Anyone know what this is?
- roxanne562001
- Registered User
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Sun Jan 24, 2021 12:14 pm
- Has thanked: 179 times
- Been thanked: 90 times
Anyone know what this is?
I found these in my dads shop anyone know or want to guess what these are ? We used to use them a couple times a year here on the farm.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
- roxanne562001
- Registered User
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Sun Jan 24, 2021 12:14 pm
- Has thanked: 179 times
- Been thanked: 90 times
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
- roxanne562001
- Registered User
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Sun Jan 24, 2021 12:14 pm
- Has thanked: 179 times
- Been thanked: 90 times
- HandyDan
- Forum Moderator
- Posts: 7051
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 7:44 pm
- Location: Youngstown, Oh
- Has thanked: 378 times
- Been thanked: 372 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
Cookie cutters for moon pies.
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
HandyDan
Youngstown, Oh
Youngstown, Oh
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
I was thinking of butchering or scraping the fatty tissue off the hides,or carcasses.I think Dan has it for shaving hogs.
HErb
HErb
- roxanne562001
- Registered User
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Sun Jan 24, 2021 12:14 pm
- Has thanked: 179 times
- Been thanked: 90 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
Yep we used them when we butchered hogs. Had to scold them in boiling water so the hair would come off easier. We boiled the water in a big cast iron pot. We put the dead hog in a big wood trough my dad made. Then he would pour the boiling water over the dead hog Then my brothers and I would scrape off the hair with what my dad called hog bells. Not a fun job but the home rendered lard was amazing for pie crusts.
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
We had a 55 gal drum with the head cut off and a fire underneath and hung the hog off a tripod with a block and tackle
, Let it down into the scalding water then pulled it out to scrape the hog.
The trough we used to neuter the smaller pigs.
My mom used a big cast iron skillet to render the lard. your right made good pie crusts . Kids loved the cracklings too. I bet the kids now don't know where those crackling they munch on while watching TV came from...
Herb
, Let it down into the scalding water then pulled it out to scrape the hog.
The trough we used to neuter the smaller pigs.
My mom used a big cast iron skillet to render the lard. your right made good pie crusts . Kids loved the cracklings too. I bet the kids now don't know where those crackling they munch on while watching TV came from...
Herb
- DaninVan
- Registered User
- Posts: 2371
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 6:12 pm
- Location: Sunshine Coast, BC, Canada
- Has thanked: 302 times
- Been thanked: 417 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
Some folks just use a Tiger torch...
You do not have the required permissions to view the files attached to this post.
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
Good idea, they didn't have propane torches then we had a blowtorch, and acetylene torch though. They might have worked.
HErb
HErb
- DaninVan
- Registered User
- Posts: 2371
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 6:12 pm
- Location: Sunshine Coast, BC, Canada
- Has thanked: 302 times
- Been thanked: 417 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
Just to gross you out, they singe them, then cut the crackling off to sell to commuters driving by on their way to work...the pig isn't even gutted or cooked at this point. Our driver suggested we pass on the crackling...
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
it is what they used to call "Chewing the Fat". I did notice that the hog in the picture didn't seem to be bled or gutted. They were stripping off the lard first. But to make cracklings they have to remove the hide and fry out the lard, the crackling is the tissue that holds the grease,once the grease is removed then the tissue that is left is edible, but the skin is not.
Herb
Herb
- roxanne562001
- Registered User
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Sun Jan 24, 2021 12:14 pm
- Has thanked: 179 times
- Been thanked: 90 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
Mom always said we used everything from the hog except the squeal LOL pretty true. Dad would say the kidneys aren't bad if you boil the pee out of them. LOL they got ground into sausage. I remember catching the blood to make blood sausage had to keep stirring it and then add fresh milk so it didn't clot. We always trimmed out the heads to make head cheese too. Yes those cracklins are good after you render the lard Herb. I don't think I want it the way you do it Dan LOL I found those bells in his shop the other day and they brought back allot of memory's thought I would share.
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
She even rendered out the tails and give them to us kids to chew on. Yes Roxanne, good memories,thanks.
HErb
HErb
- DaninVan
- Registered User
- Posts: 2371
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 6:12 pm
- Location: Sunshine Coast, BC, Canada
- Has thanked: 302 times
- Been thanked: 417 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
No idea ,Herb; I just report the news...
Those pics were taken on the main hwy. out of the old Colonial city of Cuenca, Ecuador. Not the only 'hot dog' stand by a long shot.
Those pics were taken on the main hwy. out of the old Colonial city of Cuenca, Ecuador. Not the only 'hot dog' stand by a long shot.
