loose noose
Member
In Wisconsin, we always checked the liver to see if it was spotted, if it was we discarded the rabbit as contaminated with disease.
Would people still like Brunswick Stew if they knew the history?Folks like squirrel stew, so I figure that rabbit stew oughta be good eating.
In Wisconsin, we always checked the liver to see if it was spotted, if it was we discarded the rabbit as contaminated with disease.
Seems like a cop out to me Jake. You were ordering the food in their native language. Unless you said "Fertilized Duck Egg" in English, Balut should still mean Balut.The balut turned out to be a bust. They were just un-fertilized duck eggs. Must have been a communication issue at the Asian market, my buddy said the guy didn't speak English.
Calf fries, mountain oysters, whatever you choose to call 'em,
Seems like a cop out to me Jake. You were ordering the food in their native language. Unless you said "Fertilized Duck Egg" in English, Balut should still mean Balut.
Haha. Well actually...wasn't me ordering it so I don't know... but it's called different things in different countries. Balut is the Phillipino word?? Must not have been a Phillipino he was talking to. I dunno, but I guess neither balut nor fertilized duck egg were something the guy understood.
The eggs were rotten too, at least half of them. I was going to eat them, cracked open the rest and they reeked. But were without fetus.