| Food & Cooking Questions and Discussion Got a cooking question or something you want to discuss about food and cooking? This is the forum for you. Talk about anything related to food & cooking. |  | 
04-06-2006, 01:14 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: At home cook | | Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 14
| | Cow's Tongue. Bull Balls. Are these any good? These two 'delicacies' are native to the hugely popular Calgary Stampede (which is coming up in a few months). And yes, people eat them both!! This will be my first time attending the Stampede - has anybody tried either of these? | 
04-06-2006, 01:19 PM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator | | Join Date: Mar 2002 Location: SLC UT
Posts: 3,912
| | Tongue can be excellent or awful depending on preparation.
The same is probably true of the other item. A rancher I know is fond of bull testes as a meal... | 
04-06-2006, 01:22 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Mar 2006 Location: Form BDA, imported local to Virginia Beach, for now
Posts: 215
| | Yes to the tounge! When prepared properly, It is quite good, you must boil it first the "peel" it, but it kinda reminds me of firm liver in flavor and texture. One of my favorite snadwiches at the Carnegie Deli in midtown, Manhattan, is there Tounge sandwich, piled high and covered in onion.
As for the "mountain Oysters", a lil too tendenous/sinuey for my likeing, the flavor is good, and if you didn't know what you were eating, you would be more apt to eat it, and like it... | 
04-06-2006, 01:30 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Culinary Instructor | | Join Date: Dec 1999 Location: MO
Posts: 2,491
| | Quote: |
Originally Posted by phatch Tongue can be excellent or awful depending on preparation.. | Exactly. True for just about everything edible. | 
04-06-2006, 02:20 PM
|  | ChefTalk Moderator Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: Wisconsin USA
Posts: 9,223
| | My mom made both fresh and smoked tongue a lot when I was a kid- it used to be cheap. She simmered the tongue (fresh or smoked) in water with peppercorns, bay leaf and garlic); the pot was covered. After about 2-1/2 hours she'd peel it or let me peel it, then returned it to the pot for another 1/2 hour or longer. We sliced it thinly. Any leftovers went for sandwiches. We loved it. I remember boiled potatoes and creamed spinach as sides, with horseradish or grainy mustard.
__________________ Moderator, Welcome Forum
***It is better to ask forgiveness than beg permission.*** | 
04-07-2006, 02:25 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: At home cook | | Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 44
| | I love the Stampede! I hope you see some the events. My favorite has been the chuckwagon races. I remember watching the races on tv when I was with my grandmother in northern Montana, also I had the opportunity to watch them live one year. It's a great regional competition. I've had the opportunity to eat "Rocky Mountain Oysters" but have always declined. If you really want to try this, ummmm, delicacy visit the "Testy Festy" in Bozeman, MT. | 
04-07-2006, 08:49 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: straits of juan de ***a
Posts: 44
| | I grew up eating Mountain Oysters!! My mother always had a platter of fried chicken on the table also for those too timid to try them. I love them.
__________________ cj | 
04-07-2006, 09:11 AM
|  | ChefTalk Supporter / ChefTalk Book Reviewer Culinary Experience: Cook At Home | | Join Date: Jul 2002 Location: Bellingham, WA
Posts: 952
| | Quote: |
Originally Posted by cjdacook I grew up eating Mountain Oysters!! My mother always had a platter of fried chicken on the table also for those too timid to try them. I love them. | So what do they taste like?
__________________ Emily
______________________ "If you are not killing plants, you are not really stretching yourself as a gardener." -- J. C. Raulston, American Horticulturist | 
04-07-2006, 09:56 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Oct 2005 Location: Vancouver, Canada
Posts: 1,528
| | Can't say as I've ever tried Bull's balls, or any other balls for that matter. Tongue is a very different story. When poached in a flavorfull broth and then peeled, it's very good, either cold, or hot, with a rich Marsala accented Demi.
What others have said of food being good or dreadful, depending on how and who is cooking is very, very true. I've had excellent and darn near poison versions of Haggis, blood sausage, pates, and terrines. When well prepared, they are excellent.... | 
04-07-2006, 09:12 PM
|  | Registered User Culinary Experience: Restaurant Manager | | Join Date: Sep 2001 Location: Back at work
Posts: 848
| | Beef tongue sandwiches on rye with good mustard. Yum. Reminds me of grade school.
__________________ What a relief! To find out after all these years that I'm not crazy. I'm just culinarily divergent... | 
04-08-2006, 08:03 AM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Professional Chef | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: straits of juan de ***a
Posts: 44
| | Chicken, Ellen...no, I'm kidding  they taste like fried pieces of beef - they really are very tasty! We had a restaurant years ago that severed (ooops now there is a slip of the tongue! s/b 'served') "turkey nuts" - the crowd had fun with that one!
__________________ cj
Last edited by cjdacook; 04-08-2006 at 08:05 AM.
| 
07-15-2006, 12:48 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Line Cook | | Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 31
| | Cow's Tongue & Bull Balls I dearly love beef tongue, if it is prepared right. My mom would make tongue once in a while when I was a kid, but it's cost has become so dear that I seldom get to enjoy it any more.
I have eaten mountain oysters (both beef and pork) and enjoy them, although I realize that it is an acquired taste that might not be for everyone. As an aside, my wife and I often go to a Chinese buffet in our town, where I enjoy octopus with onion. I have seen a few other people who just can't bring themselves to try it. Usually, it is quite good, but sometimes the octopi are a bit on the rubbery side.
All I can say is, try a small sample, and see what YOUR reaction is to the food. You might be pleasantly surprised. | 
07-15-2006, 10:29 PM
| | Registered User Culinary Experience: Can't boil water | | Join Date: May 2006 Location: Foat Wuth
Posts: 206
| | Well first of all yall know about tongues..but aint many of ya got experience with balls dont seem like  Now the way I was taught..which aint necessarily the right way of course...Mountain Oysters is in the pig family whilst Calf Fries come from boy cows (making things simple for the yankees here  Cowboy way to cook em is to throw em on a bed of mesquite coals and when they bust open its time to eat. Way most folks likes em is sliced thin..rolled in cornmeal and fried. Now you get em in big hunks and fry em in cold grease..they got a musty flavor. Now I had a uncle by marriage who come down here from PA one time to try Calf Fries. Yeppers..the bull drug him to death.
bigwheel
Last edited by bigwheel; 07-15-2006 at 10:31 PM.
|  |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | |