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Navy Beans and Cornbread
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<blockquote data-quote="Bright Raven" data-source="post: 1456238" data-attributes="member: 27490"><p><strong>Ask a native Cincinnatian what a 'cottage ham' is and they'll be quick to answer. It's the delicious 3 pound heart-shaped cured ham their mom used to boil slowly with bay leaves and onion and serve with boiled potatoes and green beans. They might even recognize it as a 'cottage roll.' But go only 40 miles out of the city and ask a butcher for a cottage ham and they'll say, "Huh?"</strong></p><p><strong></strong></p><p><strong>That's because cottage ham is a Cincinnati meat term that's been used by our local butchers for at least the last 100 years. But no one outside our metro area seems to know the term. Cottage ham is actually not a ham at all, by the definition, which states that ham is taken from the upper part of the pig's hind leg. The USDA actually calls what we call cottage ham "smoked pork shoulder butts,"</strong></p><p></p><p>Actually, they have them at Kroger in Maysville. Called "Bluegrass Cottage Ham". No one anywhere else I have lived knew what they were.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Bright Raven, post: 1456238, member: 27490"] [b]Ask a native Cincinnatian what a ‘cottage ham’ is and they’ll be quick to answer. It’s the delicious 3 pound heart-shaped cured ham their mom used to boil slowly with bay leaves and onion and serve with boiled potatoes and green beans. They might even recognize it as a ‘cottage roll.’ But go only 40 miles out of the city and ask a butcher for a cottage ham and they’ll say, “Huh?” That’s because cottage ham is a Cincinnati meat term that’s been used by our local butchers for at least the last 100 years. But no one outside our metro area seems to know the term. Cottage ham is actually not a ham at all, by the definition, which states that ham is taken from the upper part of the pig’s hind leg. The USDA actually calls what we call cottage ham “smoked pork shoulder butts,”[/b] Actually, they have them at Kroger in Maysville. Called "Bluegrass Cottage Ham". No one anywhere else I have lived knew what they were. [/QUOTE]
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