|
Title: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 08, 2012, 05:19:47 pm A couple folks asked me to post Sauce Piquant Recipe, so here goes. It serves about 20 to 30 people. If you want to cook less just adjust
the amounts on the ingredients. This is for chicken, but you can use deer, pork, alligator, turtle, etc. Great for sitting around bull chitin with friends while cooking an awesome meal. COMEAUX FAMILY SAUCE PIQUANT RECIPE INGREDIENTS 5 cans of 8 oz. tomato sauce 2 cans of Rotel diced tomatoes with chili pepers 1 6 oz. jar of sliced mushrooms 1 8 oz. jar of sliced olives 2/3 cup of cooking oil 2/3 cup of flour 1 box Swanson's chicken stock 6 large onions , chopped 1 stick of celery chopped fine 2 bell peppers, chopped 1 stick of real butter 6 lbs. boneless chicken, thighs,legs, breast etc. which ever you like 3 lbs. of fresh sausage. deer, pork, just as long as it's fresh sausage and not smoked Use a 10 quart or larger black iron pot or a big Magnalite oval roaster. You can cook it outside on a gas burner or inside on a stove. Just make sure you have a big enough pot. 1. cut chicken or what ever meat into pieces 2. season meat good with what ever seasoning you like 3. brown meat in a little cooking oil 4. remove meat and set aside for now. 5. put a little water in pot and cook fresh sausage just enough so you can slice it up and set aside for now. 6. wash and dry pot good. 7. open up all cans and have ready as needed. 8. make a roux with flour and oil.(add oil to pot, heat oil on med. heat, add flour slowly, a little at a time and DON'T quit stirring until roux is a couple shades darker than peanut butter.) 9. when the roux is done, pour in 2 cans of Rotel and the stick of butter and stir until butter is melted. 10. add the 5 cans of tomato sauce 11. add half cup of Swanson's chicken stock. 12. add the meat and sausage you put aside earlier 13. add chopped onions, celery, and bell pepper 14. add mushrooms and olives 15. cook on low flame for 5 hours with lid on pot. 16. add Swanson's liquid chicken stock as needed 17. stir pot every 5 or 10 minutes Don't add to much liquid chicken stock at one time. You can always add liquid stock but if you add to much it will be too watery. Cook on low enough flame so that it's not boiling but bubbling nicely. 18. cook enough white rice for the amount of folks you're feeding. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: djhogdogger on July 08, 2012, 05:23:57 pm Sounds good to me. Ima have to try it! Thank you for sharing.b ;D Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: ked on July 08, 2012, 05:24:41 pm Thanks :)
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jakes on July 08, 2012, 05:55:46 pm Jimco a good sauce picante is a lost art. I cooked turtle and gator Thursday and Friday using those same basic ingredients. Only difference is I make my own stock with the bones. Turns out looking like this(http://img.tapatalk.com/a6937819-0fff-525a.jpg)
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: halfbreed on July 08, 2012, 06:43:30 pm it's piquant from louisiana not picante from texas lol i got a good recipe for squirrel and armadillo sauce piquant
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 08, 2012, 07:09:01 pm it's piquant from louisiana not picante from texas lol i got a good recipe for squirrel and armadillo sauce piquant I have cooked it for friends from Texas,Ark.,Fla., Miss.,and a few other places and after they eat it they all have the same comment, " You got to give me that recipe " lol. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jakes on July 08, 2012, 07:35:58 pm Never have claimed a spelling bee title and never will haha
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: SCHitemHard on July 08, 2012, 07:42:41 pm mmm im using this one. we have one with squirrel and beef
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: ked on July 08, 2012, 09:00:42 pm Would it be good over noodles instead of rice?
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 08, 2012, 09:10:57 pm Would it be good over noodles instead of rice? It would be great over noodles, I have eaten it over fettuccine or egg noodles.Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: MrsLouisianaHogDog on July 09, 2012, 10:35:00 am Thanks for sharing!!! Gonna try this one this week!
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: bigo on July 14, 2012, 06:24:32 pm I made this recipe today and just got through eating. As Troy would say, Yes indeed, very good.
