I could eat a horse

Posted: October 16th, 2009 - 7:06am by Doug Powell

In the wake of news that some in south Florida are taking to butchering horses, here are some tips from Australia on how to eat horse.

Horse Steaks
The world’s most famous horse steak eaters, the French, have only gained that reputation since the 1789-1799 revolution simply because the horses of aristocrats were an easy source of protein for a country in turmoil. Its popularity was reinforced during food shortages post World War II. Traditionally, horse meat is sold from boucheries chevalines (horse butchers), although now it can also be bought from supermarkets. In French-speaking Quebec, in Canada, horse meat is also popular (above, right, a horse butcher at the Toulouse market, 2007).

Chips Cooked in Horse Fat

Horse with Noodles

Pastissada de Caval
In northern Italy, the traditional horse meat stew from Verona known as Pastissada de caval is made with wine and paprika. Legend has it that the dish originates from the town’s inhabitants marinating the meat from dead horses in the local Valpolicella wine and herbs and spices after a battle between the Ostrogoths and Barbarians in AD489. In Italy, horse - and donkey - meat has traditionally been cured to make bresaola or carpaccio.

The Original Steak Tartare
Needless to say with horses being central to life on the central Asian steppes, so it is central to their diet. For those magnificent horsemen the Tartars, the most famous being Genghis Khan and his army, the horse was also a living meal. They would slice meat from the horses' hindquarters for sustenance, sewing-up the wound, and continuing on their rampage. Another legend has it that the Tartars tenderized their meat under their saddles, the origins of the classic French raw meat beef dish steak tartare.

Alcoholica Mare's Milk
This reliance on the horse on the central steppes also means a reliance on mare’s milk. Fermented, mare’s milk becomes a mildly alcoholic yoghurt-like drink known as Kumis or Airag. When visiting Mongolia in 2005  President Bush was apparently offered Kumis although there is no record as to whether or not he actually consumed it.

Horse Jerky
Commercially produced packets of horse meat jerky is an easy introduction to horse meat for squeamish tourists in Kazakhstan. For the locals though, horse flesh is a real treat and made into sausages including Kazy and the smoked sausage Shuzhuk.

Horse Sashimi
In Japan, barbecued, horse is simply called horse meat: baniku; or skewered horse: bagushi. But raw horse meat is poetic, named after its cherry-red colour and known as sakura (cherry blossom) or sakuraniku (cherry blossom meat). Sakura served sashimi-style with soy sauce and ginger is known as basashi.

 

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Comments

Pat Kennedy says:

What you eat and are comfortable with trying comes with how you are raised. Cultural differences are okay.We Americans are such judgmental snobs, but when it comes to nutrition,if you are interested in tasting, go ahead and try it. If you have moral issues, you are probably a Vegan....and that is okay too. Unless we are being introduced to cannabalism...that would be where my line is drawn. But some cultures find aborted fetuses in soup as a delicacy.....Sorry that seems just absolutely too gross for me to even consider. If chickens were able to voice opinions, I am sure they would say that is what we do with their eggs....hmmmmm.

Posted on October 16th, 2009 - 10:42am

Theobald Tiger says:

Being born and raised in the Rhineland of Germany, horse meat is something pretty common. Still a lot of fellow countrymen have quite a few "problems" with that. If you don't have issues with it...and you have a chance....try a "rheinischer Sauerbraten" (Sour-Roast rhineland style) made from horse...it is FANTASTIC.

Posted on October 21st, 2009 - 5:30pm

Boyd R. Jones says:

In Jinan City, Shangdong Province, China donkey meat is a local delicacy. Here is a Youtube video of an American friend chowing down there:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XHgSFOxMMp4

Posted on October 21st, 2009 - 5:34pm

georgesovereigns says:

@ Pat KennedyLets not forget the Placenta eating craze in the US. I have come accross more than 4 blogs having posts of eating placenta from the all to willing mothers! MMM placenta pate! DISTURBING!!I agree with Pat Kennedy about what your culture dictates as acceptable meat and not acceptable meat. I wouldn't eat Horse meat and especially dog meat because of the simple fact that i respect both those animals deeply and eating them, well, eating them does not exactly show my respect...But i don't mind if other people eat horse meat, its just that i am not gonna eat from their lunch box, however nice they are.

Posted on October 22nd, 2009 - 10:01am

NicoleShelton says:

I know that if you live in some parts of the world, this is perfectly normal. But, since i am an American, i think this is 100% sick. I do not understand how people can eat this! I agree with George, I would never ever eat horse, or dog, or any other animal along those lines. My respect is very deep for them.Also, how can people even THINK of eating a fetus!? That's just downright WRONG!!!!

Posted on November 18th, 2009 - 6:35pm

Calico says:

What you're missing is that American horses are never raised for meat. Ethics aside, you're butchering an animal full of so many banned-for-meat-animal drugs, it would make your head spin. But since Americans are too smart to eat their own horses, it's europeans and asians who get to enjoy the drug cocktails.European horses have "passports" to track drug ingestion and ensure a detox time. American horses do not.European horses aren't shipped to Mexico in various states of disease and declining health. You are what you eat -- pathogens and all.And sadly, for some Americans, the horsemeat industry is what is fueling theft. Peoples' horses are being taken out of their own back yards. Slaughterhouses, customs, and meat-horse brokers are not required to check ownership (tattoos, chips, or brands). If these were stolen cars they were cutting up, someone would be in jail. But since they're "only horses", nobody seems to care.As a horse owner myself, I find it disgraceful we're tolerating the use of non-food-animals to be shipped to Mexico for butchering. What's next -- exporting kittens to Mexico so Asia can have cheap cat-meat? Are puppies fair game? Is nothing sacred?

Posted on December 11th, 2009 - 4:08pm

macie says:

i hate you horse eaters get a life

Posted on December 16th, 2009 - 9:51am

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