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chitoryu12 posted:I've only had coq a vin once, at Balthazar in NYC. It was absolutely delicious and even had a distinctive red wine taste to the chicken. you have poule a vin, then try to avoid eating old male animals with their balls in general
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 04:46 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 14:41 |
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/\/\/\ Reading that (after I posted the below) I'm immediately suggesting a new entry: Prairie Oyster. But this might count as a hint. Sorry.bob dobbs is dead posted:coq a vin is disgusting because it's made with roosters. the cook time is designed to make it edible, but it's still pretty disgusting Once I had what I *think* was old chicken. Probably still a hen, but about 5 years ago my GF was given two more-than-a-quarter chicken pieces (two separate birds, more than half of the breast plus all of one leg) by friends of hers on their way through town - they're farmers and I've met their flock. We left them in the freezer for a few months then got drunk and decided to cook them. They were delicious, with actual flavour instead of the absorb-anything-else-in-range tabula rasa of grocery-store chicken. They were also tougher, but not in a bad way. I had to work at eating these birds, but it was enjoyable work, not like weird low-grade meat or some error in processing, just chicken made of MEAT instead of being made of, uh, what I've come to expect from chickens. Those people and their farm are about 2000 km away from me and they have no plans to head out this way anytime (ever) so I went with what I could get. \/\/\/ Sounds like a challenge to me. Where can I buy a dead rooster? ExecuDork fucked around with this message at 05:24 on Jan 15, 2018 |
# ? Jan 15, 2018 05:20 |
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the most important part of the disgustingness of coq a vin is the coq roosters are disgusting to eat this is why we don't eat them anymore hens are fine
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 05:23 |
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Roosters are just fine in my experience. That being said that experience is homegrown birds where the pressure cooker is your friend regardless of bird gender.
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 05:35 |
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I’d get angry that nobody in this thread knows how to spell coq au vin but I guess it’s thematically appropriate
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 10:04 |
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Are you talking about the cocoa van?
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 17:05 |
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ExecuDork posted:\/\/\/ Sounds like a challenge to me. Where can I buy a dead rooster? you can buy capon meat online the problem with the capon is it's got its balls cut off, so the thing i said about it being awful is not true. rooster is w/ balls http://www.dartagnan.com/capon-whole/product/FCAPO002-1.html you will prolly have to buy an adult rooster and kill it, because they don't sell rooster-with-balls meat fryer chickens are 7 weeks. chickens are not roosters before 1 year old. most of the roosters eaten in working farms would be >3 years old, maybe >5 years bob dobbs is dead fucked around with this message at 17:14 on Jan 15, 2018 |
# ? Jan 15, 2018 17:10 |
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A friend who had some backyard hens and wanted to hatch some chicks borrowed a rooster from another "urban farmer" for some chicken sexytimes. The rooster's name was Mr. Pot Pie as that was his intended fate. Guessing that would have been a really nasty chicken pot pie, then? Also, chicken people are weird.
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 17:16 |
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awfulness is in the gaminess. also the stringiness. the wine is also there in the stew to disguise the taste. pot pie would prolly work, if you do something else for flavoring and the rooster is there for meatiness, and you butcher against the grain properly
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# ? Jan 15, 2018 17:20 |
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Discussion Quorum posted:A friend who had some backyard hens and wanted to hatch some chicks borrowed a rooster from another "urban farmer" for some chicken sexytimes. The rooster's name was Mr. Pot Pie as that was his intended fate. We called ours Pot Roast. I used to tell him he was going to be delicious, apparently I was wrong. He's dead now so it doesn't matter. One of the chicks was named Quarterpack, we had a trio named K, F, and C, any male lambs are named F1, F3 etc for Freezer. It's a farmer thing.
