The tendons of certain animals are used as an ingredient in some Asian cuisines, including the Filipino, Chinese, Japanese, Korean, Indonesian, Thai, Laotian, Cambodian and Vietnamese traditions. Tendon is tough and fibrous, but becomes soft after a long period of cooking. In some cases it may be boiled for as long as eight hours, while in other dishes it is prepared by deep frying. It contains large amounts of collagen, and after boiling or stewing, it is sometimes described as mimicking the mouthfeel of high-fat cuts of beef despite its low fat content. One author described the taste of deep-fried tendon as being similar to chicharrón .
Beef tendon
Connective tissues of animals
Also known as:
English:
Tendon (beef)
Wikidata ID:
Q7699650
Wikipedia title:
Tendon as food
References:
Article content licensed under CC-BY-SA; original content from Wikimedia Foundation
ID: 16497