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Re: Eyeball recipes

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Wow! You lucky guy, I'm envious! I would probably toss the eyes in the

stock myself, unless you have reason to believe that they'd be enough

more nutritious yet palatable enough raw.

Hmm, you could pickle them and then leave them sitting in a jar on your

counter, watching over your every move in the kitchen.

Tom

Idol wrote:

> I'm getting 8 fresh lamb heads on Wednesday. I have plans for the brains

> and I'll make stock from the heads, but any thoughts on what I might do

> with the eyeballs? (Eating them raw is an option, but I'm curious about

> the alternatives.)

>

>

>

> -

>

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From what I know, they may be one of the most concentrated sources of

zinc, along with many other precious nutrients so I would try one raw

to see how palatable they are.

Let us know how it works out!

> > I'm getting 8 fresh lamb heads on Wednesday. I have plans for the

brains

> > and I'll make stock from the heads, but any thoughts on what I

might do

> > with the eyeballs? (Eating them raw is an option, but I'm curious

about

> > the alternatives.)

> >

> >

> >

> > -

> >

>

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Tom-

>Wow! You lucky guy, I'm envious!

I am glad to have a lamb head source, but there are plenty of things I

still can't seem to get hold of. Blood, for example, and tripe, and all

sorts of other delicacies.

> I would probably toss the eyes in the

>stock myself, unless you have reason to believe that they'd be enough

>more nutritious yet palatable enough raw.

I have no idea about their palatability, but they are reputed to be

extremely nutritious, and my mom told me that in " My Big Fat Greek Wedding "

(AKA a movie I will never, ever see) the Greek relatives all made a big

fuss over who got to eat the eyeballs. I guess they were roasted along

with the rest of the animal...?

>Hmm, you could pickle them and then leave them sitting in a jar on your

>counter, watching over your every move in the kitchen.

LOL! Actually, pickling might be a good idea as long as I don't screw up

the osmotic balance so that they burst or deflate.

Amazingly, my comparatively extensive library of cookbooks dedicated to

organs and other abandoned foods has just about nothing to say about

eyes. _Curiosities of Food_ describes a couple French stuffed eye recipes,

_Innards and Other Variety Meats_ says nothing, _The Whole Beast_ says

nothing, _Strange Foods has a recipe for sheep's head stew but nothing

else, and so on. My sausage books came up dry, my various ethnic books

overlook them, even Aajonus's _The Recipe for Living Without Disease_

contains no reference to eyes!

-

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Tom-

>>_Strange Foods has a recipe for sheep's head stew but nothing else

I spoke slightly too soon. _Strange Foods_ (which isn't really a cookbook,

though it does contain some recipes) also has this to say: " Eyes may be

plucked from virtually anything cooked -- from chicken to cow to fish --

and chewed or chased with a shot of liquor. In many cultures, they are

considered a delicacy, although making a meal of them is logistically

challenging. In the Middle East, sheep's eyeballs are considered a great

delicacy, removed with the point of a dagger and eaten straight from the

skull or with a sauce or extra seasoning. " Some hints about the sauce or

extra seasoning might've been nice.

-

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Tom-

>>_Curiosities of Food_ describes a couple French stuffed eye recipes

And a correction: that's _Unmentionable Cuisine_. I didn't look in

_Curiosities of Food_, which may mention eyes many times but isn't a cookbook.

-

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> Amazingly, my comparatively extensive library of cookbooks dedicated to

> organs and other abandoned foods has just about nothing to say about

> eyes. _Curiosities of Food_ describes a couple French stuffed eye

recipes,

> _Innards and Other Variety Meats_ says nothing, _The Whole Beast_ says

> nothing, _Strange Foods has a recipe for sheep's head stew but nothing

> else, and so on. My sausage books came up dry, my various ethnic books

> overlook them, even Aajonus's _The Recipe for Living Without Disease_

> contains no reference to eyes!

,

Mrs. Beeton says always save an eyeball--and a bit of brain--for the

guest of honor.

B.

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On 10/25/05, Idol <Idol@...> wrote:

> Tom-

>

> >>_Strange Foods has a recipe for sheep's head stew but nothing else

>

> I spoke slightly too soon. _Strange Foods_ (which isn't really a cookbook,

> though it does contain some recipes) also has this to say: " Eyes may be

> plucked from virtually anything cooked -- from chicken to cow to fish --

> and chewed or chased with a shot of liquor. In many cultures, they are

> considered a delicacy, although making a meal of them is logistically

> challenging. In the Middle East, sheep's eyeballs are considered a great

> delicacy, removed with the point of a dagger and eaten straight from the

> skull or with a sauce or extra seasoning. " Some hints about the sauce or

> extra seasoning might've been nice.

,

According to AV (IIRC), eyes blended with milk and a little honey

taste like clam chowder.

--

" It is no crime to be ignorant of economics,

which is, after all, a specialized discipline

and one that most people consider to be a

'dismal science.' But it is totally irresponsible

to have a loud and vociferous opinion on

economic subjects while remaining in this

state of ignorance. "

-- Murray Rothbard

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In the Middle East, sheep's eyeballs are considered a great

> delicacy, removed with the point of a dagger and eaten straight from

the

> skull or with a sauce or extra seasoning. " Some hints about the

sauce or

> extra seasoning might've been nice.

,

caper or parsley sauce or maitre d'hotel sauce.

maybe a hot indian pickle or harissa?

(they didn't run their daggers through the chef's choice, either.)

B.

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My mother (Vietnamese) always plucked and ate the eyeballs from our cooked whole

fish with her chopsticks. Sadly, being first generation US-American, I was

grossed out and refused to try it. Still haven't gotten over the bias; too bad.

>

> Tom-

>

> >>_Strange Foods has a recipe for sheep's head stew but nothing else

>

> I spoke slightly too soon. _Strange Foods_ (which isn't really a cookbook,

> though it does contain some recipes) also has this to say: " Eyes may be

> plucked from virtually anything cooked -- from chicken to cow to fish --

> and chewed or chased with a shot of liquor. In many cultures, they are

> considered a delicacy, although making a meal of them is logistically

> challenging. In the Middle East, sheep's eyeballs are considered a great

> delicacy, removed with the point of a dagger and eaten straight from the

> skull or with a sauce or extra seasoning. " Some hints about the sauce or

> extra seasoning might've been nice.

>

>

>

>

> -

>

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>>I am glad to have a lamb head source, but there are plenty of things I

still can't seem to get hold of. Blood, for example, and tripe, and

all

sorts of other delicacies.

Is there a Latino community locally?

I did learn that the family we buy grassfed beef from is limited by what their

processor will agree to provide. They cannot get back the offal from their own

cows for composting.

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