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# ? Jan 16, 2018 06:52 |
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left_unattended posted:We called ours Pot Roast. I used to tell him he was going to be delicious, apparently I was wrong. He's dead now so it doesn't matter. Aunt had a cow named Stu
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# ? Jan 16, 2018 09:06 |
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bob dobbs is dead posted:[Fat Gravy] Awesome entry, thanks! When I saw the pork I was thinking "they're gonna nail it", but didn't quite end up like that. Fat gravy/sauce (läskisoosi) is basically a pork sauce made with fatty pork belly (I think?) and onions. It's thickened with wheat flour and seasoned with salt and a small amount of black pepper. Maybe some allspice or bayleaf, if you're feeling brave. (Finns have traditionally used very little spices.) Serve with potatoes, pickles and lingonberries with a touch of sugar. Something like this: Neofelis posted:[Tiger Skin Bell Pepper] And so I did! Tiger Skin Bell Pepper sounds like a striped, stuffed bell pepper, so that's what I wanted to make. I thought I'd cut some stripes to the bell peppers, so after I roast them in the oven I can just peel of parts and make it look like a tiger! Roasting! Meanwhile, for the stuffing, I cut down my last chili. (Time to plant this year's lot later this week!) Besides that, I added some onion, garlic, cashew nuts and carrot, and fried them a bit. Added cooked rice on the pan with a couple of teaspoons of soy sauce and one teaspoon of sesame oil. When the bell peppers were nearly done, I also added spring onions. (Could've had a higher veggies-to-rice ratio, but this was fine too since there's a lot of bell pepper.) Unfortunately the bell peppers were already all soft and squished under their own weight, so I didn't even try to get them any blacker than this. Trying to peel off every other sliced piece of skin seemed like too much compared to the usefulness, so I decided against it after a couple of bits. The end result. The bell peppers were already a bit too soft and sweet, so stuffing didn't work as well as I'd hoped. At least the taste was good and I think I'll do a similar dish in the future without pre-roasting or striping the bell peppers, just putting them in the oven with the stuffing for 10-15 minutes.
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# ? Jan 16, 2018 21:17 |
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Leopard skin bell pepper
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# ? Jan 17, 2018 07:55 |
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bob dobbs is dead posted:coq a vin is disgusting What a fantastically crazy thing to say
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# ? Jan 18, 2018 21:50 |
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Are you still taking suggestions? I'd like to see what comes out of "bread and butter pudding".
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# ? Jan 20, 2018 17:32 |
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Scientastic posted:What a fantastically crazy thing to say have you had it with a 5 year rooster with its balls still in?
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 03:35 |
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Not yet. I really want to, though. I know of a small farm that sells various somewhat exotic eggs through Kijiji, that's very close to my family's vacation property in eastern Ontario. I searched for turkey eggs a few months ago and this place popped up. I haven't been there yet, but when I do I will ask about a rooster - if they won't sell me one, I bet they can suggest a neighbour who will. Some rooster is going to its doom, but not soon. Speaking of roosters and their doom, does anybody know Doom Rooster, the OP of this thread, in real life? Or on some other forum? He hasn't posted here since January 4th, and his last post on SA was in a TVIV thread on January 13th. I got that information from his post history, I'm not stalking anybody or trying to doxx anyone. In the meantime, instead of arguing about french cuisine, can somebody step up and make something ridiculous for our entertainment, please?
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 07:16 |
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Calm down, it's not unusual for people to disappear for a few weeks when their life gets busy.
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 10:23 |
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I am still planning on doing the nun farts, but life has gotten dramatically busy lately.
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 11:46 |
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My awesome wife who knows what most of the things in this thread are already suggests the following regional cuisines: Cockaleekie Pie Potato Candy
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 19:57 |
I'm in an awkward position of trying to find out if it's possible to use potatoes as a starch for candy and only pulling up assorted potato candy recipes.
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 20:16 |
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So, we are apparently worried Doom Rooster ended up in an OP au vin?
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# ? Jan 21, 2018 21:03 |
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I wish I could afford to gently caress around with food, some of these names sound great as blind starting points (and I actually have an idea for how to handle “””””pigeons”””””). So instead have a name offering: syrup waffles. Not waffles with syrup, syrup waffles.
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 01:20 |
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ExecuDork posted:Not yet. I really want to, though. Chill, it's been two weeks. People have lives outside of the Internet. In Sonofabitch Sauce news, the sour smell of fermentation has faded out, and left it with peppers and -heat-. Two more weeks or so left to ferment, and I can tell already this is going to kick my rear end. Liquid Communism fucked around with this message at 01:58 on Jan 22, 2018 |
# ? Jan 22, 2018 01:56 |
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bob dobbs is dead posted:the most important part of the disgustingness of coq a vin is the coq Roosters are just as fine as hens if you slaughter them at the same age. Meat birds you get at the grocery store are either sex and usually slaughtered at 6 weeks or so. Give them 12 weeks and let them run around outside and you'll get that "farm flavour" and they'll both taste delicious. Eat a five year old laying hen and you'll find it just as tough and unappetizing as that five year old rooster that can't perform any more. It's the age, not the balls. Like Clockwork posted:I wish I could afford to gently caress around with food, some of these names sound great as blind starting points (and I actually have an idea for how to handle “””””pigeons”””””). So instead have a name offering: syrup waffles. Not waffles with syrup, syrup waffles. I already know what these are, but I hope someone who doesn't attempts it.
