• Fondots@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Gator- tastes like chicken, kind of tough and chewy, but come on, have you ever seen an alligator? Of course it was going to be chewy.

    Frog legs- pretty much a dead ringer for chicken wings if you didn’t know what a wing was supposed to look like. Maybe just the tiniest hint of something fishy going on there.

    Escargot - an excellent excuse to eat a bunch of butter and garlic and for some reason it’s fancy even though you’re eating a garden pest

    Squirrel - kind of greasy, but not bad, darker meat than I expected. Not really enough meat on them to be worth it though, at least not the squirrels we have in my neck of the woods, I’ve seen some pretty big squirrels in other parts of the country though, so maybe they’re a little more worthwhile. If you had a handful of squirrels I suspect they could make a pretty good soup or stew though.

    Rabbit- tastes like chicken, I’ve had it a few different ways, I don’t know that I would know the difference if you swapped rabbit for chicken in any of them, but I had a rabbit pot pie at a restaurant a few years ago that has been my happy thought ever since, probably the tastiest thing I have ever eaten.

    Deer venison - very similar to beef, a bit gamey but I dig that.

    Quail - tiny chicken, that’s pretty much all there is to it.

    Pigeon- much darker than chicken, a bit greasy, overall pretty tasty (these were country pigeons, I don’t recommend eating city pigeons) a single pigeon breast is pretty much exactly the right size to make a pigeon nugget.

    Bison- lean beef, maybe a bit stronger tasting but overall pretty well within the beef spectrum. If you didn’t tell me it was bison, I’d probably assume it was either really cheap or moderately expensive beef.

    Wild boar- pork but not, kind of hard to explain this one, and the way I had it prepared had a lot of spices and seasoning so I can’t really give a straight appraisal of the meat itself.

    Kangaroo- it tastes like it evolved on a different continent than any other mammal you’ve ever eaten. It’s still very much in the red meat family but there’s something else going on there that’s kind of hard to place, sort of gamey and stronger tasting.

    Goose- kind of like a mix of duck and turkey, leaning more duck-like, and yeah, that tracks, you could probably just about assume that from looking at a goose.

    I wouldn’t really consider these to be exotic, but a surprising amount of people don’t seem to have tried them, and they’re some of my all-time favorite meats.

    Duck- its more like a red meat than chicken, can be kind of greasy/fatty but in a good way

    Lamb- red meat, kind of a strong gamey taste (that again, I personally really like) oddly somehow gamier than venison despite venison actually being a game meat and lamb being domesticated. You could probably serve me deer and tell me it was beef and slip it by me, but I don’t think you could pull it off with lamb.

    Goat- lamb, but moreso.

    Liver- it’s kind of hard to describe liver in any way but livery, but iron-y and minneral-y are probably the best adjectives I can come up with. I’ve had beef liver and chicken liver, beef is definitely a stronger flavor but both are recognizably livery. Chicken liver is probably mild enough that as long as it’s prepared well most people could enjoy it, beef liver is definitely more of an acquired taste.

    Chicken hearts- stronger flavored and tougher than regular chicken, but still recognizably chicken, imagine dark meat but lean. Little bit of a irony/mineraly taste, but not in a livery way, can be a little tough/chewy, and if you’re inclined to batter and fry them, they are the perfect size to make sort of a popcorn chicken thing with, or if you want to have little bits of meat for a stir fry or something and don’t feel like chopping up the meat yourself. They are also dirt cheap, at least around me.

    Tripe- a bit chewy, honestly not too much going on flavor-wise, there’s something going on that tastes/smells of a barnyard but in a very pleasant way, but it’s almost more of a suggestion of a taste than an actual flavor.

    Beef tongue- recognizably beefy, but definitely has something going else on, not quite livery but leaning that direction. Definitely something you need to braise or sous vide or something for a long time because it will be damn near impossible to chew otherwise, and it has its own unique texture, it will probably make you think a lot about your own tongue while eating it.

    Chicken feet- look, there’s really no meat worth speaking of on a chicken foot, it’s basically all skin and connective tissue which is tasty and an interesting texture, but not worth it to me to eat themselves, some people do, but it’s not for me. ut if you want to take you chicken stock to the next level, use some chicken feet.

