[Sca-cooks] some ideas for your next feast :)

Tom Vincent tom.vincent at yahoo.com
Fri Jul 7 04:38:59 PDT 2006


Scorpions, worms and ants on the menu at club By Claudia Parsons
Thu Jul 6, 7:33 AM ET

http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060706/od_nm/life_scorpions_dc


A discerning guest at a Manhattan cocktail party removed a scorpion
from its bed of cheese on an endive leaf and popped it in his mouth,
determined to savour the taste unadulterated.

"Nutty, sweet," was the verdict of Gourmet magazine food editor Ian
Knauer at the recent soiree.

"That's an antenna," he added, pointing to a morsel of cricket left
poking through lips of his companion at the Explorers Club in New York,
which likes to entertain its well-traveled members with exotic culinary
adventures.

Founded in 1904, the exclusive international club has some 3,000
members around the world including Edmund Hillary, the first man to
climb Mount Everest, astronaut John Glenn and paleontologist Richard
Leakey.

On the menu at a reception for some lesser mortals in June were worms,
crickets, scorpions, ants and pigeon pate.

"We're so fast to make fun or make comments about the way someone talks
or the way someone walks, and food is like the last bastion," said Gene
Rurka, the Explorers Club's exotic foods expert. "But someone today is
living off this."

"I guarantee you people in Africa who haven't had rain for seven years
would love to see an insect," he said.

Rurka, a biologist who has studied coral reefs in the Virgin Islands,
devotes much thought to devising dishes for the Explorers Club's annual
dinner in March where guests feast on tarantulas, maggots and exotic
parts of various livestock such as eyeballs, testicles and penises.

TEXAS ANTS AND MAGGOTS

Large ants from Texas are served with blackcurrants in a sweet
mini-tart, while he likes to serve the maggots stuffed in mushrooms.
"They're delicious," Rurka said. "I was going to say like a tasty rice
grain, but soft. It's not chewy like that."

He has experimented with worms and decided the best option is to
disguise them as a pretzel, tying them in a knot like the salty dough
snack, and to serve them with mustard. First they have to be fed on
oatmeal for 10 days to cleanse the system, and he does not recommend
taking worms from just anywhere.

"You don't want them raised in a dump site, you don't want them raised
in manure," he said.

Earlier Richard Wiese, president emeritus of the Explorers Club, led
several dozen people through Central Park for a foraging hike to find
edible plants in the heart of New York.

Among the findings were wood sorrel -- a heart shaped leaf that tastes
a little like sour apples -- dandelions, violet leaves and burdock, as
well as pods from a Kentucky coffee tree from which he had brewed a
batch of coffee for the party.

"It's naturally decaffeinated," Wiese said. "It's kind of fun to go
into Central Park and make your own coffee."

Rurka sources the more exotic ingredients such as spiders and scorpions
from farms in Texas and Nevada where they are raised as pets or to feed
animals.

At $30 each, the scorpions make a costly canape.

TARANTULA CANAPES 

Rurka prepared two large black tarantulas for the cocktail party but he
said at the annual dinner he serves hundreds of them, each costing
$175. They have to be stored individually and kept alive until just
before cooking to stay fresh. 

"They kill each other if they're kept together," he said, adding that
occasionally the hairs on the legs can cause an allergic reaction, just
as some people are allergic to bees. 

He neutralizes the stings of the scorpions with heat to avoid adverse
reactions. 

"When you look at a scorpion your salivary glands dry up. It's not like
looking at a pizza," said Cal Dennison, winemaker for Redwood Creek,
who was offering advice on wine pairings. 

He recommended a pinot grigio or something similar "to get your
salivary glands working." 

Rurka said he tries to overcome people's aversion to creepy-crawlies by
serving them with something appetizing -- for example a cactus jelly
with the cricket, or cheese and sun-dried tomato with the scorpion. He
admits he would not normally feast on such creatures by choice. 

"This is for sustenance, this is not an every day meal," he said. "The
chances are you're not going to be looking for this unless you're in
dire straits, and if you're in dire straits, I would suggest you go out
and survive." 

But he said attitudes to food changed over time and between countries,
and with environmental problems and a growing population, the food
industry could eventually be looking for new sources of protein, such
as maggots or worms. 

"I would say in the future our protein source will be different," he
said, comparing raising insects to farming battery chickens. "I would
say we could raise insects faster, get a better source of protein,
control the fat content and have a higher nutritional value." 

"I think you're going to see bio-foods," he said. "It's getting over
that hurdle; it's hard to put that worm in your mouth." 

For the record, a worm pretzel, or worm-zel, is a little chewy but
doesn't taste too bad smothered with mustard. 


-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Tom Vincent
-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*
Republican agenda: Crush the middle class into poverty, rape the environment, enrich corporations, restore slavery, install a theocratic dictatorship.  Fight back!



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