Ian Sutton wrote:Hot cuisine trend?
Roadkill.
There's been a recent TV series on it here. Got to admit it would be a brave person to eat Badger.
One tidbit that came out, was the law over here stops you from eating something you've just hit, but it's fine to eat something someone else has hit.
What about where you are - for some in the rural/mountain areas I'm guessing not eating something you'd hit would be seen as a criminal waste?
regards
Ian
Been tv series here on this side of the pond as well, Ian.
Since I was originally from the "Deep South" in the USA (and why do I hear the faint twang of banjos in the background, I wonder?), I suspect I have eaten most of what people refer to as roadkill here. Some of it's not bad; some of it is awful. Squirrel can be tasty, I will admit. Rabbit, yum. Nutria keeps threatening to go mainstream (although I doubt it ever will). Not so hot on possum (too greasy and rank) or raccoon. Armadillo is fine (and also known as 'possum on a half shell' in Texas). Gator is okay, but not special, unless it's cooked wrong, then it's as chewy and tasty as steamed rubber innertubes.
There's a reason why most of those old country boys used tons of pepper in their critter stews, you know.
Years ago, when I was in the US Air Force in Florida, we had standing orders that if we hit a deer (not an uncommon occurence) with our range vehicles, we had to immediately take the carcass to the local minimum security prison facility (so called country club prisons, where politicians and rich guys went to do their time).
I often wondered about the justice of felons dining on fresh venison when I could not.
