If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Paleo diet -- one month results
|
#2
|
|||
|
|||
Ignoramus15381 wrote:
For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel. I want to say "Bravo" and "Ew" in the same breath. ..:. Craig |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
I wrote:
Ignoramus15381 wrote: For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel. I want to say "Bravo" and "Ew" in the same breath. Actually, I was being facetious. I've eaten squirrel stew. Not something I'd like every day, but no worse than bear or rabbit or venison or rattlesnake---some are gamier than others. It really all depends on the stew, and when you've got good veggies with lots of onions and garlic and maybe some tomatoes, meat is meat, whatever its source. I spent two years in Vermont. A lot of the small towns up there have annual wild game suppers. As soon as hunting season is over, the hunters cook up their prize catches in rather fanciful ways (fricaseed, barbecued, blackened and pan-fried, etc.) and all the people in town have a fun communal supper at the town hall (which is usually the firehouse). Each dish is clearly labelled, which is good, since you probably want to know if that delicious meal was bear or possum. So I applaud your trying stewed squirrel. Just not for breakfast. ..:. Craig |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
Is it going to be, Rocky the squirrel?
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel.
I don't mind eating the rodent, but do I have to get him drunk first? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
Ignoramus15381 wrote:
In article , Craig Smith wrote: I wrote: Ignoramus15381 wrote: For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel. I want to say "Bravo" and "Ew" in the same breath. Actually, I was being facetious. I've eaten squirrel stew. Not something I'd like every day, but no worse than bear or rabbit or venison or rattlesnake---some are gamier than others. It really all depends on the stew, and when you've got good veggies with lots of onions and garlic and maybe some tomatoes, meat is meat, whatever its source. I spent two years in Vermont. A lot of the small towns up there have annual wild game suppers. As soon as hunting season is over, the hunters cook up their prize catches in rather fanciful ways (fricaseed, barbecued, blackened and pan-fried, etc.) and all the people in town have a fun communal supper at the town hall (which is usually the firehouse). Each dish is clearly labelled, which is good, since you probably want to know if that delicious meal was bear or possum. So I applaud your trying stewed squirrel. Just not for breakfast. .:. Craig That's interesting. My friend is a hunter, so I ate some venison, myself. And wild duck. I would be careful about venison right now. There is some kind of a mad-cow type disease striking people who eat venison. If you want me to, I will try to find some articles. i -- nimue "If I had created reality television I would have had a much greater influence, but then I would have had to KILL MYSELF." Joss Whedon Great T & A requires great DNA. Penn (of Penn and Teller) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
"nimue" wrote in message .. . Ignoramus15381 wrote: In article , Craig Smith wrote: I wrote: Ignoramus15381 wrote: For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel. I want to say "Bravo" and "Ew" in the same breath. Actually, I was being facetious. I've eaten squirrel stew. Not something I'd like every day, but no worse than bear or rabbit or venison or rattlesnake---some are gamier than others. It really all depends on the stew, and when you've got good veggies with lots of onions and garlic and maybe some tomatoes, meat is meat, whatever its source. I spent two years in Vermont. A lot of the small towns up there have annual wild game suppers. As soon as hunting season is over, the hunters cook up their prize catches in rather fanciful ways (fricaseed, barbecued, blackened and pan-fried, etc.) and all the people in town have a fun communal supper at the town hall (which is usually the firehouse). Each dish is clearly labelled, which is good, since you probably want to know if that delicious meal was bear or possum. So I applaud your trying stewed squirrel. Just not for breakfast. .:. Craig That's interesting. My friend is a hunter, so I ate some venison, myself. And wild duck. I would be careful about venison right now. There is some kind of a mad-cow type disease striking people who eat venison. If you want me to, I will try to find some articles. Best of luck finding them because there has not been any conclusive documentation that CWD has lead to disease in humans. Speculation is not proof, nor is scaremongering. Jenn |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
only in the wisconsin/minnesota area where stupid hunters were feeding them