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: bigo on July 14, 2012, 06:32:09 pm I didn't have any uncooked link sausage, so I used wild hog pan sausage. I seasond the chicken good with cajun seasoning before I browned it and added a little garlic when I put everything together and it didn't need anything else.
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 14, 2012, 08:45:56 pm Glad you enjoyed it bigo. I enjoy sharing cajun recipes with other folks. That same recipe is also great with deer meat.
Title: Re: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: J.Prince on July 14, 2012, 11:12:02 pm Glad you enjoyed it bigo. I enjoy sharing cajun recipes with other folks. That same recipe is also great with deer meat. Do you happen to have a good cabbage rolls recipe you'd care to share? ;D Title: Re: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 15, 2012, 11:32:33 am Glad you enjoyed it bigo. I enjoy sharing cajun recipes with other folks. That same recipe is also great with deer meat. Do you happen to have a good cabbage rolls recipe you'd care to share? ;D Cabbage Rolls Cajun Style Ingredients 1 cabbage, large 1/2 pound ground beef 1/2 pound ground pork 1/2 cup rice, raw 2 small cans tomato sauce 1 can whole tomatoes 1/3 cup lemon juice 1 onion, chopped 2 eggs, beaten 1 can rotel tomatoes 1 bell pepper chopped salt and pepper to taste Directions Boil 3 quarts of water. Add cabbage and simmer 2 to 3 minutes until the leaves pull off. In a large bowl, combine ground meat, rice, onion, bell pepper, eggs, salt, pepper and 1/4 cup water. Mix with a fork until blended. Put one large spoonful of mixture into a cabbage leaf and roll tightly. Place cabbage rolls in a baking dish. Make sauce. In a large bowl, combine tomato sauce, tomatoes, lemon juice, 1/4 cup water, salt and pepper. Pour sauce over cabbage rolls. Cover the dish with aluminum foil and bake in a 350 degree oven for 1 hour. Title: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: J.Prince on July 15, 2012, 12:17:14 pm Glad you enjoyed it bigo. I enjoy sharing cajun recipes with other folks. That same recipe is also great with deer meat. Do you happen to have a good cabbage rolls recipe you'd care to share? ;D Cabbage Rolls Cajun Style Ingredients 1 cabbage, large 1/2 pound ground beef 1/2 pound ground pork 1/2 cup rice, raw 2 small cans tomato sauce 1 can whole tomatoes 1/3 cup lemon juice 1 onion, chopped 2 eggs, beaten 1 can rotel tomatoes 1 bell pepper chopped salt and pepper to taste Directions Boil 3 quarts of water. Add cabbage and simmer 2 to 3 minutes until the leaves pull off. In a large bowl, combine ground meat, rice, onion, bell pepper, eggs, salt, pepper and 1/4 cup water. Mix with a fork until blended. Put one large spoonful of mixture into a cabbage leaf and roll tightly. Place cabbage rolls in a baking dish. Make sauce. In a large bowl, combine tomato sauce, tomatoes, lemon juice, 1/4 cup water, salt and pepper. Pour sauce over cabbage rolls. Cover the dish with aluminum foil and bake in a 350 degree oven for 1 hour. Your the man! Thank you, a friend of mines father is from LA and makes some awesome cabbage rolls but is stingy with the recipe, but yours sounds like it'll come out just about the same. I've got the sauce piquant cooking now, and I'm thinking cabbage rolls for next Sunday. ;D Sent from my DROID X2 using Tapatalk Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: thomas on July 15, 2012, 06:31:12 pm would you happen to have a good boudan recipe?!
