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#21
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Spider
On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote:
On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Winnie |
#22
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Spider
On Sun, 1 Mar 2015 14:53:53 -0800 (PST), Rusty
wrote: On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Don't think I could do frog. It was hard enough trying to eat shark's fin soup in Hong Kong. Reminded me of the joke about a guy who bets he can drink a mouthful of the contents of a spittoon. Cream of Kangaroo tail soup tasted like cream of mud soup. -- |
#23
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Spider
"Rusty" wrote in message ... On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Winnie When I was a child, and spent my summers in New Jersey, our neighbors skinned turtles and made Turtle soup. No thanks, but I did keep one shell. Then, when my daughters were small I cooked rabbit...once. They caught on that it was "Bunny" like the two pet bunnies we had in the back yard, so never again. Sylvia |
#24
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Spider
On 3/1/2015 3:12 PM, Mack A. Damia wrote:
On Sun, 1 Mar 2015 14:53:53 -0800 (PST), Rusty wrote: On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Don't think I could do frog. It was hard enough trying to eat shark's fin soup in Hong Kong. Reminded me of the joke about a guy who bets he can drink a mouthful of the contents of a spittoon. Cream of Kangaroo tail soup tasted like cream of mud soup. The only time I had frog legs was when I was a kid. My grandparents owned a small farm with a reservoir on it. My brother and I used sticks, yarn and bent straight pins to "fish" for frogs on the reservoir. I caught one. I had to hold it while my Dad chopped its head off. Then my grandmother fried the legs, and I ate them. They were tough and rubbery. It was probably an old frog. I've had kangaroo filet with a plum and chili sauce. It was probably the most delicious meat I've ever eaten. I've also had emu nuggets, which were okay, but nothing special. I was told that crocodile tastes like chicken, and it really does. It's much like the white meat, only more dense and chewy. Camel steak isn't bad, but I prefer kangaroo. The secret with kangaroo is to make sure it isn't overcooked. The first time I had it, the kebabs were overdone, and I found it tough and chewy. Kangaroo should never be cooked more than medium. Some restaurants won't cook it more than that. joy -- Joy Unlimited Colorful Crocheted Critters Photos at http://www.PictureTrail.com/joy9 |
#25
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Spider
On 3/1/2015 3:59 PM, Sylvia M wrote:
"Rusty" wrote in message ... On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Winnie When I was a child, and spent my summers in New Jersey, our neighbors skinned turtles and made Turtle soup. No thanks, but I did keep one shell. Then, when my daughters were small I cooked rabbit...once. They caught on that it was "Bunny" like the two pet bunnies we had in the back yard, so never again. Sylvia We didn't have pet rabbits, so we didn't have that problem. However, the one time my mother served us rabbit, we found it very greasy and unappetizing. Joy -- Joy Unlimited Colorful Crocheted Critters Photos at http://www.PictureTrail.com/joy9 |
#26
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Spider
On Sunday, March 1, 2015 at 6:59:13 PM UTC-5, Sylvia M wrote:
"Rusty" wrote in message On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Winnie When I was a child, and spent my summers in New Jersey, our neighbors skinned turtles and made Turtle soup. No thanks, but I did keep one shell. Then, when my daughters were small I cooked rabbit...once. They caught on that it was "Bunny" like the two pet bunnies we had in the back yard, so never again. Sylvia I had turtle soup once in a restaurant in New Orleans. Didn't leave me with either a good or bad impression. Just think it was pretty exotic. Winnie |
#27
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Spider
On Sunday, March 1, 2015 at 7:14:28 PM UTC-5, Joy wrote:
On 3/1/2015 3:12 PM, Mack A. Damia wrote: On Sun, 1 Mar 2015 14:53:53 -0800 (PST), Rusty wrote: On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Don't think I could do frog. It was hard enough trying to eat shark's fin soup in Hong Kong. Reminded me of the joke about a guy who bets he can drink a mouthful of the contents of a spittoon. Cream of Kangaroo tail soup tasted like cream of mud soup. The only time I had frog legs was when I was a kid. My grandparents owned a small farm with a reservoir on it. My brother and I used sticks, yarn and bent straight pins to "fish" for frogs on the reservoir. I caught one. I had to hold it while my Dad chopped its head off. Then my grandmother fried the legs, and I ate them. They were tough and rubbery. It was probably an old frog. Just watched 4 chefs cooked frog legs in a cooking competition on TV. Found out that frogs are not easy to cook. They were undercooked or rubbery. So I won't attempt to cook them. Just wish I can find a restaurant that serves them. I sure have fond memories of eating frog legs as a kid. I've had kangaroo filet with a plum and chili sauce. It was probably the most delicious meat I've ever eaten. I've also had emu nuggets, which were okay, but nothing special. I had ostriches dumpling and ostriches congee in Vancouver restaurants. They are O.K. Just something different. But they are off the menu now. Winnie I was told that crocodile tastes like chicken, and it really does. It's much like the white meat, only more dense and chewy. Camel steak isn't bad, but I prefer kangaroo. The secret with kangaroo is to make sure it isn't overcooked. The first time I had it, the kebabs were overdone, and I found it tough and chewy. Kangaroo should never be cooked more than medium. Some restaurants won't cook it more than that. joy -- Joy Unlimited Colorful Crocheted Critters Photos at http://www.PictureTrail.com/joy9 |
