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Actually it’s not the taste of catfish I don’t care for. It’s the texture. I like my fish firm. Firmer then cat fish comes out. I’ve never fished catfish but eaten plenty, Wild and farm, home cooked, and restaurant, fried baked and made in to dishes.
I don’t care for crawfish, frog legs and crab legs. I’d rather eat it then Fido, and rather eat it then go hungry.
I’ve planned on eating ‘possum but never got past the skinning, would rather eat catfish then ‘possum.
 
The possum will eat any thing it can find, and super greasy. Years ago when I trapped I caught quite a few, as you while skinning the thoughts always crossed my mind (folks really eat these things) I guess you could board bake them then throw away the possum and eat the board. As to fish I cannot eat them allergic to fish, when we were kids we would fish for carp there was a old fellow whom would buy them as long as they were alive fifty cents apiece. he would put them in the spring house for a few weeks and feed them corn meal, said done this way they were the best eating fish to be had.
 
Well coon and bear will eat anything they can find and chicken too. I would turn my chickens out in to my gardens, but they hit the compost pile too,and hung close on butchering day... chickens rabbit deer duck other game.
 
Speaking of eating insects, don't be afraid to try Goldenrod Gall Fly larvae, found in the round galls on last summer's goldenrod. The cork-like gall requires a sharp knife to split, yielding the nutty tasting 1/8" larvae. As kids we were always quick to remind each other that the Indians used them as bait for winter fishing, too.
 
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Coon fat is greasy. Possum fat is slimy. That's the best way I can describe the difference, and there is a difference.

Oh, and Tenngun, the bleeding helps with the firmness as well. I'm not sure why, but it certainly makes a huge difference. Walleye and striped bass are still my favorites, but catfish that has been bled is worth a try.
 
Took me until tonight to get to this thread. Wife and I had corned beef and cabbage (traditional Irish-American meal) with soda bread and Guinness Foreign Export for St. Patrick's Day. We ate it without the Daughters and Granddaughters being with us...can't "social distance" at the dinner table. So, dinner wasn't as good as it should have been, but the food and drink was delicious. I forgot to have my whiskey, so I drank one the next day.
BTW, I ate horse when I was in Iceland. The Icelandic horse is a beautiful animal, but 1/3 of them are raised for eating. I tried it...it was good.

Richard/Grumpa
 
Bass, any form....Largemouth, Smallmouth, Striped, Chilean sea bass.....I've never gotten past the first bite. It gets left on the table.
Now, catfish, salmon, crawfish, blue crabs.....Watch out! I'll run you over for seconds and thirds.
Man. Mustard fried catfish and cornbread. Cherry wood smoked Sockeye salmon with grilled asparagus tips........Atchafalaya Jambalaya with hot sausage, ham and shrimp..........and greens...........
Oh hell. I gotta go cook suppah.
 
The meal that became a St. Patrick’s Day staple across the country—corned beef and cabbage—was an American innovation. While ham and cabbage were eaten in Ireland, corned beef offered a cheaper substitute for impoverished immigrants. Irish-Americans living in the slums of lower Manhattan in the late 19th century and early 20th, purchased leftover corned beef from ships returning from the tea trade in China. The Irish would boil the beef three times—the last time with cabbage—to remove some of the brine.

Or so the story goes, but I have my own story.

From the arrival of poor Irish immigrants in the 1840's up through WW1, I posit that immigrants ate a lot of horse meat. Either knowingly or unknowingly, and that when corned "beef" and cabbage became popular in the early 1900's, it was likely made with horse meat.
In the 1890's horse drawn street cars were replaced with electric ones and for the next 20 years nearly all horse drawn carriages would be replaced by cars. As a result millions of horses were slaughtered and found their way into the food stream. Horse meat, described as lean, stringy, gamey or tasteless, probably fit the bill well for corning. Oh, and it was cheap.

The latest incidence of horse meat ending up in corned beef that I could find was in 2013 in England.

Since 2017 the Trump administration has tried twice to lift the ban on horse meat in the U.S.
So who knows, you might be eating "real" corned "beef" in the near future. :D
A little off track, but I remember my dad telling me one of the blessings of the modern industrial age is that if you neglect, overwork or lose your temper and kick a car or a tractor, it doesn't feel it.
 
Bass, any form....Largemouth, Smallmouth, Striped, Chilean sea bass.....I've never gotten past the first bite. It gets left on the table.
Now, catfish, salmon, crawfish, blue crabs.....Watch out! I'll run you over for seconds and thirds.
Man. Mustard fried catfish and cornbread. Cherry wood smoked Sockeye salmon with grilled asparagus tips........Atchafalaya Jambalaya with hot sausage, ham and shrimp..........and greens...........
Oh hell. I gotta go cook suppah.
OK, had to look that one up. Somehow in my 70+ years, in spite of having southern relatives on both sides, I've missed running into mustard fried catfish. It's definitely on my list the next time I risk breaking self-isolation long enough to hit a meat counter, or get lucky in the Colorado river. Maybe I'll go fishing tomorrow...

On a side note: my lunch today was a rib eye steak, smothered in anchovy and garlic butter after it came off the grill.. I dunno about the anchovy paste version of the butter, but when made with filets there's no fishy taste. They just add a huge umami flavor burst to the butter, garlic, parsley and lemon juice.
 
Newspapers reported that Bostonians were indulging in “liberal quantities of sausages for lunch daily” -- until they found out they’d been eating horse.

Ah yes, well there is the old saying...,
Je weniger die Leute darüber wissen, wie Würste und Gesetze gemacht werden, desto besser schlafen sie nachts
The less the people know about how sausages and laws are made, the better they'll sleep at night.

Unknown quote often misattributed to Otto Von Bismarck.

LD
 
Years ago, I was working in Arizona and read something that said a plant in Oregon was canning horse meat. Supposedly they slapped one label on it and sold it in the US as dog food, and another label to sell it in France as people. That was forty five years ago, and I wouldn't guarantee now it was even true. But I had a co-worker whose dad had been a well-known cowboy and character in the Grand Canyon area, and I told him about it. He was completely horrified: "but... but... that... that's CANNIBALISM!!!"
 
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