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 01:59 |
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Liquid Communism posted:Chill, it's been two weeks. People have lives outside of the Internet. I want this in my belly, I think.
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 02:58 |
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Like Clockwork posted:I wish I could afford to gently caress around with food, some of these names sound great as blind starting points (and I actually have an idea for how to handle “””””pigeons”””””). So instead have a name offering: syrup waffles. Not waffles with syrup, syrup waffles. Ooh this reminds me. When I was in China I was given a dish they called "sweet potatoes". Here's your only hint: no yams were involved. Once I have some more of my kitchen unpacked I'm going to take on some of these, but right now I don't even have any pans or knives.
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 09:25 |
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ExecuDork posted:Funeral Potatoes
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 09:59 |
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SubponticatePoster posted:In these parts, it's a Mormon thing. \/\/\/ Hurray! ExecuDork fucked around with this message at 16:04 on Jan 22, 2018 |
# ? Jan 22, 2018 15:54 |
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Hey all, appreciate the concern. I'm still alive and pecking. Life did indeed get crazy. My wedding is in 12 days, then honeymoon trip to India two weeks later. Will try to get another entry knocked out before then. I'll also go through the thread and update posted creations and suggestions tonight or tomorrow. In the meantime though, I have knocked out a couple. I first tackled "Green Broth". I was thinking about what else has "green" in the name that would be converted into a broth. Green curry was the obvious choice, so I made a green Thai curry broth with cilantro oil. Added a little spinach for color. I blanched all of the green stuff first to bring out the bright green color, and kept the temps under 150 after that to keep the color. It was a beautiful, vibrant green for about 10 minutes... I am betting that the acidity from the lime juice is what caused the browning. Should have saved the lime for individual servings at the table. Overall though, really loving good. Served with some sous vide tilapia (lime zest and lemon grass) and rice noodles. Bunny chow! Bunny chow was super easy. I already knew what bunnies eat, so I chopped some lettuce and grated some carrots. Done! That was loving boring though. Why would anyone eat this? Maybe it was supposed to be chow, made out of bunnies...? Roasted it about an inch over coals, rubbed with garlic, rosemary, salt, pepper and olive oil. Cavity stuffed with more rosemary, garlic and lemon zest. This was actually delicious. Rabbit really does taste like chicken. Nearly indistinguishable. Glad it costs three times as much!
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 15:57 |
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Yes yes! How'd the wabbit turn out texture/toughness-wise?
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 18:44 |
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Doom Rooster posted:Hey all, appreciate the concern. I'm still alive and pecking. Life did indeed get crazy. My wedding is in 12 days, then honeymoon trip to India two weeks later. Will try to get another entry knocked out before then. I'll also go through the thread and update posted creations and suggestions tonight or tomorrow. lol, this shitpostin thread is less important than your wedding, i say as someone who's spent like $100 on food for this shitpostin thread go forth get married have fun
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 18:51 |
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Ranter posted:Yes yes! It was great actually. I concentrated coals under the shoulder joints to help cook evenly. I took it up to 145 before letting it rest in a warm oven. Was super juicy, firm but still tender. Exactly like a perfectly cooked chicken breast. The legs were a LITTLE bit interesting. They have a texture that has the same grain as chicken thigh, but the meat is still super white, and the chew is like a chicken breast. If it were not $10.99/lb, while the local organic happy free-roaming chicken I get is $4.99, I would get rabbit again. bob dobbs is dead posted:lol, this shitpostin thread is less important than your wedding, i say as someone who's spent like $100 on food for this shitpostin thread Appreciate the support! Cooking is fun and relieves stress for me though, so might have some direction, and take some pictures of it. Will definitely not be breaking my back trying to get posts up though.
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 19:10 |
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Doom Rooster posted:I first tackled "Green Broth". I was thinking about what else has "green" in the name that would be converted into a broth. Green curry was the obvious choice, so I made a green Thai curry broth with cilantro oil. Added a little spinach for color. I blanched all of the green stuff first to bring out the bright green color, and kept the temps under 150 after that to keep the color. It was a beautiful, vibrant green for about 10 minutes... I am betting that the acidity from the lime juice is what caused the browning. Should have saved the lime for individual servings at the table. That looks great! Would eat your green broth that is not green broth. Green Broth, aka Caldo Verde is a very tasty and hearty Portuguese potato, linguica and kale/collard green soup; the latter of which is responsible for the green aspect. All told, it is not a particularly green soup, but let's face it, I'm willing to bet Nun Farts contains no actual farts from nuns, so there.