    And these are probably the opposite of exotic, just weird or have bad press

    Pickled pigs feet- salty vinegary vaguely porky jello with bones in it. I like salty vinegary things, so that’s not a bad thing in my book.

    Scrapple- local delicacy for those of us in the Delaware valley, if you’ve ever heard spam described as everything but the oink, well scrapple has some oink in it too. It’s soft and mushy and fries up to a real nice crisp on the outside. Taste is sort of in a similar vein as a breakfast sausage, really nothing too wild about it.

    Pork roll (you north jersey folk calling it Taylor Ham are crazy, it says pork roll right on the package, you’re wrong) is basically just spam with a better PR department, less salty, slightly different spices, doesn’t come in a can.

    And on that note- spam, it’s delicious but very salty. If you like ham you’ll probably like spam.

    • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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      10 months ago

      I agree with most of that but would not mistake rabbit for chicken.

      Rabbit is much leaner, much sweeter, and has a different grain to the muscle, closer to very tender pork. Good eating but needs to be cooked in some fat.

    • Pulptastic@midwest.social
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      10 months ago

      For squirrel I had good luck slow cooking a few at a time, picking all the meat, and using it in casserole. Kinda like dark meat chicken. They have lots.of tiny bones so it is a bit of work.

  • rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    I don’t know if you are looking for meat analogues, but I got to eat hand made seitan once. Really great texture. It isn’t something I see anywhere in places I tend to be so it was exotic to me. It was pretty labor intensitto make, I thought. It took a lot of water!

      • rhythmisaprancer@kbin.social
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        10 months ago

        Indeed. I used to have friends who would make tempeh but I don’t remember ever having theirs and it is more available anyway.

      • the_Coffin_Seller@lemmy.world
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        10 months ago

        I don’t use facebook anymore but iirc there is a group called the seitan society which tries the most ridiculous recipees with seitan. just the images alone were stunning.

      • Cheradenine@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        If you can find this, it’s really good. I have never met someone who did not like it. Rinse it off, marinate it, throw it in curry, whatever. My ex used it, or real duck in fresh spring rolls. Available at many Asian markets.

        It’s rooted in a Chinese Taoist vegetarian festival called ‘the Nine Emperor Gods’. It has become quite big in Thailand.

  • morganth@discuss.tchncs.de
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    10 months ago

    Ostrich is delicious. I’ve eaten it in a restaurant once and cooked it myself two or three times. It tastes like a red meat, but cooks like white meat, so you have to be careful because it can overlook in a snap.

    • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      100% agree. I was at a festival, saw a stand selling “ostrich steak” sandwiches, which I’d never heard of before. I figured I’d try it. The meat, which was served on a hoagie roll, looked and tasted like London broil. Good stuff! I’m surprised it’s not more common!

    • DLSantini@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      Years ago, we got a huge case of Slim Jim’s that said they were made with ostrich, instead of the usual beef and pork. Tasted like Slim Jim’s. So there’s that.

  • magnetosphere@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Rattlesnake. Not bad, but totally unremarkable - tasted like chicken. Still, I’d recommend it, because the best thing about it is getting to say you’ve eaten rattlesnake.

    • Chozo@kbin.social
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      10 months ago

      Not bad, but totally unremarkable

      Pretty much sums up my experience with rattlesnake, as well. The novelty of it was the most interesting part, really.

      Though that really applies to just about every “exotic” meat I’ve had. They all taste like a slightly worse version of other, more conventional meats, and it’s immediately made clear why it’s not more popular in the first place.

    • 0ops@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      I think I had grilled blow snake once. I was camping with a bunch of other kids and somebody caught the thing. You’re right it tasted like chicken.

  • wombatula@lemm.ee
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    10 months ago

    Rattlesnake in the wild, thanks to an insane ex-military Scout leader I had that was trying to prove a point to us (his Scout troop).

    It was actually a lot better than I expected, but I wouldn’t recommend it for a number of (hopefully) obvious reasons.

  • Redhotkurt@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Alligator. Chewier than chicken. Tasted kinda like chicken. Would try again, I guess.

    Also had ostrich burgers a couple of times. I’m told I was shitfaced and enjoyed them immensely, but I couldn’t tell you for sure, for I was shitfaced.

