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I Ate Bison and It Tasted Like Ostrich

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Post subject: Link: I Ate Bison and It Tasted Like Ostrich
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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Not too long ago, I ate some Bison, American buffalo, ground beef. It tasted to me just like hamburger with no fat. Years ago, I had an ostrich steak at a steak house in the same building as the Jakarta Theater, near the street where a bombing would take place many years later. The ostrich was from Zimbabwe, Zaire, or some African country with a Z. It tasted just like tasted just like steak with no fat. I had water buffalo, too, a different animal. That tastes like regular beef to me, except some of it is really tough. I probably ate those steaks after they had been behind the plow for over 20 years. Boiled water buffalo is better. The soup I had in a mountain village reminded me of my grandmother's stew beef, but it had really large visible strands of muscle compared to regular beef.I had some sea turtle without knowing what it was. Some sea turtles are endangered. It tasted like bald eagle.Just kidding. I never had bald eagle. Turtle was kind of dark and sort of sweet almost, and rubbery a little but not much. I posted on this forum that I had never eaten dog. Shortly after that, I was in a mountain village in Sumatra. I had some super hot chicken and parts of some large 'gold fish' (different species from the pets and really good) with pork broth served in a beer glass. I went out for Chinese noodles and was the only one to get a certain type of noodle. I got horribly sick for about 12 hours, and was fortunately staying somewhere with a sit-down toilet, the only place I know of in that part of the mountains. Then, I went to make a little presentation on some business ideas for the village before the cultural ceremony started. We ate. The food was super hot dog and super hot chicken. And I don't mean hot dogs. I mean spicy. They served broth in a glass. I had been sick so I ate broth and rice. I got toward the bottom of my plate and rice and it occurred to me that they weren't serving pork, and there was a pretty good chance the broth did not come from a chicken. Sure enough, it was dog broth


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Post subject: Cojak:
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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Never had dog, water buffalo or even ostrich. I do like alligator and buffalo. Most of my 'foreign to me' food was Europe and the Mediterranean area. Once in Turkey I ate some kind of soup where the cook was cooking in one giant copper. He was cutting fresh meat into one side while serving from the other. I was hoping somehow he was keeping it separate. It wasn't bad, sorta like a pork or chicken soup. Later I learned it was lamb.Okay you did make me smile at the Bald Eagle. LOLMy dad's family from N Georgia (Toccoa area) ate anything with four legs (even possum) methinks but not dog or cat of course, we frown on eating pets here in the South.Dad said possum was too greasy. I sold frog legs many years before I ate them and found they were good.I bet your wife can come up with some good dishes.Personally I find it hard to beat cornbread and milk. LOL Some facts but mostly just my [email protected]/


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Post subject: Cojak:
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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OUC Some facts but mostly just my [email protected]/


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Post subject: Link:
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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We have a lot in common geographically. My dad was not born in Toccoa, but his family eventually settled there, and his father was from Walhalla across the border. We'll have to PM if my box isn't too full


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Post subject: Quiet Wyatt:
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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I haven’t gotten out as much as Link and Cojak, but I have had alligator legs and found them quite good. “A lot like chicken,” as they say. Dark meat chicken that is. Frog legs were similar in taste, but not as good and a lot more fishy flavored to me. Speaking of fish, walleye is absolutely the best-tasting fish I ever had. Wish I could get it down here in New Mexico.


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Post subject: revuriah:
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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Was it similar to venison (elk)? It is part of the deer family. Years ago in Michigan, I was working a camp out with Justin Stewart with the youth boys in the field behind VL (before the new building was there). We had a bonfire going and he went in the house to get some venison steaks for us. We cooked them over the open flames and ate them like cavemen, lol. Bare handed. But it was one of the tastiest steaks I’ve ever had.Bison is great. I wish I could get Pennesha to eat it. It’s just wild beef. Alligator and frog legs are awesome, but the worst for me was crawfish. Too greasy and more fishy than fish. And yeah, walleye is great. Good northern fish and fun to reel in The World As I See Itworldjeffreysees.blogspot.com/Revuriah's Facebookwww.facebook.com/people/Jeff-Richard/1226257444Jeffrey David Richard's Myspace Musicwww.myspace.com/547856946


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Post subject: revuriah:
Posted: Tue Jan 14, 2025 2:07 am
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The crawfish I had was from a Cajun style boil. Eww The World As I See Itworldjeffreysees.blogspot.com/Revuriah's Facebookwww.facebook.com/people/Jeff-Richard/1226257444Jeffrey David Richard's Myspace Musicwww.myspace.com/547856946


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