#28
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Spider
On Sunday, March 1, 2015 at 6:13:26 PM UTC-5, Mack A. Damia wrote:
On Sun, 1 Mar 2015 14:53:53 -0800 (PST), Rusty wrote: On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Don't think I could do frog. It was hard enough trying to eat shark's fin soup in Hong Kong. Reminded me of the joke about a guy who bets he can drink a mouthful of the contents of a spittoon. I love shark fin soup. The real ones ( not canned) can be quite pricey. But now there are attempts to ban it in many cities. I guess you don't do escargot either. The first time I tasted escargot was in Paris. I had escargot many times since then. But none measure up to the ones I had in Paris. Cream of Kangaroo tail soup tasted like cream of mud soup. -- |
#29
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Spider
On Sun, 01 Mar 2015 16:14:23 -0800, Joy wrote:
On 3/1/2015 3:12 PM, Mack A. Damia wrote: On Sun, 1 Mar 2015 14:53:53 -0800 (PST), Rusty wrote: On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Don't think I could do frog. It was hard enough trying to eat shark's fin soup in Hong Kong. Reminded me of the joke about a guy who bets he can drink a mouthful of the contents of a spittoon. Cream of Kangaroo tail soup tasted like cream of mud soup. The only time I had frog legs was when I was a kid. My grandparents owned a small farm with a reservoir on it. My brother and I used sticks, yarn and bent straight pins to "fish" for frogs on the reservoir. I caught one. I had to hold it while my Dad chopped its head off. Then my grandmother fried the legs, and I ate them. They were tough and rubbery. It was probably an old frog. I've had kangaroo filet with a plum and chili sauce. It was probably the most delicious meat I've ever eaten. I've also had emu nuggets, which were okay, but nothing special. I was told that crocodile tastes like chicken, and it really does. It's much like the white meat, only more dense and chewy. Camel steak isn't bad, but I prefer kangaroo. The secret with kangaroo is to make sure it isn't overcooked. The first time I had it, the kebabs were overdone, and I found it tough and chewy. Kangaroo should never be cooked more than medium. Some restaurants won't cook it more than that. The soup had a strong "gamy" flavor, and that's what turned me off. I think it must have been made from scratch rather than canned or processed because this was in the Royal Hawaiian Hotel in Waikiki. True with most if not all game meats, although I once had venison in Glasgow with a blackcurrant sauce, and it was delicious. I'm fairly certain the sauce masked a lot of the gamy-flavor. I like blackcurrant jam or preserves! -- |
#30
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Spider
On 3/1/2015 4:52 PM, Rusty wrote:
On Sunday, March 1, 2015 at 6:13:26 PM UTC-5, Mack A. Damia wrote: On Sun, 1 Mar 2015 14:53:53 -0800 (PST), Rusty wrote: On Saturday, February 28, 2015 at 2:43:35 PM UTC-5, jmcquown wrote: On 2/28/2015 11:52 AM, Rusty wrote: The local market sells bison meat. I am tempted to try, but not sure how to cook it. Rabbit meat is also available, probably because of the large French Canadian population in town. Winnie Rabbit is not very popular in the US but yes, I've actually cooked and eaten it. When I still lived in west Tennessee one supermarket sold it cut up and frozen, like packaged chicken. Come to think of it, it pretty much tasted like chicken. Jill I agreed. Had rabbit once long time ago. it tasted like chicken. There are also frogs legs in the market. Again probably for the French Canadians. I had frog legs once in a Chinese restaurant and just love it. Have to figure out how to cook them. A cooking competition on the Food channel tonight includes frog leg in an appetzer dish. Don't think I could do frog. It was hard enough trying to eat shark's fin soup in Hong Kong. Reminded me of the joke about a guy who bets he can drink a mouthful of the contents of a spittoon. I love shark fin soup. The real ones ( not canned) can be quite pricey. But now there are attempts to ban it in many cities. I guess you don't do escargot either. The first time I tasted escargot was in Paris. I had escargot many times since then. But none measure up to the ones I had in Paris. I've only had escargo once. It was okay, but I wasn't impressed. I'd wanted to try it for a long time, but was put off by the high price. Now I know I don't want to spend that kind of money for it when there are lots of things I like better. Joy -- Joy Unlimited Colorful Crocheted Critters Photos at http://www.PictureTrail.com/joy9 |
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