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 15, 2012, 09:26:43 pm would you happen to have a good boudan recipe?! Cajun Boudin Recipe yields 40-50 links Ingredients: 10 pounds of pork shoulder, cubed 1 in. 1 1/2 pounds pork liver 4 large onions,peeled and halved 3 cups medium grain rice, raw 3 bunches green onions, tops only,sliced 3 cups reserved stock salt, black pepper, and red pepper to taste 25 feet sausage casing In a large stockpot, place pork shoulder and cover with 6 inches cold water. Bring to a rolling boil then reduce to high simmer. Cook 1 1/2 hours. While meat boils, cook white rice. Add pork liver to stockpot then return to a boil and cook 30 minutes. Remove meat and liver from stock and set aside. In same liquid , cook onions 20 minutes at high simmer. Remove onions, set aside and reserve 3 cups stock. Using a fine grinder plate, grind pork, liver, and onions. Place ground meat and onions in a large mixing bowl. Blend in cooked rice and green onions. Pour in hot stock to achieve desired consistency. Season with salt and pepper. Be careful not to use to much red pepper. Stuff mixture into hog casing, twisting at 6-inch intervals. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: thomas on July 15, 2012, 10:56:17 pm awesome. thank you very much...i can't wait to try it!
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: justincorbell on July 16, 2012, 12:49:03 am Sounds good to me. Ima have to try it! Thank you for sharing.b ;D When you do just try to make sure danielle and I are 2 of the 20-30people needed to eat it all pretty please!!! Sounds delishous! "the sun is shining somewhere in texas" -Jason Boland Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: hogmantx1979 on July 16, 2012, 01:21:43 am Can someone give me the recipe to make enough for 6-8 people? Thanks in advance.
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 16, 2012, 12:03:39 pm Can someone give me the recipe to make enough for 6-8 people? Thanks in advance. Just use half of everything. For the Roux use 1/3 cup of flour and 1/3 cup of oil.Use the swansons chicken stock a little at a time until you get the sauce piquant the consistency you like. You can also cook the large recipe and freeze the leftovers. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: rockingw on July 16, 2012, 05:40:12 pm We made this today at the fire department . It was great. Do you have a good gumbo recipe
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 16, 2012, 07:47:50 pm We made this today at the fire department . It was great. Do you have a good gumbo recipe Chicken And Sausage Gumbo Serves 8-10 people Ingredients: 1 5 lb. chicken cut up 2 lbs. of smoke sausage 1 cup cooking oil 1 1/2 cups flour 2 cups of diced onions 2 cups of diced celery 1 cup diced bell pepper 1/4 cup minced garlic 3 quarts chicken stock 2 cups sliced green onion tops 1/2 cup chopped parsley 2 bay leaves (optional) 1 tbsp of thyme 1 tbsp of basil salt,black pepper and cayenne pepper to taste Louisiana hot sauce or Tabasco to taste cooked white rice Remove as much fat as possible from chicken. Cut smoked sausage into 1/2 inch thick slices and set aside. In a 2 gal. stock pot, heat oil over med.high heat. Whisk in flour, stirring constantly until roux is a couple shades darker than peanut butter. Stir in onions, celery, bell peppers and garlic. Saute' 3-5 minutes or until vegetables are wilted. Blend chicken and sausage into vegetable mixture, and saute' approximately 15 minutes. Add chicken stock, one ladle at a time, stirring constantly. Bring to a rolling boil, reduce to simmer and cook approximately 1 hour. Skim any fat or oil that rises to the top of the pot. Stir in green onions, bay leaves,thyme and basil. Season to taste using salt, black pepper, cayenne pepper, and hot sauce. Cook an additional 1-2 hours, if necessary, until chicken is tender and falling apart. Stir in parsley and add more seasoning if needed. Serve over hot white rice. You might want to boil chicken 1-2 hours before beginning gumbo so you can reserve stock for gumbo. I just use Swanson's chicken stock. My wife always makes a potato salad when she or I cooks a gumbo. We also cook seafood gumbo,duck and oyster gumbo,and shrimp and okra gumbo. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: rockingw on July 16, 2012, 09:46:02 pm Thanks I think we'll try the shrimp and okra
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 16, 2012, 10:06:21 pm Thanks I think we'll try the shrimp and okra just use a seafood stock. You can use a store bought stock or seafood bouillon cubes. you can use 1 lb. store bought packaged cut frozen okra or fresh okra that has been smothered down beforehand. Also add to the above ingredient list 1 1/2 cups of diced tomatoes. Put shrimp in the last 5 minutes. Add okra when you add the green onions,basil, and thyme. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: dub on July 17, 2012, 10:08:36 pm I bet it would make road kill good even if the road kill was not so fresh ;D I bet my neighbors love you when I bust out the cooker for that recipe ;D I think the crazier the Cajun the better the cook'n!
