Fresh Eyes: Jellied Moose Nose
Lara Wisniewski | Thursday Feb. 27th, 2014
Montana’s homesteading women of 1834 were not thinking about rice noodles. Their kitchens were determined by whatever they or their husbands brought home from the hunt. Hence, Jellied Moose Nose has an honest place in the history of Montana cuisine. If you could kill a moose, its nose was yours for the jellying. The recipe forewarns the cook to pull all the hairs out after scalding the nose in boiling water. Compared to other historical regional recipes, Jellied Moose Nose is inventive, chilled in its own broth to a jellied delight and finished by cutting it into thin slices. The author promises, “…it ain’t bad either, and you can use a buffalo nose instead of moose.”
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