Share on Facebook Share on Twitter Email
Answers.com

tripe

 
(trīp) pronunciation
n.
  1. The rubbery lining of the stomach of cattle or other ruminants, used as food.
  2. Informal. Something of no value; rubbish.

[Middle English, from Old French tripes, intestines, tripe.]


Search unanswered questions...
Enter a question here...
Search: All sources Community Q&A Reference topics
paunch

paunch

Dishes using the stomach lining of beef, sheep and calf. There are 3 kinds of tripe, all with tough flesh that require long cooking times.
Honeycomb tripe is favored for its tender meat and subtle flavor. Pocket tripe is shaped like a pocket. Plain or smooth tripe has a smooth texture on both sides. It is the least desirable of the 3 varieties.

Buying

Choose: tripe that is white or cream-yellow in color with a good smell.

Tripe is often sold blanched.

Preparing

Before cooking tripe, soak it in cold water (10 min), rinse, brush to remove the fat and slice.

Serving Ideas

Tripe can be accompanied by potatoes; it is cooked with beef, pig or calf trotters, pig's head, pork fat, vegetables, wine, cream and seasonings. The most common tripe dish is tripe à la mode de Caen (stewed in cider with vegetables, garlic and herbs). Trippa alla romana, or tripe roman style, involves stewing the tripe with wine, tomato sauce, pecorino romano cheese and fresh mint.

Gras-double (scalded pieces of beef paunch cooked in water) is marinated before being grilled or fried; they are also served as a stew, a gratin or braised (20 hr).

Storing

In the fridge: 1-2 days.

In the freezer: 3-4 months.

Cooking


Poached (1-2 hr), then sautéed or fried (10 min). 


Blanched (15 min), then braised (3-4 hr).

Nutritional Information

raw beef 
tripe
protein15 g
fat4 g
cholesterol95 mg
calories98
per 3.5 oz/100 g
Excellent source: vitamin B12 and zinc.



Browse other variety meats: Introduction | Heart | Liver | Sweetbreads | Tongue | Brains | Kidneys | Tripe

Browse other foods: Vegetables | Legumes | Fruits | Nuts and Seeds | Seaweeds | Mushrooms | Cereals and Grains | Fish | Crustaceans | Mollusks | Herbs, Spices and Seasonings | Meats | Variety Meats | Delicatessen Meats | Poultry | Dairy Products | Sugars, Cocoa and Carob | Fats and Oils | Binders and Leavenings | Coffee, Tea and Herbal Teas

Lining of the first three stomachs of ruminants, usually calf or ox. Sold ‘dressed’, i.e. cleaned and treated with lime. According to the part of the stomach there are various kinds, such as blanket, honeycomb, book, monk's hood, and reed tripe. Contains a large amount of connective tissue which forms gelatine on boiling. A 150-g portion is a good source of calcium; a source of protein, niacin, iron, zinc, and copper; contains 7 g of fat, of which one-fifth is saturated; supplies 150 kcal (630 kJ).

The tripe found in most markets today is the lining of beef stomach, though that from pork and sheep also fall under the definition. There are two beef stomach chambers and three kinds of tripe, all of which are tough and require long cooking. The best tripe, from the second stomach chamber, is called honeycomb tripe because the inner side has a pattern similiar to a honeycomb. It's the most tender and subtly flavored. Pocket tripe is cut from the end of the second stomach chamber. It's shaped like a pocket with the inside also being honeycombed. The least desirable plain or smooth tripe (with a smooth texture on both sides) comes from the first stomach. Tripe is available fresh (which is actually partially cooked by the packer) in most supermarkets. Choose tripe with a pale off-white color and store for up to a day in the refrigerator. Tripe is also available pickled and canned. The most famous French dish using this variety meat is the Norman dish called tripes à la mode de Caen-tripe braised with carrots, onions and cider. In Spanish-speaking countries, menudo (tripe soup) is a well-known favorite. See also variety meats.


1. n. nonsense.  That's just tripe. Pay no attention.
2. n. a bad performance; something worthless.  I know tripe when I see tripe, and that was tripe.

noun
noun

1:
Something of inferior quality. (1902 —) .
W. H. Canaway The group of girls who were watching some tripe on television (1973).

2:
Nonsense. (1935 —) .
Church Times Bomber Harris, who initially said, 'The idea is tripe', could be said to have been proved right (1993).

[From earlier sense, stomach tissue used as food.]


Previous:trip, trim, trigger man
Next:tripe-hound, triple-A, tripped-out

The scalded and cleaned rumen and reticulum. The omasum is discarded because of the difficulty in cleaning between the leaves.