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: bigo on July 18, 2012, 10:05:25 am Thats the whole idea behind Cajun cooking. They say they will eat anything that don't eat them first and with enough tomatoes and spices you can make most anything taste good.
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 18, 2012, 11:57:52 am Thats the whole idea behind Cajun cooking. They say they will eat anything that don't eat them first and with enough tomatoes and spices you can make most anything taste good. You know Cajun is "COOL" and has been for the past 20 years, but let me tell you, I'm 50 years old and it wasn't always like that. When I was a kid growing up we were looked down on, refereed to as dumb cajuns. My dad was a teenager when they moved out of the swampsto civilization and enrolled in school. He was beaten, as were most cajun kids, for speaking french in school. That's all they knew how to speak and the authorities were hell bent on "Americanizing" them even though they were here in Louisiana before the Americans. I am the first in my family since the 1700's when the acadians were expelled from Acadia (present day Nova Scotia), that can not speak fluent french. The eating anything that doesn't eat us first deal, stems from living a subsistence style life for hundreds of years. You either kill it and eat it or go to bed hungry. They took what ever they killed and used what ever seasoning they had and cooked it. Most Cajun recipes evolved over centuries. Cajuns are survivors. When the economy gets bad and you can't buy a job, Cajuns will hit the swamps and thrive. So as descendents of generations of cajuns, we love to cook. We love to cook for others, and we love sharing recipes or anything else for that matter. Another misconception is all cajun food is spicy hot. That's not true. If you like it spicy fine, if not cut back on the spices. It doesn't make it any less Cajun. I have enjoyed sharing a few recipes for those who asked. My wife and mom have plenty of recipes so if your interested just ask. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: bigo on July 18, 2012, 01:13:19 pm I love cajun food and admire how the old timers survived in south La. Some of my folks are from the Big Thicket and had to learn how to get by the same way. There is a whole lot of Spanish influence in both cultures. Not knocking them, I'm a fan.
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 18, 2012, 02:55:15 pm I love cajun food and admire how the old timers survived in south La. Some of my folks are from the Big Thicket and had to learn how to get by the same way. There is a whole lot of Spanish influence in both cultures. Not knocking them, I'm a fan. Oh, I know you're not knocking us bigo, I was bored and just felt like a little history lesson. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: Black Smith on July 19, 2012, 03:12:25 am The key to good cooking is don't cook in a hurry cook with your heart!!!!
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 19, 2012, 04:45:55 am How many of you like Hogs Head Cheese and have you ever made it with some of the wild hogs you've killed?