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 19:31 |
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bob dobbs is dead posted:lol, this shitpostin thread is less important than your wedding, i say as someone who's spent like $100 on food for this shitpostin thread Seconded. Though my spending hasn't reached $100 (yet)
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 19:46 |
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cigaw posted:That looks great! Would eat your green broth that is not green broth. Would on both. Heya, Doom. Congrats on the impending nuptials! Waiting for the next gang tag! Go, have fun, and enjoy what can be the happiest week of your life!
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 19:59 |
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e: quote is not edit
pidan fucked around with this message at 21:29 on Jan 22, 2018 |
# ? Jan 22, 2018 21:26 |
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Neofelis posted:The end result. You were definitely on the right track. Tiger Skin Bell Pepper (actually "green pepper", but I wanted to be clear that it's the vegetable and not the spice) is a Chinese dish that is made up of green peppers that are fried dry so they get a glassy, browned texture. Then they're served in a dark vinegary sauce. They look like this: Here's a Chinese video showing how to make them: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=49jkKRNynYw People on the internet seem to also make a variant where the peppers are filled with mince meat, but I've never seen that IRL
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# ? Jan 22, 2018 21:29 |
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Ooh I have another one: Eton mess.
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# ? Jan 23, 2018 15:02 |
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# ? May 28, 2024 14:41 |
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Burgoo For tonight's special PDP-1 kitchens will proudly be serving Burgoo. What is Burgoo you ask? The etymology of the name is revealed by simply breaking it into syllables: burg refers to a burger aka hamburger, and goo rhymes with roux which suggests that it's some type of sauce base. It's a hamburger sauce! Yum! But what kind of sauce is it exactly? The only demographic I can think of who would intentionally eat something marketed as 'goo' would be lunkheads who crave convenience, cheapness, and instant gratification over anything that requires patience or effort. Someone who really wants to have a burger, fries, and shake for every meal but can't be arsed to actually prepare three whole separate things. Someone who can't even stand the hassle of topping a hamburger with individual portions of mustard, ketchup, cheese, pickles, and onions. Give us convenience or give us death! Burgoo must be a singular topping that replicates the entire taste palette of drinking a blenderized McDonald's happy meal through a straw. Just microwave some prepared burger patties, squirt on some Bergoo sauce and enjoy! With that introduction, set your appetites high and your brows low and let's make some fukkin Bergoo! Step 0: OK, the first step in successful cooking is to get your ingredients ready or as the French say "mice on plates". For our 'fries' we have some instant mashed potato flakes, our burger toppings include tomato paste for ketchup, mustard for mustard, capers for the pickles, diced onions and mushrooms, grated cheese and some buns. Our milkshake is represented by some unshook milk because shaking milk smacks of effort which is very against the Burgoo convenience ethos. Oh yeah, we also got some burger meats, seasoned to taste. Step 1: Fry up dem burgers! We're gonna use our shittiest non-stick skillet here as any effort spent on cleaning anything violates the Bergoo omerta code, also we definitely don't want to fire up the grill because we need to capture all that rendered fat for step two. Step 2: Take the burgers out of the pan and let them rest. Divide the fat into two portions, use one third to fry up your mushrooms and onions and the other two thirds to fry up some instant potato flakes until the veggies have sweated out and the potatoes are a golden french-fry brown. Step 3: Add in some milk until you get a thick sauce, then tomato paste, mustard, and capers. Stir and simmer on low heat until it combines smoothly and then add in the grated cheese. Step 4: Serve! Toast up some buns, slather generously with Bergoo brand unified hamburger sauce, and slap a piece of meat inside. Since the Bergoo sauce already contains all of our side dish flavors we're done! A brown patty, served in brown sauce on a brown bun, how delightful! Visually appealing food is for try-hard assholes. The Verdict: Bergoo is loving awful. To be charitable it was easy and the whole 'entire meal in one sauce' thing did kinda work in that it actually tasted like french fries with condiments on a burger. I will also admit that as a first time Bergoo cook I may have overdone the amount of fried potato flakes in proportion to the other condiments. But overall it was a weird mush of clashing tastes and while I did finish the first burger topped with Burgoo I didn't want a second one. There's a reason nobody has ever heard of Bergoo and that reason is that it's pretty goddamn bad.
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# ? Jan 24, 2018 06:53 |