
ICK01-at244by-Anna Sattler on Flickr
Stop making that face. Do you want your face to freeze like that?
No, I’m not talking to you, I’m quoting my mother’s response to my face every time she said liver was planned for dinner. Mom* made liver no one could love. First she fried the onions. Then the liver hit the pan and didn’t come out until it was black through and through, curled up like a dessicated jellyfish and about as tasty as shoe leather. Just the smell of it cooking was enough to send us on bended knee to beg Daddy for a special trip to McDonalds.
Now, you gotta give me credit: I’ve made and enjoyed raw meat, beet kvass, beef tongue, all manner of sprouted, soaked, fermented things with odd rubbery-mushroomy-scobys floating on top. I’ve even made pate with chicken liver that was scrumptious. But evil, maroon, stomach-churning beef liver? EEK!
But, still it’s a powerhouse of a food. Few food sources can compete with liver in the nutrient density arena. If I could only find a way to cook it…
When Kimberly of Hartkeisonline came for dinner, she told me about her mom’s liver recipe. It went something like this:
Fry up a package of bacon, remove from pan. Fry a sliced onion or two in the bacon grease, add chicken livers that have first been dredged in flour with salt and pepper added. Fry until brown and crispy on the outside, still pink on the inside. Remove liver and onions from pan. Add slices of fried pineapple to the pan and fry both sides until browned. Serve fried pineapple with the liver and onions and squeeze fresh lemon juice on top of the liver.
The idea of pineapple with liver intrigued me. I mean, sure, liver and onions is classic. And there are few in our family who can contain themselves when bacon is frying. But sweet and tart pineapple (with all that great bromelain for digestion) alongside? I made a few little adjustments to the recipe and came up with Our Liver Experiment:
3 slices grassfed beef liver
4 organic lemons
1 pound uncured pastured bacon
1 whole organic pineapple
2 organic sweet onions, sliced into rings
3 tablespoons sprouted wheat flour
Juice three and a half of the lemons and pour over the liver slices in a shallow dish. Cover and refrigerate overnight. Turn partway through the marinating process if the liquid doesn’t cover the slices.
Slice the bacon into 1-inch wide pieces and fry until crisp. Remove from the pan and pour off (and reserve) most of the fat.
Slice the pineapple into half-inch thick rings,
removing rind and core,
and saute in bacon fat in the same pan over medium heat until just browned on both sides.
Remove from pan.
Add back half of the reserved bacon fat and toss in the onion rings.
Saute the onions until just browned and remove from pan.
Dry off the liver slices and dredge them in the sprouted wheat flour.
Add all the remaining bacon fat and cook the liver just until browned on both sides. Plate the liver, topped with onion, pineapple and bacon. Pass with big smiles, the remaining lemon half for squeezing a tad of juice over and “YUM!” noises.

How did we like it? Well those of us who love liver (me) thought it was fantastic and had two pieces! Those of us who enjoy strongly flavored foods (Rose) said it was not bad at all! Those of us whose palates are less refined (Blair, Kate and Christy) ate three bites each, the required minimum, and begged off gracefully. The boys? Hubby was out of town and John was at work. Little do they know I saved them some…
*Not MY mother. MY mother is a gourmet cook and would NEVER overcook liver.
This post is part of Real Food Wednesdays, hosted this week by Kelly the Kitchen Kop



8 comments
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February 24, 2010 at 6:57 am
Ann Marie @ CHEESESLAVE
Yummy! That looks so good!
One thing that has been working for me in my liver experiments is to soak the liver overnight in the fridge in milk. It really reduces the bitter flavor.
When I meet immigrants, I always ask them, “How do you cook your liver?” Recently I met a neighbor from Mexico. I asked if she used beef liver or calves liver (calves liver is milder). She said beef liver. I asked her if she soaked the liver in milk to make it less bitter. She said no but what her mother taught her to do was crush 5-6 garlic cloves and spread it all over the liver and let that marinate in the fridge overnight. She said it removes the bitter taste.
February 24, 2010 at 8:27 am
Local Nourishment
When I made pate for my Mom for Christmas I soaked the chicken livers in milk overnight. It did make them very mild-tasting!
February 24, 2010 at 10:14 am
Maggie
Aw, man… my kids hate bacon. I don’t know what’s wrong with them. They like sausage. Can you crumble liver? Maybe I could sneak it in somewhere with some sausage?
Okay, the idea of greeting immigrants with “How do you cook your liver?” really gave me the giggles. Sometimes I am sooo literal…
February 24, 2010 at 12:25 pm
Heather Lackey
Pineapple is a brilliant idea. I’m going to try this one day next week while my husband is at work (he absolutely can’t stomach the smell of liver cooking). I’m going to try the milk-soaking suggestion, too. And then, for the pièce de résistance …I’m going to serve it with butter for dipping! (It just can’t go wrong.
)
February 25, 2010 at 10:15 pm
#meatcamp Transcript, 25 February 2010 «
[...] @iTweetMeat liver!http://localnourishment.com/2010/02/24/our-liver-experiment/#meatcamp -8:55 PM Feb 25th, [...]
February 27, 2010 at 3:42 am
JDA
My parents would get a 1/2 cow and the liver would sit in the freezer until there was not much cow left and it was somewhat a last resort before the next 1/2 cow. *Then* they would fry it to liver leather. I hated liver growing up.
My friend and I buy it fresh, sear it, and eat it all the same day.
February 27, 2010 at 8:44 am
localnourishment
I think the freshness of the liver has much to do with its flavor!
March 1, 2010 at 11:02 am
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