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: djhogdogger on July 19, 2012, 08:52:25 am Thats the whole idea behind Cajun cooking. They say they will eat anything that don't eat them first and with enough tomatoes and spices you can make most anything taste good. You know Cajun is "COOL" and has been for the past 20 years, but let me tell you, I'm 50 years old and it wasn't always like that. When I was a kid growing up we were looked down on, refereed to as dumb cajuns. My dad was a teenager when they moved out of the swampsto civilization and enrolled in school. He was beaten, as were most cajun kids, for speaking french in school. That's all they knew how to speak and the authorities were hell bent on "Americanizing" them even though they were here in Louisiana before the Americans. I am the first in my family since the 1700's when the acadians were expelled from Acadia (present day Nova Scotia), that can not speak fluent french. The eating anything that doesn't eat us first deal, stems from living a subsistence style life for hundreds of years. You either kill it and eat it or go to bed hungry. They took what ever they killed and used what ever seasoning they had and cooked it. Most Cajun recipes evolved over centuries. Cajuns are survivors. When the economy gets bad and you can't buy a job, Cajuns will hit the swamps and thrive. So as descendents of generations of cajuns, we love to cook. We love to cook for others, and we love sharing recipes or anything else for that matter. Another misconception is all cajun food is spicy hot. That's not true. If you like it spicy fine, if not cut back on the spices. It doesn't make it any less Cajun. I have enjoyed sharing a few recipes for those who asked. My wife and mom have plenty of recipes so if your interested just ask. My daddy told me the same story about them not being allowed to speak french in school. When I was little and stayed at my grandmas house alot, I spoke a little french and had a heavy accent. We moved to Texas when I was in first grade and it didn't take long to forget what little french I knew and for my accent to change. Lol, one of the things that my mother remembers me saying when I was little...... she told me to get my dog out of the house because he stunk and I told her "No momma he don't tink. I done took him a bat." :D Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 19, 2012, 05:00:23 pm Dinah, when I was about 21 my dad sent me to North Carolina to teach some taxidermy courses at a technical college. The first morning
they were about 12 people in the class. The next morning it was standing room only. I couldn't figure out why there was so many more people signed up than the day before. Finally after an hour of answering endless questions, I figured it out. They were wanting to hear me speak. They found my accent and dialect rather amusing. Until then I had never been out of South Louisiana. I didn't think I had an accent lol. ;D I am the same age and went to the same school as Troy Landry on Swamp People. He said he didn't think he had much of an accent either. ;D Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jakes on July 19, 2012, 05:16:09 pm Jimco please share your hog head cheese recipe. I am from southeast Louisiana born and raised but i have always watched my family make it from Boston butt although I have never made an attempt. I would like to atleast try to make it "real" hog head cheese.
Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 19, 2012, 06:36:56 pm Hogs Head Cheese
Ingredients for stock: 1 hog's head, halved 4 pounds Boston butt 4 pig's feet 3 large onions,quartered 4 stalks of celery,quartered 1 head of garlic, halved 2 bay leaves 1 tsp. salt 1 tsp. black pepper Place all ingredients in a large stockpot. Cover ingredients with 6-inches of cold water. Bring to a rolling boil, reduce heat to simmer and cook 2 1/2 hours or until meat is tender and falling from bones. Using a ladle, skim off the foam that rises to the top of the pot during the cooking process. Adjust seasonings with salt and pepper. When meat is tender, remove, strain and reserve poaching liquid. de bone meat and grind using the chili blade of your meat grinder. Set aside. Ingredients for Cheese: 4 packages unflavored gelatin cooked ground pork reserved poaching liquid 2 cups minced onions 2 cups minced celery 2 cups minced bell peppers 1/4 cup minced garlic salt, black pepper and red pepper to taste Louisiana hot sauce to taste 2 cups sliced green onions 1 cup chopped parsley Once the poaching liquid has been strained and allowed to sit for 1-2 hours, oil will form on top. Using a ladle, carefully remove all oil from the surface of the liquid. Dissolve gelatin in 1 cup of cooled poaching liquid. Place the cooked ground pork, onions, celery, bell peppers and garlic in a large pot. Cover ingredients with reserved stock by 1/2 -inch, bring to a rolling boil, reduce to simmer and allow to cook 25-30 minutes. While cooking, add stock to retain volume. Season to taste with salt,black pepper, red pepper and hot sauce. Remove from heat, stir in green onions, parsley, and dissolved gelatin. Allow to cool slightly. Ladle the