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G Wiv wrote:
One aside, instead of potato, though the duck fat fried squares look delectable, I'd have served Sea Biscuit for starch.
Enjoy,
Gary
kanin wrote:Might as well get the full-on experience instead of masking its flavor with a sauce, right?
teatpuller wrote:I wonder where the horsemeat comes from in the EU. I would not want to be eating old racehorses loaded with drugs.
David Hammond wrote:Fascinating stuff, and I'm encouraged by the news that we may be able to buy horsemeat in Illinois. My guess is that a lot of decent meat is going to waste, though as suggested by kanin, I think horsemeat is going to be tough to sell to Americans (comment we should be ready to hear, "Flicka?").
"Stable of suppliers"? You kill.
Hammond
ViewsAskew wrote:At age nine or ten, after years of collecting horse statue thingees made of plastic, reading EVERY horse book in the school library including all in the Black Stallion series, having studied the poster on my doorway until I could name all breeds of horses and their characteristics, I landed my biggest childhood dream: my own pony. Two, to be correct: a mare and her 2 month old foal.
Three weeks later, I accidentally killed the mare by letting her eat too much corn fodder; she foundered and I wasn't strong enough to keep her upright to help her walk it off (which is what a frantic call to the vet told me to do.). The foal, however, was mine to raise.
I bottle fed her, I walked her, groomed her, and dreamt of the day I could ride her. Of course, by the time she was old enough, I was too heavy, but I didn't know that would happen at the time. I practically lived in the barn with her, lovingly stroking her nose, feeding her lumps of sugar (snuck from the house because my parents said it wasn't good for her teeth...) and pieces of carrot. Every bit of guilt I had over killing her mother, I translated into the loving care of her, from a ten year old perspective, of course. I went on long walks in the late evening with her and my grandfather during that long cold winter, my grandfather teaching me the constellations. I cried on her soft fur when I was sad. She was my best friend, just like Flicka.
While I was raised in a farming area and we slaughtered geese, ducks, and pigs that lived with us, the pony thing put animals in a completely different perspective. I had no problem watching my grandfather kill those mean geese...but a pony? A horse?????
I didn't read this with queasiness....just the knowledge that while I was willing to try a brain taco, I wasn't about to eat that steak upthread.
ViewsAskew wrote: While I was raised in a farming area and we slaughtered geese, ducks, and pigs that lived with us, the pony thing put animals in a completely different perspective. I had no problem watching my grandfather kill those mean geese...but a pony? A horse?????
I didn't read this with queasiness....just the knowledge that while I was willing to try a brain taco, I wasn't about to eat that steak upthread.
Mhays wrote:Funny, just today, a bill was introduced amending the Illinois Horse Meat Act to allow horse-processing for human consumption.
Mhays wrote:I get it...I've often wondered whether I could eat dog if presented with it - I certainly couldn't eat one of my own dogs. What I don't like about the above-mentioned legislation is not someone's personal aversion to a food, be it animal, bug, internal body part, or animal-derived foodstuff - which I respect - it's their attempt to prevent other people from eating it.
Though I suppose there's a line, even for me. I keep rolling around in my head whether it's hypocritical to be pro-meat and anti-dogfighting, and I finally came to this conclusion: I can't support someone's enjoyment of suffering exclusively for the power trip of watching something suffer. In this way, dogfighting, cockfighting, bullfighting and food traditions that are about the spectacle of the animal's suffering and not about eating are not the same as farming, butchering, and eating meat.
ViewsAskew wrote:Mhays wrote:The horse issue is strongly rolled up in the treatment that these animals receive. Interestingly enough, my mother married a man in the horse racing business. The stories of how animals are treated when no longer needed are enough to convince me that the horse meat at those factories did not come through humane animal practices.
I appreciate that the animal gave its life for me; the least I can do is treat is kindly before its demise.
David Hammond wrote:ViewsAskew wrote:Mhays wrote:The horse issue is strongly rolled up in the treatment that these animals receive. Interestingly enough, my mother married a man in the horse racing business. The stories of how animals are treated when no longer needed are enough to convince me that the horse meat at those factories did not come through humane animal practices.
I appreciate that the animal gave its life for me; the least I can do is treat is kindly before its demise.
I wonder if a racehorse, lean and muscular, with very little body fat, would provide the most delicious meat. I doubt it, though I would not mind eating a horsemeat burger made of one of the many nags I've lost money on over the years.

razbry wrote:Wow...where were all you horse meat lovers when Cavell (in DeKalb) came under fire (figuratively and literally!)? I get it that for some, a horse is way more than meat for consumption. On the other hand, the protein was not wasted, and very much wanted by the foriegn market.
Was not knocked out by flavor (minimal, perhaps due to low fat content) or texture (a little tough, probably for same reason).
Hope you didn't mistake me for a horsemeat lover
razbry wrote:Was not knocked out by flavor (minimal, perhaps due to low fat content) or texture (a little tough, probably for same reason).Hope you didn't mistake me for a horsemeat lover
Not a chance.I was surprised however by your mention that the you had this meal in Zurich. It just doesn't seem like a Switzerland sort of meat. Switzerland....beef....yes....I can hear the cow bells tinkle.