Cool weather = comfort food
Smoke some oxtails 1 hour. Stick in crockpot with onions, mushrooms, beef base MMMMmmmmm
(http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l95/43something/_MD70061-2.jpg)
(http://i94.photobucket.com/albums/l95/43something/_MD70083.jpg)
Looks like I'm going to have to chase some tail ;)
Perfecto!
Check out the book by Fergus Henderson 'The Whole Beast.' It's full of recipes for animal guts and stuff.
Oxtail soup (prepared Chines style) is very popular in Hawaii and I used to make it regularly, as well as the more European style braised/stewed version. Then people "discovered" the damn things and the price went from practically nothing to over $3.00 a pound. Took those dishes right out of my repertoire.
I'm thinking if I did try this, I'd want the end farthest from the connection.
The closer to the bone the sweeter the meat.
Quote from: KevinG on December 05, 2010, 03:39:36 PM
I'm thinking if I did try this, I'd want the end farthest from the connection.
The brain, tongue, snout or eyeballs? Yuck! I'm all for what in between! Yea and sweet too! ;D
Can you actually get oxtail anymore? Or are they cow tails. I haven't seen many oxen around lately.
I was just in a new oriental food store last week in Milwaukee, Wi. Their meat section looked rather good. They had pork bellies and oxtail. Some oriental gentleman came up to me claiming that oxtails are the best meat that he has ever had, I'll have to try them.
Brad
cowtails
Those look good. I love oxtails. I wish I could find oxtails like that in my area. What I generally find are cuts from the tip end of the tail.
Ox tails are pretty common here and relatively cheap. I love ox tail soup.
Man! Those look good.
A few weeks ago I made a visit to the B&W Meat Company (http://bwmeatcompany.com/) in Houston, which claims to be the largest meat market in TX. It's an old-style meat market where they cut from the carcass, and make a lot of sausage. I didn't see one cryopac the whole time I was there. The day I was there ox tails were on sale and the people were lined up for them. As it happened, where I was being served was right next to the oxtail line. When they got their call (you still take a number) folks would give the attendant their order, some by weight, some by count, they would be asked "how thick", most raised a hand and held up two fingers with a gap indicating thickness. The attendant would reach into the case in front of me, grab a whole dangling oxtail or two from the dozen or so that were piled on top of each other, each one somewhere between two and three feet in length, and walk them over to a cutter who was waiting at a band saw. After a sample cut and a showing to the customer for approval, any needed adjustments were made and the order was filled. Next ... number 89 ?