Random House Word Menu:

categories related to 'tripe'

Top
Random House Word Menu by Stephen Glazier
For a list of words related to tripe, see:

  See crossword solutions for the clue Tripe.
Tripe in an Italian market

Tripe (from French tripe which is from Italian trippa) is a type of edible offal from the stomachs of various farm animals.[1][2]

Contents

Description

Beef tripe

Beef tripe is usually made from only the first three chambers of a cow's stomach: the rumen (blanket/flat/smooth tripe), the reticulum (honeycomb and pocket tripe), and the omasum (book/bible/leaf tripe). Abomasum (reed) tripe is seen much less frequently, owing to its glandular tissue content.

Other animals

Tripe is also produced from any animal.

Unwashed tripe

Unwashed (or "green") tripe includes some of the stomach's last content, giving it an unpleasant odor and causing it to be considered unfit for human consumption. However, this content is desirable to dogs and many other carnivores and is often used in pet food.[3] Though it is called "green" because it has a high chlorophyll content, in reality it is often greyish brown as a result of other undigested compounds.

For human consumption, tripe must be washed and meticulously cleaned. It is ideal to boil it for two or three hours in water with salt (1 tablespoon per litre of water) to soften it and also clean it in the process.

Dishes prepared with tripe

Trippa alla Romana
Trippa alla livornese
Steamed tripe prepared as dim sum

Tripe is eaten in many parts of the world. Tripe dishes include:

  • AndouilleFrench poached, boiled and smoked cold tripe sausage
  • Andouillette — French grilling sausage including beef tripe and pork
  • Babat — Indonesian spicy beef tripe dish
  • TQalliaMoroccan spiced, seasoned in a sauce with vegetables and served on cous-cous
  • Breakfast Sausages — Most commercially produced sausages in the United States contain pork and beef tripe as filler
  • Bumbar — A Bosnian prepared dish where the tripe is stuffed with other cow parts.
  • ButifarraCatalonian sausage
  • CallosSpanish/Filipino tripe dish cooked with chickpea, chorizo and paprika.
  • ChaknaIndian spicy stew of goat tripe and other animal parts
  • Ciorbă de burtă — Romanian special soup with cream and garlic
  • DobradaPortuguese tripe dish usually served with white butterbeans and chouriço
  • Dršťkovka (dršťková polévka) — Czech goulash-like tripe soup
  • "fa9ulia bil karsha" in Libya,kidney bean soup with tripe.it is a typical Libyan dish.
  • DržkováSlovak tripe soup (Držková polievka)
  • Dulot or Dulet - Eritrean and Ethiopian tripe and entrail stir-fry, containing finely chopped tripe, liver and ground beef, lamb or goat fried in clarified and spiced butter, with garlic, parsley and berbere.
  • Ebyenda or Byenda — word for tripe in some Bantu languages of Uganda. Tripe may be stewed, but is especially popular when cooked with matooke as a breakfast dish.
  • Fileki or špek-filekiCroatian tripe soup.
  • FlakiPolish soup, with marjoram
  • Fuqi feipian or 夫妻肺片— spicy and "numbing" (麻) Chinese cold dish made from various types of beef offal, nowadays mainly thinly sliced tendon, tripe and sometimes tongue
  • Guatitas - Ecuadorian and Chilean tripe stew, often served with peanut sauce
  • Guru (food)Zimbabwean name for tripe. Normally eaten as relish with Sadza.
  • HaggisScottish traditional dish made of a sheep's stomach stuffed with oatmeal and the minced heart, liver and lungs of a sheep. The stomach is used only as a vessel for the stuffing and is not eaten.
  • İşkembe çorbasıTurkish tripe soup with garlic, lemon and spices
  • Kare-kare — Filipino oxtail-peanut stew which may include tripe
  • Khash — In Armenia the widely popular winter soup is made of boiled beef tendon and honeycomb tripe and served with lots of garlic and lavash bread.
  • KistaAssyrian Cooked traditionlly in a stew and stuffed with soft rice. This dish is part of a major dish known as 'Pacha' in Assyrian. 'Pacha' is also the Persian word for the feet of hooved animals but not the hoof itself. 'Pa' is Persian for 'leg' or 'foot'. The suffix 'cha' or 'cheh' refers to something small.
  • LampredottoFlorentine abomasum-tripe dish, often eaten in sandwiches with green sauce and hot sauce.
  • Mala MogoduSouth African Cuisine - popular tripe dish, often eaten at dinner time as a stew with hot pap.
  • MatumboKenyan Cuisine - tripe dish, often eaten as a stew with various accompaniments.
  • Menudo — Mexican tripe and hominy stew
  • MondongoLatin American and Caribbean tripe, vegetable and herb soup
  • MotsuJapanese tripe served either simmered or in Nabemono
  • Pacal or PacalpörköltHungarian spicy meal made of tripe, similar to pörkölt
  • pachaIraqi, tripe stuffed with spiced rice
  • Pancitas — Mexican stew similar to Menudo but made with sheep stomach
  • Patsás (Greek πατσάς) — Greek, similar to Turkish İşkembe
  • Philadelphia Pepper Pot SoupAmerican (Pennsylvania) tripe soup with peppercorns
  • PhởVietnamese noodle soup with many regional variations, some of which include tripe
  • Pickled tripe — Pickled white honeycomb tripe once common in the Northeastern United States.
  • Potted Meat
  • Saki or Shaki — word for tripe in the Yoruba language of Nigeria. Shaki is often included in various stews, along with other meats.
  • Saure Kutteln — from south Germany, made with beef tripe and vinegar or wine
  • Shkembe (Shkembe Chorba) (Шкембе чорба / Чкембе чорба in Macedonian) — is a kind of tripe soup, prepared in Iran, Bulgaria, Romania, Macedonia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Serbia and Turkey. Shekam is the Persian word for stomach. Sirabi is the Iranian version of Shkembe'.
  • Skembici - Serbia, one of the oldest known dishes since 13th century.Tripe in vegetable stew with herbs, served with boiled potato.
  • Tripes à la mode de Caen — in Normandy. This is a traditional stew made with Tripe in the Normandy region of France. "Tripes à la mode de Caen" obey a very codified recept, preserved by the brotherhood of "La tripière d'or"[4] that organises a competition every year to elect the world's best "Tripes à la mode de Caen" maker.
  • Tripe and Beans — in Jamaica. This is a thick, spicy stew made with Tripe and Broad Beans
  • Tripe and Drisheen — in Cork, Ireland
  • Tripe and onion — in Northern England
  • Tripoux — French sheep tripe dish
  • Trippa di Moncalieri — in Moncalieri city/Piedmont/Italy (tripe sausage, that could be served in thin slices with few drops of olive oil, minced parsley, garlic and a pinch of black pepper, or used mainly for "Trippa alla Savoiarda" recipe )
  • Trippa alla fiorentina — in Italy (fried with tomatoes and other vegetables)
  • Trippa alla Romana — in Italy (done with white wine and tomatoes)
  • Trippa alla Savoiarda — in Piedmont/Italy (stewed with vegetables, white wine, sauce from roasted beef and served covered with grated Parmigiano Reggiano/Grana Padano cheese)
  • Tsitsarong bulaklak — Filipino crunchy fried tripe (lit. "flower" crackling)
  • Tuslama (Romanian) / Tuzlama(Turkish) - tripe stew specific to south-eastern Romania, a blend of Romanian and Turkish
  • Yakiniku and HorumonyakiJapanese chargrilled, bite-sized
  • Vampi — Slovenian tripe stew.
  • Vette darmen Traditional, though now on the verge of being obsolete West-Flemish dish. The tripe is seasoned and fried in a buttered pan.
  • OjreePakistani curry made out of finely chopped and tenderized goat tripe
  • Obe ata pelu ShaakiNigerian Stew made with large chunk of cow and goat tripe
  • Pepper soup with tripeNigerian Hot peppered liquid soup with bite-sized tripe
  • 牛肚 / 金錢肚 (Mandarin: Niudu/Jinqiandu; Cantonese, Ngautou/Gumtsintou) -- Chinese cuisine Tripe with inner lining resembling ancient Chinese coin with square hole give its name: "coin stomach". The dish is usually served steamed with spring onion and garlic sauce, or just boiled in water served with sweet soya sauce with chilli and spring onions as a dipping sauce.
  • Tripe soup Shorbet Kawari3; in Jordan. This is a stew made with Tripe and tomato sauce

Tripas

In Spanish- and Portuguese-speaking countries, the close cognate "tripas" tends to denote small intestines rather than stomach lining. Dishes of this sort include:

  • Tacos de tripa — Mexican tacos filled with crunchy fried small intestines
  • Tripas à moda do Porto — small intestines with white beans, in Portuguese cuisine, a dish typical of the city of Porto.
  • "Callos"; 'Tripe' with chickpeas, black pudding and spicy sausage. Mainly eaten in Andalucia.

