SC - Re: sca-cooks V1 #647
tegan@swbell.net
tegan at swbell.net
Tue Mar 17 20:40:41 PST 1998
On Tue, 17 Mar 1998, Varju wrote:
> In a message dated 98-03-17 11:04:39 EST, you write:
>
> << thats what the Oprah case in Texas was about. >>
>
> Actually the Oprah case was about her mentioning that it COULD be a problem
> here too, which upset some cattlemen, etc. I think again it may be
> geographical, here at least the cattle are range fed until the weather gets
> bad, then go to an alfalfa or hay diet during the winter. The carcasses to
> feed problem is rare, at least in this region of the US.
I'm not sure the problem is geographical, but the local eating habits vary
w/ the geography. There are 6-7 cases per annum of slow infectious
diseases caused by eating "bugoo" a squirrel brain stew common in parts of
Tennessee and Kentucky.
I work on an Indian reservation where sheep/cattle/goats are raised and
eaten. I have helped out at social events and have butchered 6
sheep to date. Nothing is wasted. While we butcher, we cook and eat.
Some things I will eat and some things I will not eat: liver (flukes) and
brains (scrapie/prions). Since these are free range animals,
I know they have picked up parasites, but only horses are valuable enough
to be dewormed annually. Since there was a drought on the Rez from
1994-1996, I know some animals received prepared feed. Prepared feed
may include ground up dead animals, courtesy of the U.S. rendering
industies.
I am a "guest" on the Rez, so I am mindful that I must respect tribal
customs when I am invited to dinner or to ceremonies. I am also
mindful that I want to live to a ripe olde age w/ as many of my little
grey cells as possible. Doctors have reported 1 case/1,000,000 US
population of JCD per annum (1996 stats), but they still aren't sure of
the disease vector. Scrapie is a virtual mystery, no one understands how
prions might cause the disease; and some researchers even doubt that
prions cause scrapie and BSE. It is obvious that there are no clear
answers to the causes and vectors of these diseases. The cures -- if any
- -- are likely to be decades away.
In short, there are no cures for these slow infectious diseases, so why
take a chance on eating something that might degrade your quality of life
during your golden years and might remove most of your personality?
> I guess that's the
> advantage of living in the Wild West!
>
I'm not sure where you are, but "Ya'at'eeh" (Greetings) from Window Rock,
Arizona -- the heart and soul of the Navajo Nation.
In service
Arian Aurelia
If it can't be fricasseed, then fry, fry, the hen....
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