    • Dem Bosain@midwest.social
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      10 months ago

      Ostrich burgers are excellent. There used to be a sports store near here that served burgers (bison, elk, ostrich) and the ostrich was the best. Also deep fried alligator nuggets, but honestly once you bread and deep fry something they’re pretty much all the same.

  • Gargleblaster@kbin.social
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    10 months ago

    Ate a platter of 3 different fried insects. I think it was wood worms, bees, and crickets. The bees were the best.

    None of them were horrible. Would do it again.

  • Lorindól@sopuli.xyz
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    10 months ago

    I’ve eaten a rat.

    In my youth I was trekking in Thailand and we arrived to our next destination late at night and we were starving. The only option to get food was a street grill which served only two foods: rat-on-a-stick and some kind of a fried jellyfish-on-a-stick.

    The rat was actually pretty good. My friend chose the jellyfish and regretted this instantly.

  • Trollivier@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    While visiting Norway, I had a reindeer burger which was simply awesome. I also had reindeer meat prepared like they prepare antilope in the country the cook was from. Expensive and worth it.

  • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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    10 months ago

    Very low end: goat. There was an Indian restaurant near a museum we visited, and I saw it as an option and figured why not. Turns out it’s mostly like lamb. Quelle surprise.

    Haven’t had it since. It’s hard enough finding anywhere that serves lamb, in the US. It’s just not on our radar. I think everywhere I’ve seen it is either some kind of ethnic cuisine (mostly Indian and Greek, since a few years in Bavaria had quite an impact on my palette) or some upscale restaurant treating it as exotic. Otherwise you have to buy a shoulder and slow-cook it yourself.

      • mindbleach@sh.itjust.works
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        10 months ago

        Like I said, it’s not exactly bizarre. America’s just cow-pig-chicken country. We do turkey once a year. Duck only exists in east-Asian restaurants.

        My dad’s fairly midwest parents had a beloved recipe for mock fried chicken. It includes veal.

      • Chetzemoka@startrek.website
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        10 months ago

        As an American raised in West Virginia, thinking of goat as exotic feels funny as well lol. When I was a kid, my mom had a goat to eat the grass on the hill that was too steep to mow.

          • Chetzemoka@startrek.website
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            10 months ago

            Now I’m mad that I didn’t even make that pun on purpose lol

            And the secret to goat mowing is you gotta move the stake that the goat is tied to around the yard so the goat can get all the grass and not just one circle

    • deegeese@sopuli.xyz
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      10 months ago

      I love lamb but every time I try goat I’m disappointed that it’s tougher and bonier.

      It’s definitely ‘exotic’ in the US but I don’t see the appeal.

  • Koopa_Khan@lemmy.world
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    10 months ago

    Horse. A friend of mine brought some from Iceland and was kind enough to share. Its somewhere between pork and beef to me.

    The fermented shark he brought back on the other hand, was the worst thing I have ever tasted. The smell alone cleared the room, and as one chef instructor said, “it smells like dirty pussy”.

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      10 months ago

      You have to chase hákarl with brennivin. Although brennivin itself makes me gag.

      • catfish@lemmy.ml
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        10 months ago

        I had horse steak from the UK, it was superbly tender and a lovely mellow taste. I was quite surprised.

  • Shinji_Ikari [he/him]@hexbear.net
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    10 months ago

    I had some moose that was given to me by my friend who was present at his friends moose hunt. They had to break the animal down at the location and make multiple meat sack trips to the game warden for tagging. The warden said they hadn’t seen someone do it like that for a century.

    • FALGSConaut [comrade/them]@hexbear.net
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      10 months ago

      Fun facts, back in the day people would often move their entire camps to the site of a moose kill rather than trying to transport the body any distance, it was easier to pack up and move everyone than drag a moose through the forest and brush

      • Shinji_Ikari [he/him]@hexbear.net
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        10 months ago

        I believe it. Once big work horses were more available, people stopped tearing down the moose on-location and just dragged it home. In more modern times, they’ll use a 4x4. This particular area was extremely rutted so they couldn’t get anything wheeled back there, and where do you even find a Clydesdale rental service this day and age?