Tripe seems to be one of those foods that people either love or hate—or sometimes love to hate. Blogger Carol Blymire, who cooked her way first through The French Laundry Cookbook and then Alinea, ...
In the realm of love-it-or-hate-it foods, tripe rules. Count me in the love-it camp, although that may be an understatement. When I'm in a city where it's a specialty, like Rome or Florence, I'll eat ...
For all the talk about how food can bring us together, it can divide as well. There are dishes that polarize. Take tripe. It is standard equipment on every cow that ever produced a T-bone and has been ...
It's honeycomb tripe, done Roman-style, but with some surprising subcontinental flavours. “Last year the Swillhouse crew went on a wild trip to Paris, where I noticed a bit of Indian influence in the ...
Submitted by Lydia Gurrieri, Oakwood 5 pounds honeycomb tripe 2 pounds sweet sausage meat 2 eggplants, peeled and cubed 2 cans crushed tomatoes 3 onions, sliced 4 garlic cloves, chopped 1 cup dry ...
It happened again. Yesterday at lunch, while idly flipping through the small menu of a downtown eatery, I found a tripe dish and immediately decided it would be my meal. It never fails. If there is ...
A Sonoran soup exists for every desire and occasion. Soups of wild greens studded with chickpeas, corn and cheese made richer with the addition of milk, thick cream of carrot, earthy bean stews, red ...
Two weeks ago in a column about horehound drops, I said they came from an herb named for the Egyptian sun god, Horus. I heard from several folks for whom the column brought back memories of childhood ...
Tripe is one of those foods that is adored, abhorred or ignored. As a cooking teacher, I find one of the hardest things to teach culinary students is an appreciation of unusual foods, including meats ...