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Apr 11, 2003
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gooeygraphics.com
how bout a turducken





20-25 lb whole turkey
4-5 lb whole duckling
3-4 lb whole chicken (or use a larger chicken and place the duckling inside it)
corn bread dressing
sausage stuffing
large roasting pan and rack
cotton string and cheese cloth
Place the cleaned turkey, breast side down, on a flat surface. Cut through the skin along the length of the spine. Using the tip of a knife and starting from neck end, gently separate meat from rib cage on one side. Toward neck end, cut through meat to expose shoulder blade; cut meat away from and around the bone, severing bone at the joint to remove shoulder blade. Disjoint wing between second and third joints. Leave the wing bones and keep the wing attached to the meat.

Continue separating meat from frame, heading toward the thighbone and being careful to keep the "oyster" (pocket of meat on back) attached to skin, rather than leaving with bone. Cut through ball-and-socket joint to release thighbone from carcass (bird will be open on one side, exposing bones left to deal with). Keep the leg attached to the meat.

Repeat boning procedure on the other side of the bird. Carefully remove carcass and reserve for making stock. You should end up with a flat boneless (except for wings and legs) turkey with the skin intact in one large piece. Cover the boned turkey and set aside (or chill).

Repeat the process on the duckling and chicken, but cut off the first two joints of wings, and debone both stumps of wings and leg drumsticks (cut through flesh at thinnest point and trim around these bones with a knife until they can be removed). Trim excess skin and fat from necks of birds. If it is your first time deboning a fowl, it is advisable to practice first on the chicken rather than the turkey. Both the chicken and duck will be stuffed inside the turkey and need not be kept "perfectly" intact. Make stock from the chicken carcass.



http://fp.thesalmons.org/lynn/turducken.html
 
Apr 24, 2003
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Kansas City, MO
have any of you ate brains? i went to this all night diner type spot in k.c. and ordered some brains and scrambled eggs just to see what it was like. Shit, the smell alone made me sick to my stomach. I tried a bite though, and just spit it out...shit was nasty.

any of y'all eat shit like that? brains, cow tongue, pig's feet/ears, ect.?
 
Nov 14, 2002
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Dowels are the little pieces of wood that go into holes in things like ikea furniture. You put glue in the holes, put the dowel in one, then press it into the other so basically it holds joining pieces of wood.

Know what I mean?

They're like... an inch long and maybe an eighth to a quarter inch thick and round.
 
Jul 21, 2002
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Oklahoma
www.youtube.com
mexican food has some nasty shit in it. there are tacos con lengua which is tongue, and cerebra which is brain. menudo has tripe in it which is stomach lining, although i am mexican too, i can't funk with none of that shit. I went to eat menudo and damn near threw up because i had seen the tripe un cooked, and seeing it cooked didnt' look much better.

deer chili is off the chains tho.

never had frog legs

crawfish/crawdads whatever, are damn good if they are seasoned well, if you don't get em down south, don't get em at all.
 
Apr 29, 2003
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buy one get one free always at food smart.... come on in bring ya momma and ya paw we gunna have a sale like never berfore ya hear..

bring ya food stamps and ya wic they are always welcome here at the com food smart near you.