Jump to content
  • Welcome to the eG Forums, a service of the eGullet Society for Culinary Arts & Letters. The Society is a 501(c)3 not-for-profit organization dedicated to the advancement of the culinary arts. These advertising-free forums are provided free of charge through donations from Society members. Anyone may read the forums, but to post you must create a free account.

Edit History

liuzhou

liuzhou

From something rarely eaten to the opposite. From Japan to Jamaica, Laos to Lithuania, one porky part is eaten with relish. Trotters or pettitoes; ຫມູຂອງ to kiaulės koja, there are few cultures which don’t eat them.

 

879612428_PigsFoot.thumb.jpg.71d28f5214a3637779fcfe5b5cbfa939.jpg

 

I’m talking pig’s feet, although in Chinese we have both 猪手 (zhū shǒu) and 猪脚 (zhū jiǎo), pig’s hands and pig’s feet respectively, denoting the front and back feet separately although the latter is also used for both, unless it is essential to differentiate.

 

1411113152_SpicyPigsFootwithGarlic.thumb.JPG.dd26a86b851b9b044f719d5ddfaa44e8.JPG

Pig's Foot with Garlic

 

I’ve never cooked them, but I’ve eaten them on three different continents. Now, the nearest restaurant to my home does a mean pig’s foot, which I always order when I visit. I ate them in the UK regularly when my mother cooked them (or more often bought them pre-cooked from the butcher).

 

1287839591_PigsFeet.thumb.JPG.caeae1f25ad7667ce25d6bb746a21138.JPG

Cantonese Braised Pig's Feet

 

 

I think these are too well known for me to have to say anything very much except to mention this typical Cantonese recipe which is how I usually have them, and point you to probably the greatest song about a porcine part.

 

 

Twenty-five cents?

Ha! No! No!

I wouldn't pay twenty-five cents to go in nowhere 'cause listen here:

 

Up in Harlem ev'ry Saturday night when the high-browns git together it's just too tight,

They all congregates at an all night strut and what they do is tut-tut-tut

Old Hannah Brown from 'cross town gets full of corn and starts breakin' 'em down

Just at the break of day you can hear old Hannah say, "Gimme a pigfoot and a bottle of beer"

 

Send me gate I don't care I feel just like I wanna clown

Give the piano player a drink because he's bringin' me down

He's got rhythm, yeah! When he stomps his feet, he sends me right off to sleep

 

Check all your razors and your guns

We gonna be rasslin' when the wagon comes

 

I wanna pigfoot and a bottle of beer

 

Send me 'cause I don't care Slay me 'cause I don't care

Gimme a reefer and a gang o' gin

Slay me, 'cause I'm in my sin

Slay me 'cause I'm full of gin

 

Check all your razors and your guns

Do the shim-sham shimmy till the risin' sun

liuzhou

liuzhou

From something rarely eaten to the opposite. From Japan to Jamaica, Laos to Lithuania, one porky part is eaten with relish. Trotters or pettitoes; ຫມູຂອງ to kiaulės koja, there are few cultures which don’t eat them.

 

879612428_PigsFoot.thumb.jpg.71d28f5214a3637779fcfe5b5cbfa939.jpg

 

I’m talking pig’s feet, although in Chinese we have both 猪手 (zhū shǒu) and 猪脚 (zhū jiǎo), pig’s hands and pig’s feet respectively, denoting the front and back feet separately although the latter is also used for both, unless it is essential to differentiate.

 

1411113152_SpicyPigsFootwithGarlic.thumb.JPG.dd26a86b851b9b044f719d5ddfaa44e8.JPG

Pig's Foot with Garlic

 

I’ve never cooked them, but I’ve eaten them on three different continents. Now, the nearest restaurant to my home does a mean pig’s foot, which I always order when I visit. I ate them in the UK regularly when my mother cooked them (or more often bought them pre-cooked from the butcher).

 

1287839591_PigsFeet.thumb.JPG.caeae1f25ad7667ce25d6bb746a21138.JPG

Cantonese Braised Pig's Feet

 

 

I think these are too well known for me to have to say anything very much except to mention this typical Cantonese recipe which is how I usually have them, and point you to probably the greatest song about a porcine part.

 

 

Twenty-five cents?

Ha! No! No!

I wouldn't pay twenty-five cents to go in nowhere 'cause listen here:

 

Up in Harlem ev'ry Saturday night when the high-browns git together it's just too tight,

They all congregates at an all night strut and what they do is tut-tut-tut

Old Hannah Brown from 'cross town gets full of corn and starts breakin' 'em down

Just at the break of day you can hear old Hannah say, "Gimme a pigfoot and a bottle of beer"

 

Send me gate I don't care I feel just like I wanna clown

Give the piano player a drink because he's bringin' me down

He's got rhythm, yeah! When he stomps his feet, he sends me right off to sleep

 

Check all your razors and your guns

We gonna be rasslin' when the wagon comes

 

I wanna pigfoot and a bottle of beer

 

Send me 'cause I don't care Slay me 'cause I don't care

Gimme a reefer and a gang o' gin

Slay me, 'cause I'm in my sin

Slay me 'cause I'm full of gin

 

Check all your razors and your guns

Do the shim-sham shimmy till the risin' sun

liuzhou

liuzhou

From something rarely eaten to the opposite. From Japan to Jamaica, Laos to Lithuania, one porky part is eaten with relish. Trotters or pettitoes; ຫມູຂອງ to kiaulės koja, there are few cultures which don’t eat them.

 

879612428_PigsFoot.thumb.jpg.71d28f5214a3637779fcfe5b5cbfa939.jpg

 

I’m talking pig’s feet, although in Chinese we have both 猪手 (zhū shǒu) and 猪脚 (zhū jiǎo), pig’s hands and pig’s feet respectively, denoting the front and back feet separately although the latter is also used for both, unless it is essential to differentiate.

 

1411113152_SpicyPigsFootwithGarlic.thumb.JPG.dd26a86b851b9b044f719d5ddfaa44e8.JPG

Pig's Foot with Garlic

 

I’ve never cooked them, but I’ve eaten them on three different continents. INow, the nearest restaurant to my home does a mean pig’s foot, which I always order when I visit. I ate them in the UK regularly when my mother cooked them (or more often bought them pre-cooked from the butcher).

 

1287839591_PigsFeet.thumb.JPG.caeae1f25ad7667ce25d6bb746a21138.JPG

Cantonese Braised Pig's Feet

 

 

I think these are too well known for me to have to say anything very much except to mention this typical Cantonese recipe which is how I usually have them, and point you to probably the greatest song about a porcine part.

 

 

Twenty-five cents?

Ha! No! No!

I wouldn't pay twenty-five cents to go in nowhere 'cause listen here:

 

Up in Harlem ev'ry Saturday night when the high-browns git together it's just too tight,

They all congregates at an all night strut and what they do is tut-tut-tut

Old Hannah Brown from 'cross town gets full of corn and starts breakin' 'em down

Just at the break of day you can hear old Hannah say, "Gimme a pigfoot and a bottle of beer"

 

Send me gate I don't care I feel just like I wanna clown

Give the piano player a drink because he's bringin' me down

He's got rhythm, yeah! When he stomps his feet, he sends me right off to sleep

 

Check all your razors and your guns

We gonna be rasslin' when the wagon comes

 

I wanna pigfoot and a bottle of beer

 

Send me 'cause I don't care Slay me 'cause I don't care

Gimme a reefer and a gang o' gin

Slay me, 'cause I'm in my sin

Slay me 'cause I'm full of gin

 

Check all your razors and your guns

Do the shim-sham shimmy till the risin' sun

liuzhou

liuzhou

From something rarely eaten to the opposite. From Japan to Jamaica, Laos to Lithuania, one porky part is eaten with relish. Trotters or pettitoes; ຫມູຂອງ to kiaulės koja, there are few cultures which don’t eat them.

 

879612428_PigsFoot.thumb.jpg.71d28f5214a3637779fcfe5b5cbfa939.jpg

 

I’m talking pig’s feet, although in Chinese we have both 猪手 (zhū shǒu) and 猪脚 (zhū jiǎo), pig’s hands and pig’s feet respectively, denoting the front and back feet separately although the latter is also used for both, unless it is essential to differentiate.

 

1411113152_SpicyPigsFootwithGarlic.thumb.JPG.dd26a86b851b9b044f719d5ddfaa44e8.JPG

Pig's Foot with Garlic

 

I’ve never cooked them, but I’ve eaten them on three different continents. INow, the nearest restaurant to my home does a mean pig’s foot, which I always order when I visit. I ate them in the UK regularly when my mother cooked them (or more often bought them pre-cooked from the butcher).

 

1287839591_PigsFeet.thumb.JPG.caeae1f25ad7667ce25d6bb746a21138.JPG

Cantonese Braised Pig's Feet

 

 

I think these are too well known for me to have to say anything very much except to mention this typical Cantonese recipe which is how I usually have them, and point you to probably the greatest song about a porcine part.

 

 



























liuzhou

liuzhou

From something rarely eaten to the opposite. From Japan to Jamaica, Laos to Lithuania, one porky part is eaten with relish. Trotters or pettitoes; ຫມູຂອງ to kiaulės koja, there are few cultures which don’t eat them.

 

I’m talking pig’s feet, although in Chinese we have both 猪手 (zhū shǒu) and 猪脚 (zhū jiǎo), pig’s hands and pig’s feet respectively, denoting the front and back feet separately although the latter is also used for both, unless it is essential to differentiate.

 

I’ve never cooked them, but I’ve eaten them on three different continents. INow, the nearest restaurant to my home does a mean pig’s foot, which I always order when I visit. I ate them in the UK regularly when my mother cooked them (or more often bought them pre-cooked from the butcher).

 

I think these are too well known for me to have to say anything very much except to mention this typical Cantonese recipe which is how I usually have them, and point you to probably the greatest song about a porcine part.

 

 



























×
×
  • Create New...