Recently, you talked with someone who was eating pork brains and
scrambled eggs whose chef had never eaten them. You seemed in
wonderment that such a dish should be on the menu.
Just wanted to share with you that both our sons, born in 1970 and
1972 respectively, ate pork brains and scrambled eggs every day when
they were infants. This brains diet was recommended by Adelle Davis.
Marj, my wife, had the idea of mixing them with egg. Thanks for being
the occasion of a delightful memory recalled.
We get your radio broadcast on WFYI FM90 : Indianapolis. Appreciate
your work very much.
Shalom,
--Dick
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I just heard the segment on weird foods and the
pork brains and eggs caught my attention. Three
years ago, I was working on a dig in Gilmer,
Texas, a small town up in the far northeast corner
of the state. One night, a friend and I were
perusing the shelves of the local supermarket and
we noticed some things that, to us as Oregonians,
seemed a little strange. The strangest were some
small, dust-covered cans of pork brains in milk
gravy. So, I bought some and still have it. On the
label is a recipe for "SCRAMBLED EGGS AND BRAINS":
Drain brains; combine with 3 beaten eggs and
salt and pepper to taste. In fry pan, cook in
melted butter or margarine on medium heat,
stirring to prevent sticking.
I should point out that this 5.5 oz. can has 3500 mg
of cholesterol, or 1170% of the US RDA.
Bon Appetit!
--Jason
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I listened to you program on strange foods and heard about the "brains
and eggs" and the fellow who had heard of them but had never eaten
them in 52 years. Well, I have been eating them for most of my 50
years. It is somewhat of a southern food, much like chitterlings.
As you taster said, they are mild, but to me have a distinctive and
not unpleasant taste. Everyone should try them. You can get them in
the canned meat section or frozen meat section of the grocery store.
--Susan
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For someone billed as a savvy traveler, you
display a surprising ignorance. Brains and
scrambled eggs have been a staple of the farm and
ranch diet far longer than the 52-year-old Bill
there in Salt Lake City has had them on his menu.
You may not find them in too many of today's
homogenized roadside eateries or trendy
designer-food palaces, but they're a staple in
back country kitchens where folks have learned not
to be wasteful.
Brains, by the way, are practically tasteless and
have a jelly-like consistency. Sort of like
bone marrow. I don't know if eating them makes
you smarter.
--Bob
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While I enjoy your program very much I now wonder how savvy you can be
if you don't know that brains are a delicious and decidedly non-weird
food! Brains and scrambled eggs are a classic and certainly not
invented by the guy in the diner. Since they are light, fluffy and
very subtly flavored brains are actually much like eggs anyway.
If you want to be truly savvy and are lucky enough to find a French
restaurant that serves brains in black butter with capers try them and
enjoy a truly sublime and delicate dish.
--Anne
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Contrary to what you were lead to believe, the restaurant in Salt Lake
City did not "make up" the dish pork brains & scrambled eggs in 1952.
My grandmother & great aunts were eating this "regional favorite" for
many years before that. It is a dish that I know many older Americans
remember fondly. I equate this dish, in my memories of growing up in
southern Illinois, with head cheese, cow's tongue, and pig's knuckles.
It probably originated in times when our society was not so affluent
and people (especially rural people) utilized every part of the
butchered animal that could be used. I doubt if this dish could really
be attributed to any certain ethnic group. It's been my experience
that people of English, Germany, Czech, Polish, & Hungarian as well as
other ethnic backgrounds all have enjoyed cuisine of this type.
By the way, I enjoy listening to your show on WSIU radio.
--Kitty
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I heard your show this morning and
enjoyed the piece about foods, especially the
diner serving pork brains and eggs. You all
thought that was a very strange food, but I
didn't. I live in Memphis, Tennessee and grew up in the
area. I can remember going to my grandparents'
house to kill hogs. It was an all day event,
with all the men doing the butchering and all the
women cleaning and packaging the meat, making the
sausage and such. For supper that night we
always had my grandmother's biscuits and
scrambled eggs and hog brains. Maybe this is a
regional thing. I have never seen that dish
anywhere else, but the country people of that day
(1950s) did not think of the dish as unusual.
I really enjoy your show. I am going skiing in
March and may be calling you about air fare deals
from Atlanta or Jacksonville, Florida to Denver.
Thanks for an enjoyable ride to work.
--Sara Anne
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