TechnoHippyChic
The Freeman
- Joined
- Jul 23, 2003
- Messages
- 1,764
- Reaction score
- 103
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: this_feature_currently_requires_accessing_site_using_safari
a new “bacon island” dressing
Darn.I'd upvote you if that was link was disguised and not stated so obviously.
I'd upvote you if that was link was disguised and not stated so obviously.
If you were the creative mind behind Slater’s burgers, what kind of burger would you have on the menu next month? Share your ideas in the comments!
bacon on bacon on bacon
So has anybody ever had Bison burgers? I had one awhile ago, and god damn it was good. A++++ Highly Recommend!
I've had an Ostrich burger. That was pretty weird. Really nice, though.
I've had a venison burger, it was rather nice.So has anybody ever had Bison burgers? I had one awhile ago, and god damn it was good. A++++ Highly Recommend!
I was expecting it to taste like poultry but it was actually closer to beef than anything. Red meat. Very tasty.Did it taste like a big chicken?
There's an awesome burger joint in Glasgow which did Ostrich burgers. Now they have, impala, venison, lamb, Kobe beef, pork etc.I've had an Ostrich burger. That was pretty weird. Really nice, though.
There's an awesome burger joint in Glasgow which did Ostrich burgers. Now they have, impala, venison, lamb, Kobe beef, pork etc.
Kobe burger is om nom-est.
Yeah, I'm pretty sure you can't get real Kobe beef outside of Japan.Even though it's probably not Kobe.
Except not really.Sure, in the same way champagne can only be from one particular part of France.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/larryolmsted/2012/04/12/foods-biggest-scam-the-great-kobe-beef-lie/It is now illegal to import (or even hand carry for personal consumption) any Japanese beef. Before 2010 you could import only boneless fresh Japanese beef, but none was real Kobe. Under Japanese law, Kobe beef can only came from Hyogo prefecture (of which Kobe is the capital city), where no slaughterhouses were approved for export by the USDA. According to its own trade group, the Kobe Beef Marketing & Distribution Promotion Association in Japan, where Kobe Beef is a registered trademark, Macao is the only place it is exported to – and only since last year.
All the myths about cows getting massages and drinking beer while listening to classical music are just that, myths, but nonetheless real Kobe beef is produced under some of the world’s strictest legal food standards, whereas “domestic Kobe” beef production, along with that in Australia and South America, is as regulated as the Wild West. In Japan, to be Kobe requires a pure lineage of Tajima-gyu breed cattle (not any old Japanese breed crossbred with American cattle as is the norm here). The animal must also have been born in Hyogo prefecture and thus raised on the local grasses and water and terroir its entire life. It must be a bull or virgin cow, and it takes considerably longer to raise a Tajima-gyu for consumption than most other breeds, adding to the cost. It must be processed in a Hyogo slaughterhouse – none of which export to the US – and then pass a strict government grading exam. There are only 3000 head of certified Kobe Beef cattle in the world, and none are outside Japan. The process is so strict that when the beef is sold, either in stores or restaurants, it must carry the 10-digit identification number so customers know what particular Tajima-gyu cow it came from.
... I know that, hence my champagne analogy. The similarities are pretty clear, but hey, semanticstime.net.