Some Strangest Foods
They say one man's trash is another man's treasure.
The same could be said about food: one man's nightmare may just be another
man's delicacy. From cow's tongue and pig's snout to chicken's feet, from fried
worms and frog's legs to sauteed snails, the list of weird stuff we eat is
endless (and often quite tasty). If you've been indulging lately and need a
reason to diet, take a read, you may just lose that appetite. Here is the list
of the ten strangest foods from around the world.
10. Fried - brain sandwiches
Long before the era of Mad-Cow Disease, a sandwich
made from fried calves' brain, thinly sliced on white bread was a common item
on the menus in St. Louis, Missouri, USA. The sandwich is still available in
the Ohio River Valley, where the brains are now heavily battered and served on
hamburger buns. In El Salvador and Mexico beef brains, lovingly called sesos in
Spanish, are used in tacos and burritos. The brains have a mushy texture and
very little flavor on their own so the addition of copious amounts of hot sauce
definitely helps.
9. Haggis
A traditional Scottish dish, haggis is made with the
minced heart, liver and lung of a sheep mixed with onion, spices, oatmeal, salt
and stock, and boiled in the sheep's stomach for a few hours. Larousse
Gastronomique, a popular encyclopedia of gastronomic delights, claims that
haggis has "an excellent nutty texture and delicious savory flavor."
Haggis is available year-round in Scottish supermarkets and made with an
artificial casing rather than a sheep’s stomach. In fact some are sold in cans
to be heated in a microwave before eating. Similar dishes can be found in other
European countries with goat, pork or beef used instead of sheep.
8. Bugs
The practice of eating insects for food is called
entomophagy and is fairly common in many parts of the world, with the
exceptions of Europe and North America (though bugs are apparently a favorite
with the television show "Fear Factor"). It is not uncommon to find
vendors selling fried grasshoppers, crickets, scorpions, spiders and worms on
the streets of Bangkok, Thailand. Insects are high in protein and apparently
consist of important fatty acids and vitamins. In fact flour from drying and
grinding up mealworm can be and is often used to make chocolate chip cookies.
So next time you think there is a fly in your soup, it may actually just be
part of the presentation.
7. Rocky Mountain Oysters
What is so strange about oysters? Probably the fact
that they're not the kind you find at the bottom of the ocean, but rather a
fancy name given to deep-fried testicles of a buffalo, bull or boar. Rocky
Mountain oysters (also called Prairie Oysters) are well-known and regularly
enjoyed, in certain parts of the United States and Canada, generally where
cattle ranching is prevalent. The testicles are peeled, boiled, rolled in a
flour mixture, and fried, then generally served with a nice cocktail sauce.
6. Stuffed Camel
The recipe for a whole stuffed camel kind of reads
like a bad joke, with ingredients that include one whole camel, one whole lamb
and 20 whole chickens. The Guinness Book of World Records lists the recipe as
the largest item on any menu in the world, conveniently leaving out any
concrete examples of this dish actually being eaten. Legend has it that that a
whole stuffed camel is a traditional Bedouin dish seemingly prepared like a
Russian Stacking Doll, where a camel is stuffed with a whole lamb, the lamb
stuffed with the chickens and the chickens stuffed with eggs and rice. The
entire concoction is then barbecued until cooked and served. Fact or fiction,
the shear amount of food created by this dish makes it deserving of a place on
the list.
5. Hakarl
Anthony Bourdain, known for eating some of the
strangest foods in the world, claims that hakarl is the most disgusting thing
he has ever eaten. Made by gutting a Greenland or Basking shark and then
fermenting it for two to four months, hakarl is an Icelandic food that reeks
with the smell of ammonia. It is available all year round in Icelandic stores
and often served in cubes on toothpicks.
4. Fugu
Fugu is the Japanese word for the poisonous puffer
fish, filled with enough of the poison tetrodotoxin to be lethal. Only
specially-trained chefs, who undergo two to three years of training and have
passed an official test, can prepare the fish. Some chefs will choose to leave
a minute amount of poison in the fish to cause a tingling sensation on the
tongue and lips as fugu can be quite bland. Perhaps the fuss of fugu is more in
surviving the experience than the actual taste of the deadly fish.
3. Casu Marzu
Found in the city of Sardinia in Italy, casu marzu is
a cheese that is home to live insect larvae. These larvae are deliberately
added to the cheese to promote a level of fermentation that is close to
decomposition, at which point the cheese’s fats are broken down. The tiny,
translucent worms can jump up to half a foot if disturbed, which explains why
some people prefer to brush off the insects before enjoying a spoonful of the
pungent cheese.
2. Sannakji
With sashimi and sushi readily available the world
over, eating raw seafood is no longer considered a dining adventure. The Korean
delicacy sannakji however, is something quite different, as the seafood isn't
quite dead. Live baby octopus are sliced up and seasoned with sesame oil. The
tentacles are still squirming when this dish is served and, if not chewed carefully,
the tiny suction cups can stick to the mouth and throat. This is not a dish for
the fainthearted.
1. Balut
Balut seems to be on every
"strange food" list, usually at the top, and for good reason. Though
no longer wriggling on the plate like the live octopus in Korea, the fertilized
duck or chicken egg with a nearly-developed embryo that is boiled and eaten in
the shell is easily one of the strangest foods in the world. Balut is very
common in the Philippines, Cambodia and Vietnam and usually sold by street
vendors. It is said balut tastes like egg and duck (or chicken), which is
essentially what it is. It is surprising to many that a food that appears so
bizarre—often the with the bird's features clearly developed--can taste so
banal. In the end, apparently everything does indeed, just taste like chicken.
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