Raoul's China Saloon (V5.0) Beta
The Bar Room => The Saloon Photo Album => Topic started by: Escaped Lunatic on June 05, 2015, 12:09:57 AM
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Thought I'd share a few of my favorites from my village.
First up: Goose disassembly girls.
(http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n313/escapedlunatic/Village%20Life/GooseDisassembly.jpg)
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Hey girl
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Yum, yum. Get me some duck.
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EL, pardon my ignorance, but why or better still, what are they doing that requires the aprons. What is all the "stuff" on the bench?
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Chinese don't know how to "carve" meat, they hack it into bits with a cleaver. The aprons are to protect their clothes from the splattering. The "slop" on the table next to the cutting board is hard to see in the photo. It is either the meat they have finished chopping, pushed to the side to make way on the board, or refuse bits left over (never actually seen this 100% is served usually even here at home for my fam) from the chopping process.
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Chinese don't know how to "carve" meat, they hack it into bits with a cleaver.
It's the same in Korea. They have absolutely no concept of dis-articulating a bird at the joints - they just hack it up 'willy nilly' with a cleaver. Consequently, there are shards of bone (especially from the hollow, long bones) and you have to be very careful when eating.
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Thanks guys! bfbfbfbfbf EL, doing this "outside" would appear to be a regular thing. Is this for an outside party with several guests?
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It was from a dinner celebrating opening the new meeting/dining hall for my sector of the village. I was taking pics all over the place and wandered out the back door of the kitchen and ran into the girls there.
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Thanks guys! bfbfbfbfbf EL, doing this "outside" would appear to be a regular thing. Is this for an outside party with several guests?
Here at home gramma and grampa make the Chinese meals (I make my own), and always chop the meat up on a board on the floor. Easier to clean the splattering maybe, I am not sure.
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Interesting! I have never heard of a chicken being "chopped" up like that. I'd be terrified of the small slithers of bone getting into my throat and the rest of my digestive system. bibibibibi Perhaps the Asian folk have extra thick/strong skin in their throats? Wait! maybe I've just found the answer to why I can hear them yelling all over "the den". I always thought that they were hard of hearing. ahahahahah ahahahahah
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It's something I've never figured out. I've seen so many Chinese people pop a chunk of meat with razor-sharp bone shards into their mouths. After a few moments, they spit out bones that look almost perfectly clean and swallow the meat. Perhaps there's some well-kept secret about Chinese people we haven't learned yet. xxxxxxxxxx
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It's something you learn as a child, moving the bone around in your mouth with your tongue and pulling the meat off it. You don't think about it and there's no effort involved, it just feels perfectly normal. I was surprised how many foreigners I met here who had trouble with this and so preferred not to have any dishes with bone in them.
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One razor sharp item in a piece of meat is something I can sort of deal with. Trying to eat the equivalent of a whole small sea urchin and spitting out all the spines while not stabbing myself is somewhat beyond my skill level.
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It's something you learn as a child, moving the bone around in your mouth with your tongue and pulling the meat off it. You don't think about it and there's no effort involved, it just feels perfectly normal. I was surprised how many foreigners I met here who had trouble with this and so preferred not to have any dishes with bone in them.
After nearly 8 years I will still actively avoid dishes with bones in them.
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It's something you learn as a child, moving the bone around in your mouth with your tongue and pulling the meat off it.
Stil, the mind boggles! Perhaps you have just answered another question that an older lady shouldn't ask. afafafafaf uuuuuuuuuu ahahahahah
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Yes Granny, tongue dexterity is a skill best learned young.
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Thanks Stil! bfbfbfbfbf I thought that I was missing something. My tongue is pretty good in the swearing stakes though. ahahahahah
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I've sometimes been accused of being too dumb to come in when its raining. The acquisition of a waterproof camera gives me a new excuse. ahahahahah
(http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n313/escapedlunatic/Village%20Life/BanyanInRain.jpg)
One of the village banyan trees
(http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n313/escapedlunatic/Village%20Life/Waterfall2ndTunnel.jpg)
A waterfall into a pedestrian tunnel. I'm sure this is perfectly normal. ahahahahah
(http://i115.photobucket.com/albums/n313/escapedlunatic/Village%20Life/SidewalkRapids.jpg)
Rapids on the sidewalk.
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Bloody Hell EL! I don't think that I would be going too far in the rain there, unless I got washed away. aqaqaqaqaq
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Chinese don't know how to "carve" meat, they hack it into bits with a cleaver.
It's the same in Korea. They have absolutely no concept of dis-articulating a bird at the joints - they just hack it up 'willy nilly' with a cleaver. Consequently, there are shards of bone (especially from the hollow, long bones) and you have to be very careful when eating.
It is my understanding that poultry is carved, "a la shrapnel" because it better exposes the marrow, hence, providing more flavor. Seems common in asia. Makes me think of roadkill a la Buick Roadmaster.