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- Type of diabetes
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Spooky.. had my first lambs heart yesterday evening..
I tried one a few weeks back. Don’t think I quite cooked it right, but worth another go. How did you cook yours?
Spooky.. had my first lambs heart yesterday evening..
I tried one a few weeks back. Don’t think I quite cooked it right, but worth another go. How did you cook yours?
I stuff mine with sage and onion stuffing and roast them for about 45 mins . I put butter on them and bast them occasionally . Some gravy plenty of creamy mash ( Albert Bartlett Elfe potatoes mmmm ..Lidl’s) with some peas .I tried one a few weeks back. Don’t think I quite cooked it right, but worth another go. How did you cook yours?
Pan fried in butter with some ox liver too. Didn't taste like I thought it would but very nice...ox heart next on the list but the butcher usually only has whole frozen ones which might be a bit big for an experiment.
I imagine they would need a mega cooking time.
Erm,..... if it wasn't to your taste, would your dog help you out?
No they took about 1 1/2 mins per side but I had sliced and trimmed them.. the dog had some too of course!
No worries.. I think you can cook ox heart the same way like a steak as well.. I'll let you know when I've tried it.Sorry. I wasn't clear. I meant the ox heart
Anyone here do bone broth?
I just made some (again) and just cannot drink it as was the plan. What do you add (other than bones or water) during the cooking, or even better for the batch I now have, after cooking to make it more palatable? Mine was chicken bones and skin etc, some herbs and a little onion. It tastes....oily and not pleasant and I can only manage a mouthful or two. I did a search and as suggested added lime and ginger and it was worse. Not sure what to do with it now. Ideas please
Ok so at this point I’ll do the skimming thing with this batch and see if that makes it easier drinking and if that fails it’ll be the base of other dishes. Some lessons for next time And will try other bones - do you mix lamb/beef or keep them separate? Thanks.
Looks like a trip to Lidl will be in order.
Late to this discussion @HSSS but concur with the others. I’ve only made bone broth a couple of times, but wait for the fat to set on the top, take that off and store it for frying and then either use what remains as a base for other dishes, or drink it, although I much prefer solid food to liquid, so usually just end up drinking what remains after a nice hearty chunk of oxtail or short rib.
I find chicken broth can be tricky. First up it's surprisingly strong, a bit much really, it makes excellent chicken soup and is good with beans and lentils because it's so pokey. Also I find a huge variation in each batch, some are lovely, some not so much. If you have pets, especially poorly or older pets they like it and it's good to get them hydrated. For me I wouldn't try to drink it like beef broth it would just be too much. I guess in some ways that's the magic, you can make a really chicken-y soup with only the carcass and no meat to speak of. So I'd be more inclined to go cream of chicken soup rather than chicken broth if that makes sense.chicken bones and skin etc