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Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by paintermujer
(Post 8206585)
And those starey eyes from the fridge cabinet.
I have eaten so much paella over the years. Would never order conejo but what are all those chickeny bits in paella???:blink::eek: apologies to those who have heard this story before............... some years ago we came here for hols with some Floridian friends she insisted that real paella came with the rice on the side - not all cooked together like they do here after all - that's 'the american way':rolleyes: we persuaded her to try paella valenciana eventually then told her she'd just eaten bugs bunny:rofl: |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by lynnxa
(Post 8206593)
rabbit;)
apologies to those who have heard this story before............... some years ago we came here for hols with some Floridian friends she insisted that real paella came with the rice on the side - not all cooked together like they do here after all - that's 'the american way':rolleyes: we persuaded her to try paella valenciana eventually then told her she'd just eaten bugs bunny:rofl: After gutting and skinning they simply chopped up whole rabbits into chunks with a big cleaver and cooked it in a big pot with a lovely sauce before placing it in the middle of the table c/w teeth, eyes, head and all. There was usually a stampede for the eyes, even amongst the British ladies as they were always said to be especially good for the complexion. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by Dick Dasterdly
(Post 8206641)
I used to go to rabbit restaurants out in the sticks in Tenerife.
After gutting and skinning they simply chopped up whole rabbits into chunks with a big cleaver and cooked it in a big pot with a lovely sauce before placing it in the middle of the table c/w teeth, eyes, head and all. There was usually a stampede for the eyes, even amongst the British ladies as they were always said to be especially good for the complexion. good job really, having been in the hotel & restaurant business - although I was pretty shocked walking into the larder of the country hotel I worked in during my 20's to see a deer with its head lolling off the counter don't think I could eat eyes though |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by cricketman
(Post 8206490)
But why pretend that the meat is not part of an animal?
The English way of calling the meat and animal different names is strange and has left people out of touch and confused about what they are eating. . |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by fionamw
(Post 8206522)
What I've never quite understood is why the pig is king; or is it simply in Andalucia, where maybe cattle & sheep are less likely to be bred successfully?
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Re: Meat eating in Spain
That's it. After reading through this awful thread, I'm going to be a vegan.
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Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by paintermujer
(Post 8206482)
Vegetarianism aside
Can somebody tell me why when we buy meat in Spain we are constantly reminded of the animal we are eating by lovely live photos or outlines on the meat package. Puts me off a bit. How many of you have bought the little suckling pigs,cooked them and can still eat the meat.Probable tasty when its meat but the whole dead animal is too much for me. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by warren d
(Post 8207015)
Pathetic.
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Re: Meat eating in Spain
Jesus H Christ, some of you people are just a short step away from cannibalism.
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Re: Meat eating in Spain
Well I'm not sure about cannibalism, but........
I'm not sure it's a national thing, nor cultural necessarily, maybe it's just the way we've been brought up individually. I was brought up with animals both as pets and to rear to sell and to rear to kill & eat. Have killed, plucked, drawn, etc., and eaten a kid goat, and so on. To some who've been brought up eating from supermarket vacuum packs most or all of their life, that may come as a distasteful notion. Doesn't mean they should be criticised for their parents' inability to teach them the facts of food.... and that inability may, of course, have arisen from the parents' parents' upbringing, etc. I would venture to suggest, though, that there are many side issues in this topic. Whether eating suckling pig is acceptable morally/ethically; whether we should all accept our own hypocrisy regarding meat/fish eating; whether children should receive a rounder education on nutrition in all its gory detail, being just a few. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by bil
(Post 8206952)
That one's easy to answer. Post the reconquest, when the Inquisition was given free rein to torture kill or imprison anyone suspected of heresy, eating pork publically was an excellent way to signal that you weren't Jewish or Islamic. Given the horrific consequences of them even suspecting you weren't 100% committed to Catholic Christianity, it is hardly surprising that the population as a whole made pork its main meat.
I realise that it's a bit of a shock for people who have lived all their lives insulated from "real" food supplies, but since we never stop learning it's just another lesson that living in Spain has to teach us. It doesn't change the meat - just 'cos you're shown were it comes from. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by paintermujer
(Post 8206482)
Vegetarianism aside
Can somebody tell me why when we buy meat in Spain we are constantly reminded of the animal we are eating by lovely live photos or outlines on the meat package. Puts me off a bit. How many of you have bought the little suckling pigs,cooked them and can still eat the meat.Probable tasty when its meat but the whole dead animal is too much for me. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by lynnxa
(Post 8207019)
aren't you
I had suckling pig on Christmas day. It's no big deal. It's perfectly natural to eat dead animals and accept that, that is what you are doing. Rejecting what is natural human behaviour is very strange and truly pathetic. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
I´ve attended a class in marketing, where they´ve given a funny example how marketing can go horribly wrong.
A company producing babyfood had a picture of a wealthy, well nourished (white) baby on their cans with powder for babymilk. The Africans were really put off buying it, because they we´re thinking the cans contained babymeat. |
Re: Meat eating in Spain
Originally Posted by warren d
(Post 8207154)
Pathetic because I don't cringe when I see a picture of a pig on a packet of pork chops perhaps? Making a fuss about a picture of an animal on the packaging really is pathetic.
I had suckling pig on Christmas day. It's no big deal. It's perfectly natural to eat dead animals and accept that, that is what you are doing. Rejecting what is natural human behaviour is very strange and truly pathetic. It’s not natural human behaviour to eat animals, It’s only ignorant humans that think so. Fortunately, the tide is turning, and the ignorant are being driven back to the caves where they belong. |
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