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Mocotó (Brazilian Portuguese:) is a Brazilian dish made from cow's feet, [1] [2] stewed with beans and vegetables. The name is derived from the Kimbundu mbokotó.. This dish is also popular in Portuguese cuisine, where it is known as mão de vaca com grão.
Kaledo (or sop kaledo, abbreviated from kaki lembu donggala) is a traditional cow's trotters soup served in spicy broth, from Donggala regency, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia. Per its name, the meat used in this particular food is cow's feet and its marrow. The dish originated from Donggala, and from there spread around Sulawesi.
Cooked cow's hoof or cow's trotters, a delicacy in Uganda. A cow's trotters is the culinary term for the foot of cattle. The cuts are used in various dishes around the world, especially in Asian, African, French, and the Caribbean cuisine. [1] Latin American cuisine also uses cow's trotters for several traditional dishes.
Sopa de pata is a hearty Salvadoran soup made from cow's feet, tripe, yuca (also called cassava or manioc), cabbage leaves, chayotes, sweet corn, plantains, and green beans. It may be seasoned with Mexican coriander leaves and flavored to taste with lemon or chile powder .
In most parts of Turkey, such as in Kastamonu, for instance, the term ayak paça ("feet pacha") is used for cow, sheep, or goat hooves, [23] and the term kelle paça is used for "head pacha" . Sometimes the term dil paça is also used for tongue soup, while "meat pacha" is made with gerdan ( scrag end of sheep's neck).
It is the largest agricultural YouTube channel in the world with more than 100 million views a month and has more than six million followers across YouTube and Facebook as of 2024. [ 4 ] [ 1 ] He had originally set up the channel to educate fellow farm workers and to share videos of specific trims with explanations, before reaching a much wider ...
Adding patas (beef or pig's feet) to the stew is popular in the United States. In some areas of central Mexico, "menudo" refers to a stew of sheep stomach, pancitas stew of beef tongue. In south-western Mexico (in and around the Distrito Federal, Morelos, and Guerrero) it is called panza or panza guisada.
Paya means 'leg'/'feet' in Hindi and Urdu languages. [2] The main ingredients of the dish are the trotters ( hooves ) of a cow , goat , buffalo , or sheep , cooked with various spices. Origins