Skybird |
05-11-18 01:42 PM |
Quote:
Originally Posted by Catfish
(Post 2552700)
^ Other than north american barbarians we do not eat squirrels, regardless which colour. We do not eat cats and dogs either, or bats.
Maybe you should emigrate to, say, China? :O:
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Hm, after Brexit the UK probably counts as a Northamerican offshore province anyway:
https://www.wildmeat.co.uk/blogs/rec...d-chorizo-stew
https://www.wildmeat.co.uk/blogs/rec...sage-hazelnuts
http://allrecipes.co.uk/recipe/8220/...-squirrel.aspx
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/foodandd...ur-dinner.html
Quote:
At the Jugged Hare, a stylish gastropub in London's Barbican which has a reputation for serving excellent game dishes, they are one of the most popular items. “They sell extremely well,” says head chef Stephen Engelfield. “They can be a bit tricky to get hold of, but we buy all we can get, and can easily sell 40 or 50 portions a week. I have people coming for dinner this week who have already reserved them.”
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Actually I already had Squirrel, cold, roasted, in pieces as fingerfood, for dipping in two sauces. I was served it - by a British guy. Reminded indeed of rabbit, but was more juicy (as far as I could say considering that it was cold fingerfood), and even milder than rabbit.
Know one Anglosaxon, know every Anglosaxon. They all are squirrel-eating barbars, no matter on which side of the Atlantic! :D
I kill for lamb in an English peppermint sauce. English cuisine has a suspicious reputation - but this recipe for example is brilliant. But I never was able to copy that sauce. Its - tricky.
Nutria (from Holland) I tasted once, it was not bad either. And non, Nutria and bisam rats are two different species - many people believe them to be the same, but they are not. Nutria is far more juicy than rabbit.
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