cheese into five 4" x 9" loaf pans, cover with clear wrap and refrigerate overnight. My dad also makes it with just Boston butts and he also makes it with just turkey, very good either way. Title: Re: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: J.Prince on July 07, 2013, 06:00:24 pm would you happen to have a good boudan recipe?! Cajun Boudin Recipe yields 40-50 links Ingredients: 10 pounds of pork shoulder, cubed 1 in. 1 1/2 pounds pork liver 4 large onions,peeled and halved 3 cups medium grain rice, raw 3 bunches green onions, tops only,sliced 3 cups reserved stock salt, black pepper, and red pepper to taste 25 feet sausage casing In a large stockpot, place pork shoulder and cover with 6 inches cold water. Bring to a rolling boil then reduce to high simmer. Cook 1 1/2 hours. While meat boils, cook white rice. Add pork liver to stockpot then return to a boil and cook 30 minutes. Remove meat and liver from stock and set aside. In same liquid , cook onions 20 minutes at high simmer. Remove onions, set aside and reserve 3 cups stock. Using a fine grinder plate, grind pork, liver, and onions. Place ground meat and onions in a large mixing bowl. Blend in cooked rice and green onions. Pour in hot stock to achieve desired consistency. Season with salt and pepper. Be careful not to use to much red pepper. Stuff mixture into hog casing, twisting at 6-inch intervals. I got a new grinder/stuffer this weekend, and tried out the boudin. It was pretty good, the taste was great but, I ground up the meat a little to much, so it was a little mooshy. But lesson learned it'll be good next time. (http://img.tapatalk.com/d/13/07/08/su2e6a2u.jpg) Title: Re: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 07, 2013, 09:42:35 pm would you happen to have a good boudan recipe?! Cajun Boudin Recipe yields 40-50 links Ingredients: 10 pounds of pork shoulder, cubed 1 in. 1 1/2 pounds pork liver 4 large onions,peeled and halved 3 cups medium grain rice, raw 3 bunches green onions, tops only,sliced 3 cups reserved stock salt, black pepper, and red pepper to taste 25 feet sausage casing In a large stockpot, place pork shoulder and cover with 6 inches cold water. Bring to a rolling boil then reduce to high simmer. Cook 1 1/2 hours. While meat boils, cook white rice. Add pork liver to stockpot then return to a boil and cook 30 minutes. Remove meat and liver from stock and set aside. In same liquid , cook onions 20 minutes at high simmer. Remove onions, set aside and reserve 3 cups stock. Using a fine grinder plate, grind pork, liver, and onions. Place ground meat and onions in a large mixing bowl. Blend in cooked rice and green onions. Pour in hot stock to achieve desired consistency. Season with salt and pepper. Be careful not to use to much red pepper. Stuff mixture into hog casing, twisting at 6-inch intervals. I got a new grinder/stuffer this weekend, and tried out the boudin. It was pretty good, the taste was great but, I ground up the meat a little to much, so it was a little mooshy. But lesson learned it'll be good next time. (http://img.tapatalk.com/d/13/07/08/su2e6a2u.jpg) Looks good J.Prince. When you cook it it should firm up a little, the more you make it the better it will turn out. Title: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: J.Prince on July 08, 2013, 09:14:13 am Yeah I figure after a few times I'll get it down. I had my fire to hot and popped a few lol but overall I was pleased with my first go at it. Do you ever freeze them after you make them, and cook them later? Just wondering if they still come out good.
Title: Re: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: jimco on July 08, 2013, 12:03:32 pm Yeah I figure after a few times I'll get it down. I had my fire to hot and popped a few lol but overall I was pleased with my first go at it. Do you ever freeze them after you make them, and cook them later? Just wondering if they still come out good. Sure you can freeze them. I let them defrost, I put a little water in a rice cooker and steam them in the rice cooker until they are hot. You can also pop them in the microwave. Just let them defrost on their own, dont soak them in water or defrost them in microwave. Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: Monteria on July 08, 2013, 08:03:05 pm YUMmmmmmI I made about 50LB of wild hog Boudin last Saturday. I have probably eaten 6 to 8 pounds of it already, and just heated up two more 11" links for dinner.
I had planned to make a batch of Hot Italian sausage next Saturday, But now you have me hungry for wild hog Sauce Piquant and Head Cheese... Steve Title: Re: Sauce Piquant Recipe Post by: dub on July 08, 2013, 10:18:46 pm My mother in law that sure hates me refused to let her children speak with Texas accent. Now my wife stands out because she don't speak Texan. I refuse to say some words properly. My mother in law corrected me early on and I just looked her in the eye and told her I was a Texan and my relatives were here before it was Texas. She said she was a Texan and I told her she sure did not sound like one. She ain't brought it up again ;D I think people should be proud of who they are. All people not just some.
|