| ||
TEXAS FOOD | ||
HOME TEXAS REGIONS | ||
![]() | ||
| ||
A trio of menus from a couple Texas Events click thumbnail to view menu | ||
| ||
To give you some idea of the Southern and Texan concept of food we have gleaned a collection of quotes from an Internet discussion that started out being about okra, that wonderful vegetable, imported from Europe, which never caught on much in America... except in the South...... | ||
| ||
Eyes on Texas comments follow the excerpts,delineated by being in smaller print. | ||
| ||
I'm not a huge fan of Okra unless it's fried. I usually add sliced jalapenos and use corn meal for the breading. Tasty!
| ||
In Alabama we used to do it with cornmeal and green tomatoes (also coated in cornmeal like the traditional "fried green tomatoes")...
| ||
One of the great things about living in the South is that we don't have *any* limitations on what is, or is not, considered food. With the possible exception of scrapple (which even a Southerner knows to stay away from).
| ||
Finally...something we solidly agree upon. Scrapple is not food and is not to be put into one's mouth. If someone were to request scrapple at my house I would be offended.
| ||
What is scrapple?
| ||
Even though I grew up in Texas, I've never been able to bring myself to try scrapple. My older brother was a HUGE fan of it (still is) and loved to fry it up and eat it with maple syrup. Maybe it was because I knew what was in it, but the smell of it cooking was enough to turn my stomach.
| ||
In the Deep South, we refer to 'scrapple' as souse or head cheese. White folks hardly ever ate it, or pig knuckles, or trotters or hawg jowls.
| ||
![]() | ||
At the State Fair, at Six Flags, at Street Fairs, at Flea Markets, at Canton Trade Days, at parades, at just about any public event at which Texans gather there will be purveyors of barbecued Turkey Legs. And multitudes of Texans chewing on them. You don't ever seem to see turkeys being fried at public events however.
| ||
There's a chain around the D/FW Metroplex called "Red, Hot, and Blue" that serves fairly authentic Tennessee style BBQ. *Pulled* pork, not chopped (they do also offer beef for the heathen Texans). They don't seem to have "the touch" on getting the meat right (it's often too dry), but the sauces are pretty authentic.
| ||
I had a friend from Mississippi tell me that "Red, Hot, and Blue" was pretty good in Jackson, MS. I haven't tried them. I am in San Marcos (Texas) and the only time I get that far north is when I'm headed back to Tennessee. Beef and pork require different temperatures to be their best. The cooks at the Texas locations probably dry out the pork by trying to cook it like beef.
| ||
Okra flash fried in hot bacon grease is the only way in my humble opinion...
| ||
My white mother, who was raised on a ranch in the panhandle, relished head cheese, brains and pig knuckles. My father even liked the pig knuckles. I tried the brains in scrambled eggs a couple of times but it was too much like cannibalism to me. The head cheese was disgusting. I never knew that I knew what scrapple was.
| ||
My Dad was known to cook "chittlin's" in my Mom's kitchen once or twice when I was a kid. We all left the house for a couple of days while he was indulging. He says that chittlin's are good when there is some grit in them. But, I don't know if he eats scrapple or not. He should find this web site interesting.
| ||
I think Poke Salet proves that quite well. For any Yankees reading this: "You don't wanna know."
| ||
My cousin's wife loved scrapple, she was the only one in the family that ate it normally. She got me to try it, I ate it once but could not get into anything fried that was still squishy.
| ||
Polk Salad is the greens from a root vegetable similar to a turnip. Poor southerners, black and white, ate Polk Salad, especially after Reconstruction. Poke Salad is the leaves of the Poke weed. As it matures, the stalk turns a reddish color and the plant produces purple poke berries which are poisonous. The leaves have to be parboiled or they are also poisonous.
| ||
You really don't understand Southern food traditions if you think people would buy poke salad. Finding and picking it is part of the experience. I think most grocery stores would be a little reluctant to stock produce which was known to be poisonous if eaten raw or improperly prepared. That might break a few people of the habit of grazing in the produce department. Killing ones customers is generally not good for business in the long run. Now there might be a market for the parboiled and then frozen poke salad. People might be willing to pay to avoid stinking up their own house. Maybe poke salad can be the next peasant food to become hip and trendy.
| ||
Ummmmmm...brains and eggs. As a kid in west Texas, we had it for breakfast with homemade biscuits and thick gravy. I never considered that it was really hog brains! I enjoyed it so much that it never seemed repulsive to me.
| ||
It's more of a pig head reduction. Brains? Probably, but I'll take pig-head and cheeks with sage and pepper, over those lymph nodes and salivary glands (chorizo), any day. You have to cook scrapple properly. Cut 1/4 inch and fry on medium heat for 9 minutes a side. Never let the sides touch, and don't fondle the slices too much. Crispy heaven.
| ||
Crisp scrapple w/ maple syrup and some eggs on the side. Now I'm hungry for sure. Haven't had any for quite a while.
| ||
Didja ever notice the Red River crossovers can't discern the subtle difference of Interstate 45 asphalt in the Galveston area with it's moderate salty flavor vs. the rather plain taste of Interstate 30/Texarkana armadillo, known in Shreveport as 'possum on the half shell'?
| ||
The Dallas/Forth Worth Metroplex has the World's Highest per Capita Number of Restaurants | ||
| ||
HOME TEXAS TOWNS PARADES | ||
EVENTS PARKS SCENERY | ||
TEX MISC SCANDAL EXIT TEXAS | ||
BIG BEND COUNTRY | ||
GULF COAST PINEY WOODS | ||
HILL COUNTRY | ||
SOUTH TEXAS PLAINS | ||
PANHANDLE PLAINS | ||
| ||
| ||
| ||
email feedback © DurangoTexas.com All Rights Reserved |
Texas Food----Okra...etc. (2024)
Top Articles
Contactless payments - Google Pay Help
The Ultimate Pop-punk Gear Guide for Guitar, Bass, and Drums - inSync
งบกำไรขาดทุนสำหรับ Excel
เทมเพลตกำไรและขาดทุนฟรีSmartsheet
Day 11 - Psalm 11; Genesis 35-37 by Bible In A Year 2024 - Sojourning *NKJV + Daily Devotion
Bible Gateway passage: Proverbs 1 - New King James Version
Just Busted Giles County Tn
Schauspieler Heinz Schimmelpfennig
Nwsflagstaff
Texas Motors Specialty Photos
What Is Level F In Iready? - OfAdvantages
i-Ready Central Resources | Family Center – FAQs
Latest Posts
Ulta and Sephora Break into the Big Boxes - The Robin Report
Countries or regions where you can make payments with Google
Article information
Author: Van Hayes
Last Updated:
Views: 6014
Rating: 4.6 / 5 (46 voted)
Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful
Author information
Name: Van Hayes
Birthday: 1994-06-07
Address: 2004 Kling Rapid, New Destiny, MT 64658-2367
Phone: +512425013758
Job: National Farming Director
Hobby: Reading, Polo, Genealogy, amateur radio, Scouting, Stand-up comedy, Cryptography
Introduction: My name is Van Hayes, I am a thankful, friendly, smiling, calm, powerful, fine, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.