Nutritional value

Green tripe is highly recommended by the advocates of raw food for dogs. In an analysis of a sample of green tripe by a Woodson-Tenant Lab in Atlanta, Georgia, it was discovered that the calcium:phosphorus ratio is 1:1, the overall pH is on the acidic side which is better for digestion, protein is 15.1, fat 11.7 and it contained the essential fatty acids, Linoleic and Linolenic, in their recommended proportions. Also discovered, was the presence of Lactic Acid Bacteria. Lactic Acid Bacteria, also known as Lactobacillus Acidophilus, is a beneficial intestinal bacteria and common ingredient in probiotics.[citation needed]

See also

References

  1. ^ "Troppa Trippa". History of tripe, worldwide tripe recipes. Neri Editore, Firenze. 1998. http://www.epodismo.com/100pelli/100p025i.htm. Retrieved 2007-07-21. 
  2. ^ Driscoll, Michael; Meredith Hamiltion, Marie Coons (May 2003). A Child's Introduction Poetry. 151 West 19th Street New York, NY 10011: Black Dog & Leventhal Publishers. pp. 12. ISBN 1-57912-282-5. http://search.barnesandnoble.com/A-Childs-Introduction-to-Poetry/Michael-Driscoll/e/9781579122829. 
  3. ^ a http://greentripe.com/
  4. ^ a http://www.ville-caen.fr/Tourisme/tripiereOr/index.asp

Translations:

Tripe

Top

Dansk (Danish)
n. - kallun, bras, møg (litteratur)

Nederlands (Dutch)
pens (ook voedsel)

Français (French)
n. - tripes, foutaise

Deutsch (German)
n. - Kaldaunen, (ugs.) Quatsch

Ελληνική (Greek)
n. - (μαγειρ.) πατσάς, (μτφ.) αηδίες, κουραφέξαλα

Italiano (Italian)
trippa, sciocchezze

Português (Portuguese)
n. - tripa (f), dobradinha (f), intestinos (m pl), porcaria (f), lixo (m)

Русский (Russian)
(разг.) чепуха, ерунда, вздор, требуха, рубец (часть желудка животного)

Español (Spanish)
n. - tripa, mondongo, callos, tonterías

Svenska (Swedish)
n. - komage (kok.), buk, skit, smörja (sl.)

中文(简体)(Chinese (Simplified))
内脏, 废话

中文(繁體)(Chinese (Traditional))
n. - 內臟, 廢話

한국어 (Korean)
n. - 내장, 하등품, 졸작

日本語 (Japanese)
n. - トライプ, つまらない話

العربيه (Arabic)
‏(الاسم) شئ تافه أو كريه, المعدة ألأولى وألثانيه لحيوان مجتر, الكرش‏

עברית (Hebrew)
n. - ‮קיבה של מעלה-גירה, כותל-קיבה, שטויות, הבלים‬


 
 
Related topics:
patsa
trippa (culinary)
mondogo

Related answers:
How can you pickle Tripe? Read answer...
Is tripe bad for you? Read answer...
Do you have to cook tripe? Read answer...

Help us answer these:
Can you freeze tripe?
How do you scald tripe?
What is a sentence for tripe?

Post a question - any question - to the WikiAnswers community:

 

Copyrights:

American Heritage Dictionary. The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition Copyright © 2007, 2000 by Houghton Mifflin Company. Updated in 2009. Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wiley Visual Food Lover's Guide. Copyright © 2009 QA International. Published by John Wiley & Sons, Inc. Wiley and the Wiley logo are registered trademarks of John Wiley & Sons, Inc. and/or its affiliates in the United States and other countries. Used here by license.  Read more
Oxford Food & Nutrition Dictionary. A Dictionary of Food and Nutrition. Copyright © 1995, 2003, 2005 by A. E. Bender and D. A. Bender. All rights reserved.  Read more
Barron's Food Lover's Companion. Food Lover's Companion. Copyright © 2001 by Barron's Educational Series, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
McGraw-Hill Slang Dictionary. McGraw-Hill's Essential American Slang Dictionary. Copyright © 2007 by McGraw-Hill Companies, Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
 Oxford Dictionary of Modern Slang. Oxford University Press. © 1997, 2008, 2010 All rights reserved.  Read more
Saunders Veterinary Dictionary. Saunders Comprehensive Veterinary Dictionary 3rd Edition. Copyright © 2007 by D.C. Blood, V.P. Studdert and C.C. Gay, Elsevier. All rights reserved.  Read more
Random House Word Menu. © 2010 Write Brothers Inc. Word Menu is a registered trademark of the Estate of Stephen Glazier. Write Brothers Inc. All rights reserved.  Read more
 Rhymes. Oxford University Press. © 2006, 2007 All rights reserved.  Read more
Bradford's Crossword Solver's Dictionary. Collins Bradford's Crossword Solver's Dictionary © Anne Bradford, 1986, 1993, 1997, 2000, 2003, 2005, 2008 HarperCollins Publishers All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia on Answers.com. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article Tripe Read more
Translations. Copyright © 2007, WizCom Technologies Ltd. All rights reserved.  Read more

Follow us
Facebook Twitter
YouTube