Spicy Stewed Tripe With Scallions

Published Jan. 17, 2021

Spicy Stewed Tripe With Scallions
Heami Lee for The New York Times. Food stylist: Maggie Ruggiero. Prop stylist: Miako Katoh.
Total Time
6 hours
Rating
4(109)
Comments
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This spicy, slippery tripe begs to be slurped like a bowl of noodles, so you may want a roll of paper towels nearby. Slicing the tripe as thinly as possible provides a soft, tender texture, and the collagen that yields from the calf’s foot makes the broth itself slick and full-bodied. The mix of chiles creates a great and powerful warmth that spreads across your chest and leaves a bold, pleasant zing on the tongue, but it is not the kind of sharp or angry spicy that makes your eyes water or your nose run. The paper towels are for tidying up around your enthusiasm, not for dabbing your tears.

Featured in: The Case for Stewed Tripe

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Ingredients

Yield:2 quarts
  • 4pounds honeycomb tripe
  • 1medium yellow onion, unpeeled but cut in half horizontally
  • 1whole head garlic, unpeeled but cut in half horizontally
  • ½ounce chiles de árbol (about 20 chiles), plus 1 more chile de árbol
  • 1calf’s foot (about 1½ pounds), split, cut crosswise into 2-inch pieces and well rinsed to remove any grit and blood
  • 2quarts broth of any kind (mixed meats, chicken or beef)
  • ¾ounce guajillo chiles (about 3 large)
  • ¼ounce ancho chile (1 chile)
  • 1tablespoon dried oregano
  • ½teaspoon ground cumin
  • Kosher salt
  • 2big bunches scallions or green onions, cleaned, roots snipped, then sliced
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (38 servings)

91 calories; 3 grams fat; 1 gram saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 1 gram monounsaturated fat; 0 grams polyunsaturated fat; 3 grams carbohydrates; 1 gram dietary fiber; 1 gram sugars; 13 grams protein; 232 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Prepare the stewed tripe: Put tripe in a heavy pot and cover with 1 inch cold water. Bring to boil over high heat, then drain and set aside. Put onion, garlic and 1 chile de árbol into a cheesecloth sachet. Set aside.

  2. Step 2

    Add foot pieces and 2 quarts water to the pot, and bring to boil over high heat. Reduce heat to medium, and simmer, skimming any foam that rises to the surface, for 30 minutes.

  3. Step 3

    Meanwhile, slice the flat sections of tripe into thin, 4-inch-long ribbons resembling noodles — wider than linguine but not quite as thick as fettuccine — and any folds and thick creases into skinny coins.

  4. Step 4

    Add tripe and onion sachet to calf’s foot, cover with 2 quarts broth and simmer, uncovered, for 4 hours until soft.

  5. Step 5

    Meanwhile, prepare the chile powder: Heat the oven to 375 degrees. Lay the guajillo chiles, ancho chile and remaining chiles de árbol on a sheet pan and heat them through for 8 to 10 minutes — enough time for them to become hot and fragrant but not enough time for them to take on dark color. Let the chiles cool completely until they again feel dry and brittle.

  6. Step 6

    Pull off the chile stems and tap out the seeds, or split the chiles like a vanilla bean to let out the seeds. Pulse the dry skins in a spice mill to fine flakes the same texture as fish meal. (It makes about 6 tablespoons chile powder.)

  7. Step 7

    Remove and discard feet and sachet. (A majority of the flesh and fat and tendon of the foot should have turned gelatinous and fallen off; what’s left on the foot is mostly stark, bare bone.) Stir in the chile powder, plus the oregano, cumin and a little salt to taste. Simmer, uncovered, 45 minutes more until tripe is slippery soft and broth is dark as leather.

  8. Step 8

    To serve, ladle tripe and broth into bowls, and positively shower each portion with a mountain of sliced scallions.

Ratings

4 out of 5
109 user ratings
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Comments

We add yellow hominy to our "menudo"(tripe stew) and serve it with chopped onion, a lemon slice, and corn tortillas. Yum! Provecho!

In South Texas this would be menudo. A lot of recipes use pigs feet, almost all have hominy. Garnish with lemon, dried Mexican oregano, minced serranos and thin strips of cabbage.

Nice, when my husband was keto I'd just dump some tripe in the slow cooker with gochujang, soy sauce, and a splash of mirin. Laziest meal to put together.

There are some foods that are revolting and tripe is one of them. This tripe recipe will not make it to my NYT Recipe book. But congratulations to those of you who are brave and eat tripe and love it. An acquired taste?

Instead of making chile powder, as one poster noted too "dry", followed another googled recipe which soaked the toasted chiles, after seeding, in the broth for 30 min, then blending. Blended with the broth onions & garlic, added oregano, cumin and salt. It worked well. 6 hours total, but worth it. Used a pig's foot instead of calf and added about 1.5 lbs of pork shoulder to 1.75 lbs tripe, cutting all of the chiles in half and broth/water to 3 Q vs 4 Q. Added 25 oz hominy for last boil.

Made this last week. Didn't have the exact peppers on hand so I used what I had Guajillo, Ancho and Sante Fe chiles already dried. Things I did differently: I made in the pressure cooker. 1st put everything in the IP at the same time and pressure-cooked on high for 45 minutes. Picked out the icky parts. Absolutely some of the best Menudo I've had ever. However, the real surprise was the following day. When a taste of the reheated leftovers exploded in mouth and evolved in layers of flavor

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