OT [AT] Sausage and cracklings

George Willer gwill at toast.net
Mon Feb 23 13:32:52 PST 2004


Frobl,

Here's one to make you even hungrier!  This came from my cousin, Dick, who
some of you met at the Cub Fest 2003 or Cubarama 2002.  He's next in line
for patriarch after Pop passes, and the closest I have to a brother.  Just
imagine... 79 years old and on a computer!  The Willers are made of stern
stuff!
-------------
Hi George ,

Interesting item about Uncles Jim and George . Leland and I used to help
some with the butchering and we did help press out the lard . Sometimes we
would cook and press out a pig tail or two and they were much better eating
than just the plain cracklings . Cracklings even were good eating sometimes
when they didn't trim the lean meat off too close . I don't think that my
teeth could hold up to eating those cracklings any more . Never tried eating
ears !

........................ Dick

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "George Willer" <gwill at toast.net>
To: "Antique tractor email discussion group" <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
Sent: Sunday, February 22, 2004 3:35 PM
Subject: Re: [AT] Sausage


> Frobl,
>
> This will really make you hungry!  Pop's oldest brother Jim, born in 1897,
> was usually in charge of the rendering kettle.  He was fond of the pig's
> ears.  He'd throw one or more in the kettle  with the cut-up fat and let
it
> cook.  I have the mind's image of him holding the ear like a piece of
pizza
> in one hand and a salt shaker in the other.  He looked like he thought he
> was in Heaven!
>
> Pop's the only one left of the 9 kids that reached adulthood.  I'll ask
him
> if he remembers.  I'll also ask if he remembers making ponhaas.
>
> George Willer
>
> ----- Original Message ----- 
> From: "Robinson" <robinson at svs.net>
> To: "'Antique tractor email discussion group'"
> <at at lists.antique-tractor.com>
> Sent: Sunday, February 22, 2004 4:01 PM
> Subject: [AT] Sausage
>
>
> > Here I am sitting here at 1 PM waiting on a late
> > lunch and you guys are still talking about food. It is
> > causing great suffering...   ;-)
> > Diana's folks, of all German/Swiss background, used
> > to make the best tasting sausage when butchering that
> > I ever ate. Ever... Her dads grandfather was born in
> > Baden Germany and his grandmother was born in Bavaria.
> > On her mother's side they have been on this side of
> > the pond for a very long time but they always stayed
> > in a tight close group (some were Mennonite) so never
> > mixed much and retained many of the old food skills.
> > Diana is one of the first in her family to marry a non
> > German/Swiss. One of the first here came as a Hessian
> > soldier during the revolution. The Swiss were mostly
> > from near Zurich and I think from further north before
> > that so still mostly German.
> > Sadly now there is no one left in her family that
> > butchers or cooks in the old ways. Several are good
> > cooks just not the old ways.
> > I say that I'm a non-German but 1/2 of my mother's
> > line were German (Miller, Minnich, Stumph etc). My
> > fathers Robinson line started in Kessen's part of the
> > world as the Viking Clan Gunn. Then to Scotland, then
> > as Robinson to England (Cleasby, Yorkshire), then
> > America (Virginia) as representatives of the crown
> > about the mid 1600's. One side of my mothers line is
> > also Robinson, probably connected to the other line
> > but not found yet beyond Maryland about 1800. Maybe
> > they are where I get my love for fish & chips and
> > Fordson Major Diesels.   :-)
> > I sure would like to find some sausage that tastes
> > like those her dad used to make...
> >
> > "farmer"





More information about the AT mailing list