- Herb Stoops
- The Welcome Wagon
- Posts: 3054
- Joined: Mon Oct 05, 2020 8:05 pm
- Location: Auburn WA.,USA
- Preferred name: Raff
- Has thanked: 1484 times
- Been thanked: 876 times
-
- Registered User
- Posts: 264
- Joined: Thu Oct 29, 2020 12:34 pm
- Location: Johannesburg, South Africa
- Has thanked: 57 times
- Been thanked: 78 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
In the little Italian village where I was born, up to WW II, every family except the completely destitute used to raise a hog each year. The stall was often under the main storey of the house - when we visited with my wife in 1981, one of the neighbours still kept a hog under the house. Acted like a big dog, sniffing visitors.
The tradition gradually died out after the war, partly because in the last year or so, German troops retreating northwards tended to requisition all the hogs for rations, leaving a large gap in the diet.
As with Roxanne's family, every part of the hog was used. The lard was used for cooking throughout the winter months, and was also used for storing sausage (no refrigeration, but cold cellars in winter). Added to the taste. Hams were cured in the fireplace hearth (prosciutto) or sometimes boiled (prosciutto cotto), the guts were used for sausage and salami casings, the belly was used for pancetta, the cheeks for guanciale (has made a recent comeback with trendy foodies), the blood for blood pudding and blood sausage, the trotters were boiled for broth and gelatine, and sometimes stuffed, and the ears were something of a delicacy - certain more edible than silk purses. Different types of sausage (fresh, semi-cured, cured, like salami), processed meat (mortadella, a type of baloney), not to mention the offal. Bones were fed to the dogs.
These days they talk of the circular economy. In those days, the hog was fed bran from wheat (not a breakfast cereal, which in any case is not an Italian tradition), and all sorts of kitchen scraps were recycled through the hog. My late mother always used to snigger at Kellogs All-Bran flakes, claiming that even her hogs ate better bran.
I once read that American spies were trained to vomit at will, as a way of deterring rough interrogators in case of capture. I could have been such a spy - I learnt the art of purposeful vomiting by being fed blood pudding. Just a thought of the smell, and I could still do it - have not had blood pudding since I was five.
Interesting that with so much use of lard, there was not much arterial disease. Partly because life expectancy was lower, but I think mainly because in a rural setting, everybody did hard manual labour. Next generation (i.e. me) sit for 8+ hours a day, and have to pass on all the good stuff. Rats!.
The tradition gradually died out after the war, partly because in the last year or so, German troops retreating northwards tended to requisition all the hogs for rations, leaving a large gap in the diet.
As with Roxanne's family, every part of the hog was used. The lard was used for cooking throughout the winter months, and was also used for storing sausage (no refrigeration, but cold cellars in winter). Added to the taste. Hams were cured in the fireplace hearth (prosciutto) or sometimes boiled (prosciutto cotto), the guts were used for sausage and salami casings, the belly was used for pancetta, the cheeks for guanciale (has made a recent comeback with trendy foodies), the blood for blood pudding and blood sausage, the trotters were boiled for broth and gelatine, and sometimes stuffed, and the ears were something of a delicacy - certain more edible than silk purses. Different types of sausage (fresh, semi-cured, cured, like salami), processed meat (mortadella, a type of baloney), not to mention the offal. Bones were fed to the dogs.
These days they talk of the circular economy. In those days, the hog was fed bran from wheat (not a breakfast cereal, which in any case is not an Italian tradition), and all sorts of kitchen scraps were recycled through the hog. My late mother always used to snigger at Kellogs All-Bran flakes, claiming that even her hogs ate better bran.
I once read that American spies were trained to vomit at will, as a way of deterring rough interrogators in case of capture. I could have been such a spy - I learnt the art of purposeful vomiting by being fed blood pudding. Just a thought of the smell, and I could still do it - have not had blood pudding since I was five.
Interesting that with so much use of lard, there was not much arterial disease. Partly because life expectancy was lower, but I think mainly because in a rural setting, everybody did hard manual labour. Next generation (i.e. me) sit for 8+ hours a day, and have to pass on all the good stuff. Rats!.
- roxanne562001
- Registered User
- Posts: 200
- Joined: Sun Jan 24, 2021 12:14 pm
- Has thanked: 179 times
- Been thanked: 90 times
Re: Anyone know what this is?
I saw this on FB today and thought it fit here LOL "MARY HAD A LITTLE LAMB, LITTLE LAMB, UNTIL HER FATHER SHOT IT DEAD: NOW MARY TAKES HER LAMB TO SCHOOL BETWEEN TWO HUNK'S OF BREAD. ( NOW GO BACK AND SING IT )" LMAOROF