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Has anyone eaten fermented raw meat, or have any recipes that I could try?

I'm reading the Untold Story of Milk and am fascinated by the references to

the enzymes in raw meat and to Eskimo diets of raw, fermented meat. I've

always liked my meats rare, and lately I noticed I have been going even more

rare... the other day I was surprised to find myself enjoying very much a

steak that was extra rare, cold in the center.

When I was harvesting the chickens the other day, I dared myself to eat a

piece of raw liver, and did taste it, but was somewhat repelled by the cold

and hard jelly texture; but the same liver when sauteed very very lightly

that night was delicious, especially with sherry and thyme, lol.

I was thinking that maybe fermented raw liver (home-raised, of course) might

be interesting to try. I was born in Alaska.. doesn't that make me an

honorary Eskimo? LOL

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No, but it sounds interesting. How about more info on Eskimo fermented

meats? I've heard a little about fermented Salmon fish heads. How would one

ferment meat? I assume just put it in a jar and tighten the lid for a few

days?

******************************

The active misidentification of evil

is the worst kind of evil.

-MRN

_____

From: Sagehill [mailto:sagehill@...]

Sent: Friday, October 08, 2004 4:50 PM

Subject: fermented (raw) meats

* Has anyone eaten fermented raw meat, or have any recipes that I

could try?

I'm reading the Untold Story of Milk and am fascinated by the references to

the enzymes in raw meat and to Eskimo diets of raw, fermented meat. I've

always liked my meats rare, and lately I noticed I have been going even more

rare... the other day I was surprised to find myself enjoying very much a

steak that was extra rare, cold in the center.

When I was harvesting the chickens the other day, I dared myself to eat a

piece of raw liver, and did taste it, but was somewhat repelled by the cold

and hard jelly texture; but the same liver when sauteed very very lightly

that night was delicious, especially with sherry and thyme, lol.

I was thinking that maybe fermented raw liver (home-raised, of course) might

be interesting to try. I was born in Alaska.. doesn't that make me an

honorary Eskimo? LOL

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Not sure how to ferment meats. Wonder if it's sort of the same as pickling

it. When I was younger I used to pickle raw herring with a recipe that my

Swedish grandmother used to use. Used to be, you could buy small 10lb

barrels of herrings around Christmas time and I'd pickle dozens of jars.

But then they stopped selling those barrels and over the years I forgot

completely about pickling herring until I was thrilled to find it in the

local grrocery store: Ma Cohen's Pickled Herring. I've been overdosing on

about a jar a week since I discovered it some three weeks ago. If I could

get raw herring again, I'd pickle up a lifetime supply, LOL!

Anyway, I guess it was the pickled herring that made me wonder if meat

couldn't be done the same way.

RE: fermented (raw) meats

No, but it sounds interesting. How about more info on Eskimo fermented

meats? I've heard a little about fermented Salmon fish heads. How would one

ferment meat? I assume just put it in a jar and tighten the lid for a few

days?

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