James Behring Knives Miles Swelze
The RANDALL KNIFE FORUMS

A place where EVERYBODY is welcome to join in on the discussion of Randall Made knives


Page 49 of 96 < 1 2 ... 47 48 49 50 51 ... 95 96 >
Topic Options
Rate This Topic
#190797 - 11/15/20 08:43 AM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: Shoot870p]
Wayne Dengler Online
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 08/01/17
Posts: 1645
Loc: Earth
Things cooked in cast iron seem to taste better. At least to me.

Years ago,when camping,I always prepared the meals in a nice cast iron Dutch Oven.

Wayne
_________________________
Top Dog

Top
#190799 - 11/15/20 10:55 AM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: pappy19]
BladesNBarrels Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 09/19/05
Posts: 1419
Loc: East Tincup General Store,Colo...
Originally Posted By: pappy19
... Red wine in my special Red Solo cup. Pretty tasty....

Pap


The ultimate touch!

_________________________
David Loomis
RKS# 724
RKCC# CM-061
Molon Labe

Top
#190800 - 11/16/20 05:36 AM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: BladesNBarrels]
GCTom41 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 01/25/10
Posts: 2370
Loc: NY
Pap,

That is one good looking dinner. Love the Special Red Solo Cup!

Tom Flynn
_________________________
Tom Flynn
NRA Endowment
RKS#5918
RKCC-CM-178
SCI Life Member
DSC Life Member

Top
#190806 - 11/16/20 02:30 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: Shoot870p]
coachblalock Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1874
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
I came in for lunch and Pap's steak & vegs made me hungry.
_________________________
"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.

Top
#190812 - 11/16/20 07:07 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: coachblalock]
pappy19 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 7442
Loc: Garden Valley, Idaho
I pickled an elk tongue for the first time. Boiled it in pickling spices, vinegar, water, sugar, salt, dill seeds, etc. Boiled at a simmer for 2 hours. Refrigerated it with the liquid overnight, then trimmed off the outside of the tongue. Re heated to a simmer for 2 more hours. Refrigerated again, then sliced thin. Wow, absolutely delicious. Firm but tender and quite tasty. Worth the effort for sure.

Pap
_________________________
Mike Allen
RKCC-CM-086
True West Magazine Maniac
Randall Collector
Behring Made Collector
Ruana Collector
Glock Fan
NRA- Life Member since 1975
mikenlu99@aol.com

Top
#190814 - 11/16/20 07:19 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: pappy19]
coachblalock Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1874
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
Sounds good Pap!

When I was a little bitty toot, my Grandfather introduced me to cow tongue.

I ate it because he did and ended up developing a taste for it.

He & I were the only two that would eat it.
_________________________
"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.

Top
#190817 - 11/16/20 08:11 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: coachblalock]
Windsor Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 08/12/15
Posts: 1960
Loc: Colorado!
Originally Posted By: coachblalock
When I was a little bitty toot, my Grandfather introduced me to cow tongue.

I ate it because he did and ended up developing a taste for it.

He & I were the only two that would eat it.


My grandmother would cook it in a pressure cooker with some good seasoning. We'd peel the skin off and make sandwiches out of the meat.

When you're hungry, you can get over what the meat came from and give it a try. It wasn't bad at all.
_________________________
Rob

Top
#190821 - 11/16/20 08:42 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: Windsor]
pappy19 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 7442
Loc: Garden Valley, Idaho
Most don't realize that salted buffalo tongue was the first and most popular part of the buffalo. Boiled in salt water, cooled, peeled and sliced, was a tender and tasty meat. Obviously an elk tongue isn't anywhere close to the size of a beef or buffalo, but big enough to make it worth while. My wife, Lucille, is from New Mexico and she would have me cook a beef tongue every Christmas to prepare, grind and mix with minced meat and pinion nuts to make empanadanitas. I would always slice a couple for a sandwich with onion and mayo. Don't knock it if you haven't tried it.

Pap
_________________________
Mike Allen
RKCC-CM-086
True West Magazine Maniac
Randall Collector
Behring Made Collector
Ruana Collector
Glock Fan
NRA- Life Member since 1975
mikenlu99@aol.com

Top
#190828 - 11/16/20 11:21 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: pappy19]
coachblalock Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 12/03/16
Posts: 1874
Loc: Lake Fork, East Texas
My Grandparents raised some long red peppers that they used to make pepper sauce with.

It was almost as thick as ketchup and hot as FIRE !!! As a kid, it was all I could do to handle a drop or two, and that was with plenty of sweet milk on ice next to my plate.

My Grandfather would get a good sized bite of beef tongue on his fork and dip it in that pepper sauce and eat it like that.
_________________________
"Filet that fish? Hell naw! I'll scale him, gut him, fry him up in grease, take him by the head and tail, and play him like a French Harp!" - Uncle Paul sometime in the 60s.

Top
#190892 - 11/21/20 12:21 PM Re: What's For Dinner? [Re: coachblalock]
pappy19 Offline
Knife Enthusiast

Registered: 10/31/07
Posts: 7442
Loc: Garden Valley, Idaho
Made a small batch of tiny pinto beans in my #6 Griswold Dutch oven last night. Pretty tasty.

Pap


Attachments
------Griswold#6DO PiquitoPintoBeans.jpg


_________________________
Mike Allen
RKCC-CM-086
True West Magazine Maniac
Randall Collector
Behring Made Collector
Ruana Collector
Glock Fan
NRA- Life Member since 1975
mikenlu99@aol.com

Top
Page 49 of 96 < 1 2 ... 47 48 49 50 51 ... 95 96 >


Moderator:  Mr_Mod