banned feed products. :\ -- Peace, Pen -- Pawbreakers - The Candy for Cats! http://www.pawbreakers.com "nimue" wrote in message .. . Ignoramus15381 wrote: In article , Craig Smith wrote: I wrote: Ignoramus15381 wrote: For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel. I want to say "Bravo" and "Ew" in the same breath. Actually, I was being facetious. I've eaten squirrel stew. Not something I'd like every day, but no worse than bear or rabbit or venison or rattlesnake---some are gamier than others. It really all depends on the stew, and when you've got good veggies with lots of onions and garlic and maybe some tomatoes, meat is meat, whatever its source. I spent two years in Vermont. A lot of the small towns up there have annual wild game suppers. As soon as hunting season is over, the hunters cook up their prize catches in rather fanciful ways (fricaseed, barbecued, blackened and pan-fried, etc.) and all the people in town have a fun communal supper at the town hall (which is usually the firehouse). Each dish is clearly labelled, which is good, since you probably want to know if that delicious meal was bear or possum. So I applaud your trying stewed squirrel. Just not for breakfast. .:. Craig That's interesting. My friend is a hunter, so I ate some venison, myself. And wild duck. I would be careful about venison right now. There is some kind of a mad-cow type disease striking people who eat venison. If you want me to, I will try to find some articles. i -- nimue "If I had created reality television I would have had a much greater influence, but then I would have had to KILL MYSELF." Joss Whedon Great T & A requires great DNA. Penn (of Penn and Teller) |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
only in the wisconsin/minnesota area where stupid hunters were feeding them
banned feed products. :\ -- Peace, Pen -- Pawbreakers - The Candy for Cats! http://www.pawbreakers.com "nimue" wrote in message .. . Ignoramus15381 wrote: In article , Craig Smith wrote: I wrote: Ignoramus15381 wrote: For breakfast tomorrow, I am going to eat a stewed squirrel. I want to say "Bravo" and "Ew" in the same breath. Actually, I was being facetious. I've eaten squirrel stew. Not something I'd like every day, but no worse than bear or rabbit or venison or rattlesnake---some are gamier than others. It really all depends on the stew, and when you've got good veggies with lots of onions and garlic and maybe some tomatoes, meat is meat, whatever its source. I spent two years in Vermont. A lot of the small towns up there have annual wild game suppers. As soon as hunting season is over, the hunters cook up their prize catches in rather fanciful ways (fricaseed, barbecued, blackened and pan-fried, etc.) and all the people in town have a fun communal supper at the town hall (which is usually the firehouse). Each dish is clearly labelled, which is good, since you probably want to know if that delicious meal was bear or possum. So I applaud your trying stewed squirrel. Just not for breakfast. .:. Craig That's interesting. My friend is a hunter, so I ate some venison, myself. And wild duck. I would be careful about venison right now. There is some kind of a mad-cow type disease striking people who eat venison. If you want me to, I will try to find some articles. i -- nimue "If I had created reality television I would have had a much greater influence, but then I would have had to KILL MYSELF." Joss Whedon Great T & A requires great DNA. Penn (of Penn and Teller) |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
"Penelope Baker" wrote in message ...
Pawbreakers - The Candy for Cats! http://www.pawbreakers.com For a paleo diet for cats see: www.barfworld.com Commercial cat food ( not Pawbreakers) is a major source of death for cats. That's really a shame when natural food for cats ( frozen or live mice)is readily available and costs less than the crap most cats are fed. The State of Texas requires that I feed my hawk only what it eats in Nature (the same things that cats eat in Nature). Were I to feed him commercial cat food, the state would take him away and charge me with animal cruelity. Why should I have lower standards for my cat, my dog, myself or my child? Ray Audette Author "NeanderThin" www.NeanderThin.com |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Longest scientific study yet backs Atkins diet | Diarmid Logan | Low Carbohydrate Diets | 127 | May 27th, 2004 09:11 PM |
low-carb kicks butt in studies - again | tcomeau | Low Carbohydrate Diets | 17 | May 20th, 2004 09:07 PM |
ATKINS DIET MAY REDUCE SEIZURES IN CHILDREN WITH EPILEPSY | Ken Kubos | Low Carbohydrate Diets | 0 | January 28th, 2004 04:53 PM |
Some WW recipe sites | LIMEYNO1 | Weightwatchers | 1 | January 17th, 2004 04:03 AM |
Playing games | Logorrhea | Low Carbohydrate Diets | 102 | November 9th, 2003 08:39 PM |