US has gotten really bad on what we perceive as edible – European cuisine still has a LOT of dishes based on organ meats that we’ve almost completely lost (liver paté, steak and kidney pie, blood sausage, tripe, lengua, guanciale, oxtail, pickled trotters) – everything’s been reduced down to what’s available in the supermarket, shrink-wrapped into a styrofoam tray – we can handle portioned steaks but not a butcher taking a bandsaw to a carcass, we can handle chicken breasts but not a whole chicken – things like “thigh”, “leg”, “rib” refer to the shape, not to the location on the animal it came from
Good riddance to that, for how it’s produced alone. Yes, I know you can get other than Goose pâté, but it’s considered lower quality and inferior. The best pâté is fatty pâté, and there’s only one way to make it and it’s beyond cruel. Factory farming looks positively humane in comparison.
I think your point largely stands, with some regional exceptions. I mean, I live in the Midwest and most of the local grocery stores carry pig’s feet, so people around here are doing something with then. But then, this area was settled largely by Germans, so you’re going to find more of that than French pâtés or British steak & kidney pies.
US has gotten really bad on what we perceive as edible – European cuisine still has a LOT of dishes based on organ meats that we’ve almost completely lost (liver paté, steak and kidney pie, blood sausage, tripe, lengua, guanciale, oxtail, pickled trotters) – everything’s been reduced down to what’s available in the supermarket, shrink-wrapped into a styrofoam tray – we can handle portioned steaks but not a butcher taking a bandsaw to a carcass, we can handle chicken breasts but not a whole chicken – things like “thigh”, “leg”, “rib” refer to the shape, not to the location on the animal it came from
EDIT: for the curious, The Whole Beast by Fergus Henderson
Good riddance to that, for how it’s produced alone. Yes, I know you can get other than Goose pâté, but it’s considered lower quality and inferior. The best pâté is fatty pâté, and there’s only one way to make it and it’s beyond cruel. Factory farming looks positively humane in comparison.
I think your point largely stands, with some regional exceptions. I mean, I live in the Midwest and most of the local grocery stores carry pig’s feet, so people around here are doing something with then. But then, this area was settled largely by Germans, so you’re going to find more of that than French pâtés or British steak & kidney pies.