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We can tell you, but then we'd have to kill you.
Grebenes is the rendered skin of the chicken, sort of like cracklings. You cut the skin in smallish pieces, put them in a pot, and, over low heat, render out the fat. The skin will crisp up. Drain it on paper towels, and do not share---it's your reward for doing all that work with the chickens! BTW, the rendered fat is useful too, for cooking, or just spreading on bread like butter. When make cracklins the rendered fat of a hog is called lard. When you make grebenes, the rendered fat is called schmaltz. |
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>Good for topping salads, soups, stews....<
I reckon they would be, if they hung around that long. As noted below, I consider grebenes a reward for doing all the work. Selfish of me, I suppose. |
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They use schmalt to make chicken liver spread right? |
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That's correct, Janie.
Just think of lard made from a chicken, and you'll have a fair idea of what it's like. A lower melting point than lard, though, a pale yellow color, rather than white, and can be used as a spread by itself, like butter or marjorin. My mama would saute chopped onions in the schmaltz as part of her method of making chopped liver. The chicken livers, too, would be cooked in it. Then the livers, onions, a hard-boiled egg, would all be finely chopped in a wooden bowl (this by hand, mind you, with a chopper that in many ways resembled an ulu or a single-bladed messaluna). Salt, pepper, maybe a little parsley if some was laying around, and enough more schmaltz to bind it all together. Oh, goodness. Just thinking about my mom's chopped liver, with a slice of tomato on rye. Ummmm, ummmm, ummmm. |