Intelligent design as a resource

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bryan
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Joined: Sat Nov 29, 2014 2:01 am
Location: mostly Bay Area

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by bryan »

I made a comment in the garden log thread about wanting to eat my compost worms/pill-bugs but it didn't get any bites :P From youtube, the pill-bugs will either taste like piss or prawns. If I still lived in the South I would probably be devising a way to harvest fire ants..

I haven't met many foods I disagree with.. the worst ones usually just have foul odors that I connect with a lack of freshness. This is why I won't order tripe unless it is vouched for (once I got a menudo that tasted like a public restroom.. switched to birria since then). Similarly, once I had some papaya salad that was pretty rank, bitter :(

I confirm I would not like/try hakarl. I'll try balut, next time it is offered..

Blood as an ingredient is pretty great in all of my experiences (sausages, puddings, dinuguan, a version of laap, diced curdled blood chunks in noodle soups..).

One thing that I've wondered is why don't Americans cure more meat (in the style of the Spanish)?

And one more strange food related thought.. the first time I went to a Piggly Wiggly in the black neighbourhood (as a kid) was a big WTF moment. Before my eyes were all the parts of animals that were not even stocked at the "normal" Pig: cheeks, tongue, ears, nose, feet, tail, intestines, etc.

halfmoon
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Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by halfmoon »

black_son_of_gray wrote:The only thing I've purchased but been unable to eat was hakarl. It smelled so foul I just couldn't do it.
I had to look this up. Aside from the overwhelming ammonia smell (yum!), I'm not tempted by things that are innately poisonous to humans. It's odd, because shark meat in general is delicious. DH used to eat pork kidneys, which had a nauseating ammonia odor. I'm guessing that had to do with urine. Another of my fussy American values: stay away from animal parts that served as toxin or waste filters in the original owner.
Dragline wrote: The specialty there is suckling pig. Complete with the face and the hair on the knuckles.
Those whole-body pigs can be found in Seattle's Chinatown (probably every city), hanging in the windows of restaurants that barbecue them. You could bring one to your next ERE meet-up! Very festive, with the eyes and all. :D

Our local small grocery store sells all sorts of insects (crickets, worms, etc.) in little boxes at the checkout stand next to the Cadbury eggs. They come with a variety of spices sprinkled on top and look either dried or fried; I'm not sure, because so far I've resisted trying them.

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Jean
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Joined: Fri Dec 13, 2013 8:49 am
Location: Switzterland

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by Jean »

Tripe and tongue are good!
And, I'm pretty sure that eating a whole animal (instead of only its muscles) makes it unnescessary to eat anythnig else.

halfmoon
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Joined: Mon Nov 07, 2016 10:19 pm

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by halfmoon »

Jean wrote:Tripe and tongue are good!
No argument with tongue (tripe imho is like tofu: tolerable dependent on sauce). Tongue has a soft, moist texture that we love in tacos and burritos. My mother used to cook it like pot roast, but for whatever reason she left the tastebud-pebbled skin on. It looked like a huge, grayish...tongue. Didn't keep me from eating it, but still.

Eating the whole animal is a great idea, but I question whether that makes it unnecessary to eat anything else.

On an unrelated note: one of the less appealing animals I've eaten is woodchuck. DH had a strict code for his son to discourage wanton sniping at things: 'You kill it, you eat it.' We went on a camping trip early in our life together, and DS shot a woodchuck. Per the code, we promptly made camp and cooked the woodchuck. I prefer tripe.

enigmaT120
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Joined: Thu Feb 12, 2015 2:14 pm
Location: Falls City, OR

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by enigmaT120 »

I would have guessed woodchuck was OK. Good thing we don't have them here.

I ate a stink bug once. If given the opportunity, don't do it. Even with the mouthful of raspberries that accompanied it it was horrible.

vexed87
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Joined: Fri Feb 20, 2015 8:02 am
Location: Yorkshire, UK

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by vexed87 »

I think about the weirdest thing I ever ate was sheep's intestines at a motorway service station in southern France. No I didn't know what it was when I pointed to it at the deli counter, and yes, it tasted like excrement. Never again.

I know we should be closing our loops, but Pig's anus, tripe, brains? Isn't this what dogs are for? :lol:

Dragline
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Joined: Wed Aug 24, 2011 1:50 am

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by Dragline »

I've never eaten a dog. I imagine it tastes something like a woodchuck, though. :lol:

enigmaT120
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Joined: Thu Feb 12, 2015 2:14 pm
Location: Falls City, OR

Re: Intelligent design as a resource

Post by enigmaT120 »

I want to eat a gold finch. I bet they taste lemony. I would ask my cat but he won't say.

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