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What three animals everyone else eating? We’ve got chickens, ducks, pigeons, quail, geese, cranes, turkeys, cows, deer, elk, moose, antelope, armadillo, beaver, bobcats, coyotes, foxes, lynx, bear, bison, caribou, goat, musk ox, pronghorn, sheep, muskrat, opossums, pigs, porcupine, rabbits, squirrels, pheasant, chukars, and tons of tasty insects to choose from.
107 18 ReplyYou forgot the many difference species of fish/creatures-of-the-sea.
64 6 ReplyI didn’t even go there because of so many tasty options to list!
22 2 Reply
Tell me with a straight face that you eat a fucking squirrel
36 8 ReplyTHAT'S the one you take issue with? Lol
In not sure anyone is eating muskrat or opossum outside West Virginia mountain hermits, people born before 1890, and anyone who self identifies as a trapper.
43 1 ReplyThere's parts of the Florida Panhandle where opossum is a serious delicacy. They even have a festival in August.
6 0 ReplyHuh. Weird.
2 0 Reply
Muskrat was classified as non meat for Catholics, so some people ate it, but anyone I know who did is dead now.
5 0 ReplyWell squirrel was the funniest one within that context imo.
4 1 ReplyEat the elongated muskrat!
1 0 Reply
Squirrel are fantastic.
They’re the least “gamey” out of most small game, less so than rabbit, and taste something like leaner dark meat chicken.
Awesome in a crockpot substituted for chicken in most recipes. Can fancy up squirrel with a Sous vide to make squirrel confit bánh mì tacos, or keep it old school and make squirrel pot pie.
23 1 ReplyI'm from Kentucky, friend. I've definitely had a squirrel or two in my day.
14 1 ReplyTennessee checking in - I’ve had squirrel as well.
8 0 Reply
I grew up eating squirrel. Its very common in rural areas,
13 1 ReplyDove, too.
Knew someone that tried to eat possum once, said it was the nastiest, greasiest thing he'd ever tried.
7 0 ReplyYou have to catch the possum first, then corn feed it for about a month or two to get the nasty taste out of the meat before you eat it. So basically, turn it into a pet, then kill and eat it.
4 0 ReplyIs.. is that actually true, or are you having a laugh? I genuinely cant tell.
but if its true, thats an awful lot of effort to make something nasty taste decent.
3 0 ReplyIts how they did it for the Possum Festival in Florida when I was growing up, so its a thing, But I can't imagine anyone would do it just cause they like possum though.
3 0 Reply
They're good too.
3 0 Reply"very common" is generous. I grew up in rural GA and never once saw someone actually eat squirrel
2 3 Reply
I used to live in rural Kansas, so yes
10 0 ReplySquirrel is actually pretty good. Some of those others though...
5 0 ReplyMan the size of the of the ones in my neighborhood could replace our thanksgiving turkey if it wasn’t illegal to hunt them (I checked).
2 0 Reply
I mean tbf, the majority of Americans don't eat anything aside from chicken pork and beef, with the occasional turkey
13 2 ReplyTrue, but the majority of Americans also eat only a handful of plants, especially when counting brassica as one plant.
14 1 ReplyThat's only true because turkeys aren't that good.
2 2 ReplyTurkey is amazing when done right. Though I guess that can be said for damn near anything.
6 0 ReplyFucking heretic.
3 0 ReplyThe amount of work required to make a decent turkey simply isn't worth it when so many better poultry options exist. The best prepared turkey isn't going to come close to a good roast duck.
1 0 Replyyeah they're mid af
2 1 Reply
To get 80k they're obviously counting variations. How many breeds of cow have I eaten?
9 0 ReplyI don't have access to that many animals, nor that many plants. Maybe 5 animals and about two dozen plants.
2 0 Reply
OP probably meant fish, octopus, and squid
9 1 Replylambs and sloths and carp and anchovies and orangutans and breakfast cereals and fruit bats
6 0 ReplySkip a bit, brother
2 0 Reply
Pls don't eat fox or lynx, they cute.
3 1 ReplyNot after you cook them?
11 0 Reply
And the slothes, and the orangutans, and breakfast cereals
1 0 Reply