Exotic Eats

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  • WickedKitchen
    Member
    • Nov 2009
    • 2528

    Exotic Eats

    What's the strangest thing you've eaten? Was it good? What would've made it better?

    I came across this article and started thinking. This is something I'd like to try but a flight to AZ is not in the cards.

    ***
    In the six months since it launched Exotic Taco Wednesdays, Boca Tacos y Tequila has served up python, alligator, elk, kangaroo and rattlesnake. Frog legs, turtle, duck and Rocky Mountain oysters have also made appearances.
    "We've done just about anything we can get our hands on," said owner Bryan Mazon. "Every Wednesday we do something a little bit different."
    Last week he announced on Boca's Facebook page that the UA-area taco shop was accepting prepaid orders for African lion, to be served on Feb. 16. Orders must be placed by 3 p.m. Feb. 7.
    "I've gotten a lot of questions, like if it's legal," said Mazon, adding that a few lion tacos have been reserved so far. "We're still a month out, too."
    According to the Food and Drug Administration, lion and other game meat can be sold as long as the species isn't endangered.
    "I'm doing the African lion to get my name out," said Mazon, who used to be a salesman for City Meat and Provisions. "I've never tried it myself, but this one really caught my eye."
    Mazon said he had heard about a Mesa restaurant, il Vinaio, that served burgers made with African lion to correspond with the World Cup in South Africa last summer. Reservations sold out, but others picketed the restaurant.
    Most of Boca's exotic tacos range between $3 and $4. The lion tacos cost $8.75 apiece.
    This is the first time Boca is pre-selling its tacos. But at $100 a pound of ground lion meat - $400 for a pound of tenderloin - it makes sense.
    Mazon said he still expects to lose money on the lion, but is in it for exposure.
    "In all reality, what I want is just people to know that I'm here," he said. "That's the way to do it. You can't get these tacos anywhere else."
    His wife, Maria Jose Mazon, is Boca's chef and will make eight tacos per pound.
    The couple usually order 2 to 3 pounds of meat for Exotic Wednesdays, with grilled alligator being the best-seller.
    But rattlesnake made an impact, too.
    "It's the one people want back the most," Mazon said. "It was the first one, and it's the one most talked about."
    The couple plan to order the lion meat from a farm in Perris, Calif., which is southwest of Los Angeles.
    For the lion, diners will build their own Sonoran street-style taco. They can add cabbage, guacamole, pickled red onions and diced cucumbers and any of the six house-made salsas to the tacos.
    The Mazons opened their taco shop at 828 E. Speedway, in the former home of Greasy Tony's, the legendary sub shop, last June.
    "I'm 50 percent local Tucsonans and 50 percent students," Mazon said. "We do gourmet tacos. Do I want to get more students? - sure.
    "A lot of students might think that my price point isn't directed at them, but the average check is $8. Late night is 100 percent students."
  • precious007
    Banned Users
    • Sep 2010
    • 5885

    #2
    The strangest thing ..

    Hmm .. Snakes... don't exactly know what type...

    It was in a mongolian restaurant :-)

    Comment

    • Hanske
      Member
      • Jan 2011
      • 425

      #3
      It's not very exotic in Norway, but it might be in the US. I've eaten moose/elk and raindeer steaks. I've also eaten raw beef in Italy.


      EDIT: Got some more. Angus chin and snales.

      Comment

      • ratcheer
        Member
        • Jul 2010
        • 621

        #4
        I have had quite a few strange or exotic foods.

        Fresh octopus soup in the Dominican Republic was wonderful. It was a cream soup. There were fairly large pieces of octopus in it, including whole "suckers".

        OTOH, pickled octopus in Maui was awful. It didn't taste particularly bad or good, but it was like chewing on a piece of a car tire. It never chewed up in the slightest way and I ended up having to spit it out.

        Fried rattlesnake, fried alligator - both fairly good, but nothing to get really excited about.

        Barbequed goat was excellent. I also had goat tacos in a Mexican restaurant, and they were good too.

        Fried frog legs
        are usually very good. Also beef tongue.

        These are the ones that came to mind, but I am almost 60 years old and I have traveled a lot, so I have eaten many exotic foods over the years.

