably not going to happen. I didn't even know what a tweet was until a couple weeks ago, so realistically I don't have the know-how to do that. Sorry...

    ReplyDelete