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Posted

I recently bought some chicken livers from the farmers market and it tasted great: sweet, hardly any bitterness. Today I bought chicken livers from Chinatown and they were wretched: bitter, with an array of unusual off-flavors. I threw them away.

Do livers vary so much in quality? It would make sense to me considering the function of the liver in the body.

Where do most restaurants get the livers for chicken liver mousse or pate? Do they have to seek out special chicken? I've certainly never had a chicken liver dish at a restaurant that tasted like the Chinatown livers.

Posted

Don't know what's up with your Chinatown chicken livers, maybe they were old and/or poorly stored. The Chinatown I once lived near in Toronto had some great items and others that were total rubbish.

If I could only buy one organic grocery item, it would be liver for the reasons you alluded to -- it's the major detox organ of the animal's body.

Peter Gamble aka "Peter the eater"

I just made a cornish game hen with chestnut stuffing. . .

Would you believe a pigeon stuffed with spam? . . .

Would you believe a rat filled with cough drops?

Moe Sizlack

Posted

Raw.

The livers were a huge soggy mess and would have been a real pain to remove any thing like a gallbladder.

Posted

Er. Huge soggy mess doesn't sound good. On a whole liver, it's easy to see anything that shouldn't be there. We go through a lot of chicken livers (for chopped liver) and they rarely have any gallbladder left on them, but every once in a while they do. If you don't remove it, it can ruin the whole dish.

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