        Tim

        Comment

        • lxskllr
          Member
          • Sep 2007
          • 13435

          #5
          I'm funny with food, and would be unlikely to eat anything exotic. I'd like to try emu, and I'd be ok with reptiles, but that's about it. The only food I'll eat raw is fish, and I don't do any kind of organ meat if I can help it. I do love sausages, but I try not to think about it too much while I'm eating :^D

          Comment

          • Roo
            Member
            • Jun 2008
            • 3446

            #6
            Stir-fried dog and a $150 bottle of cognac was the most memorable. Scorpions, congealed duck's blood, duck brains, crab brains, pig's ear, chicken feet, various intestines and organs, horse salami and cold cuts, pigeon, goat fat "tea", fermented mare's milk (arag)... I'll try anything once. Even Taco Bell. Brains and blood are horrid, and straight-up beef liver always makes me puke.

            Comment

            • Mykislt
              Member
              • Sep 2010
              • 677

              #7
              pidgeon

              Comment

              • snupy
                Member
                • Apr 2009
                • 575

                #8
                I went on a blind date one time to a sushi restaurant. Actually, this was at the only place I would eat sushi. In the course of preparing to place our orders, somehow, it was decided that we each would order one item that the other person had to eat. For him, I ordered baby octopus. For me, he ordered sea urchin with quail egg. I don't know about the baby octopus, but the sea urchin with quail egg was NASTY. I love eggs, but the quail egg was raw, which I don't like. Even worse, the sea urchin had the texture of phlegm balls.

                Never again.

                Comment

                • WickedKitchen
                  Member
                  • Nov 2009
                  • 2528

                  #9
                  Wow...Roo Bourdain. Nice.

                  I think it was sheeps brains in Scotland. Then there was hagis...there's a ton of weird stuff in that. Blood sausage which is pretty much the same thing though I prefer the black rather than the white. Ostrich eggs which are friggin' huge. I've had the snails and frogs and such but I didn't find them particularly worth it. A pig's foot is nasty but when you're drunk as hell it's like ice cream. Black bear which was too gamey for regular consumption but a finally a decent marinade made it good...needed lots of soy sauce and orange juice.

                  I want to try a gooeyduck but every time I go for sushi it's not available.

                  Comment

                  • precious007
                    Banned Users
                    • Sep 2010
                    • 5885

                    #10
                    Barbequed goat
                    Also beef tongue.
                    with olives

                    This is actually a traditional meal here in Romania.

                    Fried frog legs
                    I eat them all the time in the restaurant :-) (they're better than fried chicken)

                    pidgeon
                    They've very rare, can't get them in the stores .... but I've eaten pigeon a few times in different forms... very soft meat and tasty.... I'd say better than turkey or duck.

                    Comment

                    • WickedKitchen
                      Member
                      • Nov 2009
                      • 2528

                      #11
                      How is it traditionally made? I've had goat many times in Indian cuisine but mainly in a curry.

                      Comment

                      • Roo
                        Member
                        • Jun 2008
                        • 3446

                        #12
                        Soy-marinated black bear? Lol I'd try it. As far as game is concerned, the best I've had is this N. American antelope my buddy Matt shot in Montana -- he called it "snackelope". R.I.P. Matty. Cultural mores as far as what is good to eat differ so much between countries and even regions; I find the endeavor of eating squirrel meat quite strange and unappealing, yet many on this forum have eaten many a squirrel. And you saw my partial list, who am I to judge a squirrel-eater? I've never had the chance to eat snake except for rattlesnake chili when I was a kid. I sought out a snake restaurant in southern China but the vipers they brought out, while quite large, were lethargic and looked sick. So I passed. All reptiles seem like they would be tasty, though, and I've heard camel is good. You know what I don't think I've ever had, despite all the weird shit? Rabbit. I want to eat a rabbit.

                        Comment

                        • precious007
                          Banned Users
                          • Sep 2010
                          • 5885

                          #13
                          How is it traditionally made? I've had goat many times in Indian cuisine but mainly in a curry.
                          Barbequed goat?

                          Actually it's roasted goat...

                          They take the entire goat, prepare it in special sauces and inject the meat with all different spices ... and put it as whole on a roller ... over the wood fire... hmm



                          This is a pig, but that's how the goat is done as welll...

                          Comment

                          • ratcheer
                            Member
                            • Jul 2010
                            • 621

                            #14
                            Originally posted by WickedKitchen View Post
                            How is it traditionally made? I've had goat many times in Indian cuisine but mainly in a curry.
                            I have never cooked it myself, but the barbequed goat I had was just made like regular pork barbeque at a family picnic out in the country. They roasted it over a big charcoal fire and smoked it with green hickory sticks and leaves.

                            Tim

                            Comment

                            • precious007
                              Banned Users
                              • Sep 2010
                              • 5885

                              #15
                              I still don't get it ...

                              Why do Indians use so much curry in the food.... ?!?!

                              I only like it with beans.... and sometimes on chicken

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