How do you shred ham hocks?

How do you shred ham hocks?

Remove the ham hock from the water and allow it to cool. Once it is cool enough to touch, pull the meat, which looks just like ham, off of the ham hock. Shred the meat by pulling into smaller pieces, and put it back in the soup pot or store it for another dish.

What can you use collard green stems for?

Collard and kale stems bring a lot of good green flavor to the pot and, unlike the leafy part of the plant, don’t cook down in volume as dramatically….Try them:

  1. Pureed into pesto with walnuts, hard cheese, olive oil and a handful of herbs.
  2. Blended into a smoothie.
  3. Sautéed as a side.
  4. Raw as a snack.
  5. Pickled!

What part of collard greens are edible?

Because the stems are very tough, conventional wisdom dictates that we cook with, and eat, the leaves of Collard Greens and avoid or discard the stems, but the stems can be used like Broccoli stems, by stripping out the ribs before Mincing them pretty fine to make them more palatable and a Good Chew.

Is a ham shank the same as a ham hock?

Ham hocks tend to be bonier and have less meat on them because they come from the area of the leg that is closest to the foot of the pig. Ham shanks, on the other hand, are meatier because they come from the area just below the shoulder or the hip.

What is a ham shank?

+ Larger Image. A processed cut taken from the bottom half of the leg. The shank end contains less fat, is not as meaty as the butt end, but it contains only one leg bone, making it easier to carve. It has a slightly sweeter flavor.

Should you eat the stems of collard greens?

First things first: Kale and collard stems are tough, chewy, and fibrous. While we enjoy the occasional raw collard or kale salad, you should never eat the stems raw. Otherwise, the exteriors will burn before the stems have cooked through, making them both bitter and too tough to chew.

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