Happy Feet

I ordered a chest freezer, which hasn’t come yet, but in anticipation I made six liters of trotter stock (it’s like Fergus Henderson’s Trotter Gear, but I separate the meat and strain the liquid. I also don’t use Madeira). It’s such a jiggly joy to have on hand, and I always freeze most of it in ice cube trays for convenience; even one cube adds superlative lip-smackery to anything from simple sautéed greens on up.

This batch I made particularly neutral in flavor, since it’s so easy to add custom aromatics on the other end. Carrot, onion, a bit of celery root, and a couple of fennel stalks were it. Oh, and a shake of herbes de Provence, because I think a pinch of dried woody herbs gives such a wonderful note to stock. And it’s hard not to add lavender to pretty much everything. This pot simmered low, with the surface of the liquid undulating gently, for about five hours. The house smelled porky.

Now it’s all socked away in the freezer, waiting to be put into a bag. The new, big freezer will be here soon, I hope; in doing research for an upcoming article I’ve found a bunch of excellent sources for humanely raised, pastured meat in our area and my inner survivalist wants provisions for when the rapture happens.

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8 Comments

  1. mimicooks
    March 20, 2010

    Foot stock! I haven't tried trotters before, but I hear they are tasty.

  2. The Spiteful Chef
    March 21, 2010

    Which freezer did you go with? We're still looking into them and probably won't purchase until we move, but are anxiously awaiting that moment.

  3. Julia
    March 21, 2010

    Everyone I talk to is about to get a chest freezer. Myself included. Jealous!

  4. cookiecrumb
    March 21, 2010

    Yaay, chest freezer! Mine is in the dining room.

    (Kristie: Sears.)

  5. peter
    March 22, 2010

    Mimi: They are, and very gelatinous.

    Kristie: It's a kitchen aid, from Lowe's. If you can, get an energy star; beyond that there's not much difference beyond size.

    Julia: Ours comes tomorrow. I bet you can guess what goes in first.

    CC: I remember that post. We have a storage area in the back of C's Pilates studio, so it won't have to double as furniture.

  6. The Spiteful Chef
    March 23, 2010

    Is it hard to find the energy star? Just curious because of the "if you can."

  7. peter
    March 24, 2010

    Not hard, but there are fewer to choose from and they can cost more.

  8. JonnyS
    March 25, 2010

    i feel like that trotterish gelatinousness could become a go-to in all kinds of things. I'm thinking it'd add beautiful shine and body to all kinds of sauces, maybe being especially useful in creating that classic brightness to good old westernized chinese dishes like chop suey (which i've never made but have a secret hankering for). Not to mention an unbelievable porkiness. Damn you for having a chest freezer. We barely have room for ice trays.
    Jonny (WANF)

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