Craziest foods you've ever tried

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  • WelshBlue
    WelshBlue Online Community Member Posts: 955 Championing

    Ooooh I love cockles and muscles … which is weird because as stated before I hate the texture of prawns πŸ™„

    On the subject of animals … I love offal - stuffed lambs heart was a Friday night dish for many years … liver/ bacon and onions over chips. Love home made steak and kidney pie

    I remember back when Oxtail or shin was the cheapest of the cheap cuts. Thanks to celebrity chefs that isn't the case and can't remember the last time I had them

    I did marinade my own pork ribs and cook them in the slow cooker, then finished them off in the air fryer a couple of months ago … succulent, smoky and hot πŸ˜€

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Online Community Member Posts: 15,405 Championing

    @JessieJ I really do agree with trying everything before deciding, that goes beyond food too!

    As for eggs, I wonder if it was something a bit more primitive, something we'd consider silly today? There's a parable in the bible about a couple with a hen that lays a single solid gold egg per day, and greed led the couple to cut the hen open hoping for all the eggs at once… sounds stupid but maybe someone saw what eggs become and thought there was a tasty chicken inside the egg?

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Online Community Member Posts: 15,405 Championing

    At least you're still here to type that, I'd call that a win πŸ˜…

  • JessieJ
    JessieJ Online Community Member Posts: 1,366 Championing

    As a kid, we had stuffed pig hearts every week, I still have them now, when I can find them. I think offal is just about the tastiest meat. I draw the line at brain, which has been mentioned. Closest I got was a friend ordered them when in France, I'm still not sure that he understood what he'd ordered & who was I to tell him, but he seemed to enjoy them.

    I agree with you on the cheap cuts of meat & TV chefs, lamb shanks used to be cheap, now… 😡

    Well done on the ribs, fall off the bone goodness when done in the slow cooker, yummy!

    @66Mustang, yes, maybe or from when we still lived in caves & anything was food.

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Online Community Member Posts: 15,405 Championing
    edited August 2025

    @JessieJ

    "yes, maybe or from when we still lived in caves & anything was food."

    I read an article a while ago. It was centred around the whisky industry and mostly men being in it, despite women being more likely to be classed as a "supertaster" which is a label given to someone with more taste buds than normal causing them to have a very sensitive sense of taste

    It's theorised it comes from the times you were describing, where anything was food: women tended to be the ones to give food to their children, and would taste-test first before feeding to their children

    If you apply Darwin's rules it's clear why there would be a higher evolutionary benefit for women who were supertasters, because their children would have a higher chance of survival, rather than just themselves as was the typical case with male supertasters

    It's not proven but makes sense to me

  • JessieJ
    JessieJ Online Community Member Posts: 1,366 Championing

    That is interesting & does make sense, @66Mustang. A lot of females will have died though, being the first to taste test. πŸ˜‰

  • Littlefatfriend
    Littlefatfriend Online Community Member Posts: 439 Trailblazing

    Sure enough 66mustang, whilst we men were risking our lives out foraging, hunting and warring with each other, women were supposedly purely focused on putting their feet up at home and evolving senses of style and good taste! Always makes me laugh.

    Anyhoo, in no particular order:

    Wagyu (4 types of Japanese cattle), veal, venison, buffalo, bison, mouflon (Mediterranean wild sheep, look and taste more like goats), mangalitza (or mangalica, a Hungarian type of hairy pig/boar), pigeon, foie gras, duck, ostrich, emu, kangaroo, springbok, wild boar, rabbit, squirrel, horse, camel, reindeer, zebra, goat, elk, antelope, nilgai (Asian antelope), biltong, hogget and mutton (1 and 2+ year old lambs respectively), snail, crocodile, alligator, turtle, various snakes, oysters, sea cucumber, geoduck, clams, muscles, lion fish, jelly fish, tamilock, Japanese and UK cuttlefish, sea urchin, and let's not forget frog's legs!

    Do black pudding, grouse, pheasant and partridge even qualify?

    Can you tell I've just spent more than an hour reflecting on my meaty adventures? Thanks, I enjoyed that. There may have been others. πŸ€”

    In case anyone is curious each had their own particular pros, the trick was mostly working out how to cook them well. I'll likely most of them again.

    As others have written, I guess I'd only have foie gras again if I was in France and given it, that's also why I've tried it. I found horse, zebra and camel a bit too tough, but that's also why I very rarely eat beef. Some people like it that way.

    😺

  • 66Mustang
    66Mustang Online Community Member Posts: 15,405 Championing
    edited August 2025

    I think that's exactly the point of the evolution theory. Maybe those who had to taste a fatal amount died and "supertasters" survived as they could detect toxicity without having to take a large bite?

    Also add in the fact that the parent who died was likely "taking one" for their child, although maybe less evolutionary benefit to the child as I imagine if a mother died in those times no one else would look after the child

    A common mistake people make with evolution is assuming there is some kind of planning or consciousness behind it

  • WelshBlue
    WelshBlue Online Community Member Posts: 955 Championing

    My wife puts jam on cream crackers. Really wish I'd known how twisted she is before we got married …

  • trouble5316
    trouble5316 Online Community Member Posts: 150 Contributor

    My own cooking

  • [Deleted User]
    [Deleted User] Posts: 1,170 Championing
    The user and all related content has been deleted.
  • Blueyblue
    Blueyblue Online Community Member Posts: 4 Listener

    Octopus, was very chewwy. Or maybe was undercooked

  • Wibbles
    Wibbles Online Community Member Posts: 3,374 Championing

    I once went to a barbeque where I was served Shark, Ostrich, Alligator and Kangaroo meat….

    The Kangaroo and Ostrich were extremely tender but the Shark and Alligator were gristley !

  • WelshBlue
    WelshBlue Online Community Member Posts: 955 Championing

    Not a crazy food but people can't believe I find the fat on a pork chop the best part.

    It's okay … I'm on statins ☺️

  • onmylonesome
    onmylonesome Online Community Member Posts: 642 Empowering

    I'm with you on this one, i buy the pork shoulder steaks for the fat!

  • WelshBlue
    WelshBlue Online Community Member Posts: 955 Championing

    We can harden our arteries together πŸ‘¨β€πŸ³

    That's my tea tonight now. Pork shoulder steak, chips and a nice free range egg, the yolks are so orange it's almost day-glo. Loads of salt

    Damn I'm so going to die young … ish πŸ˜