• Pondering
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Perhaps I just talk too much...
Wednesday , November 14 , 2007
Disgusting Animal Parts People Eat
Posted by Pondering , Reader : 1043 , 13:08:53   | Category : General  
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Years ago when I was in college in Chiang Mai, I remember every single minute of that one particular night I stayed over at my friend's condo. We were studying late and all of us were pretty hungry. A few of them volunteered to pick up "something" to eat.

I cheered. I was excited for a late night meal.

Good 45 minutes later, they were back with several plastic bags--there were several unidentified items in there looking unidentifiable. Turning out, there were organs....every single organ indicated in a dictionary. Before I was able to pull myself together, these organs were sliced and cut into pieces mixing with all kinds of herbs and spices. The process of cooking took less than 20 minutes, but I swore it was the longest 20 minutes in my life. The smell was unbearable. I didn't remember anything else, but my head poking in the toilet puking my butt off. I didn't remember what time I had left shorting after several vomitting activities.

And I keep on wondering.....up until today.

How can many stand eating offal(s) a.k.a animal organs a.k.a. brains, lungs, livers and disgusting list goes on. Not only these parts look nasty, they seem to taste and worst of all smell disgusting as well. I don't judge the eater, but I judge the meat. Call me superficial. I judge the way they look (if a piece of a lung were a person, it would have been one ugly dude).

May be I'm not immuned to these inside-the-animal parts. I can't appear to be around them or I'll end up getting myself killed over puking. The one and the only part I've eaten was a tiny bit piece of liver and that was because my parents made me to when I was like 5!

Why do people like eating them? Why are they so special?


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comment 14
Ian date : 20/11/2007 time : 21.08
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/anterian36

Pondering, I still enjoy meat, but only if I have a toothpick handy:-)
comment 13
Pondering date : 20/11/2007 time : 11.13
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/pondering

Very useful/ educational stuff from your comment. I agree with you that human's mind is the one controling our decision-making skills.

Have you thought about becoming a vegetarian or still enjoying meaty foods?
comment 12
Ian date : 18/11/2007 time : 15.20
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/anterian36

Technical lecture coming up

Your muscles, your organs, blood and your immune system are made up mostly of protein. Proteins are made from combinations of amino acids. There are many different amino acids in protein, but 22 of them are very important to human health.
Of those 22 amino acids, your body can make 13 of them itself. Your body can't make the other nine amino acids, but you can get them by eating protein-rich foods. They are called essential amino acids because it's essential that you get them from the foods you eat.
Protein from animal sources, such as meat and milk, is called complete, because it contains all nine of the essential amino acids. Most vegetable protein is considered incomplete because it lacks one or more of the essential amino acids.
But people who eat a vegetarian diet can still get all their essential amino acids by selecting a sufficiently wide variety of protein-rich vegetable foods. Manufacturers of meat substitute foods do this selecting for you.
You need about 1 gram of protein each day for every kilogram you weigh.
Protein is needed for both growth, maintenance and repair of the body, hence children and convalescents need more.

Your body doesn't give a damn where the protein comes from, it is only your mind which is fussy.

The main advantage of animal sourced protein is that it is concentrated.
comment 11
Pondering date : 18/11/2007 time : 10.50
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/pondering

You know what...I've noticed myself in the past few years, I believe I can live without meats too. I can survive with tofu alone.

Not sure if this is a part of getting older?
comment 10
veen date : 18/11/2007 time : 01.30
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/veen

Liver - chicken, duck, pig or ox - is no no for me. I once fed my little baby liver and she finished it and acted like she was ready to vomit. So I never give her liver again. I guess she hates it like her mom. Now she has grown up and never feels like having liver again.
Funny but true, she loves blood - lued mu, lued khai, and lued ped - just like I do.
Pig intestine is fine too. What scares me is stranger one - like turtle soup or monkey brain!!!

But I have to say now I don't care - if there is no meat left, I still survive. I love veggie
comment 9
Ian date : 17/11/2007 time : 10.06
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/anterian36

Pondering, thanks
comment 8
Pondering date : 17/11/2007 time : 06.10
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/pondering

Glad you're back Ian.
comment 7
Ian date : 16/11/2007 time : 23.07
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/anterian36

I have eaten a few things that were quite pleasant, until I found out what they were:-) In Algeria I ate what I thought were very sweet grapes only to discover they were "honeypot ants".
We are indeed conditioned to expect certain apearances, textures and tastes, too radical a departure and we object.
Many westerners find plain boiled rice too bland, equally many Asians find western bread too accrid, bread sold for Asian consumption is sweetened.
I hate things that crunch when they should squish, like a bit of eggshell in my omlette:-)
comment 6
PasaNINJA2499 date : 15/11/2007 time : 18.11
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/PasaNINJA2499
Keep walking forward. Don't give up. Don't fed up.

I agree with you, GG. hehehehehe….liver, my mom said, was good source of iron good for children.
comment 5
GGrass date : 15/11/2007 time : 08.24
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/GGrass

if there was NO meat left in the world, i'd still be fine...
comment 4
Pondering date : 14/11/2007 time : 21.47
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/pondering

FelixQui: I too have no desire to teach my mind to love these parts of animals either. Not even someday or optional for me. Remember one says, never says never. I'm saying that right now

It's funny. My mind just can never adjust to the look and the smell of them. I figure whenever the world is short of the actual meat supplies, I'll be a vegetarian.
comment 3
FelixQui date : 14/11/2007 time : 15.16
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/FelixQui

It's our genetic hard-wiring filled out with what you were brought up on.
In his book "How the Mind Works" (1997) the Harvard psychologist Steven Pinker gives a thorough tour of recent research which explains these things. The question you raise being one he explicitly addresses. Humans are hard-wired to behave in certain ways and do certain things, like learn languages, but the details depend on the accidents of time and place: my native language is English, because I happened to be born in New Zealand. I love those bits of animal innards because I grew up on a farm where we didn't waste them. But I had to turn my nose up when a friend in Phrae offered me first go at the spider and rats fresh from the rice fields at the family dinner. Rationally, I was sure they were nutritious and probably tasted fine, but it was most unlikely that they would have gone down or stayed down. (Maybe a polite taste of rat, definitely not spider.)Best leave them to those who love them.
Five years old is too late - the brain starts setting solid around three.
You could probably overcome your dislike with behavioural therapy techniques if you think it's worth the effort. Personally, I have no desire to learn to love rats or spiders. And I'm also pretty iffy about eating boiled up frogs.
comment 2
earlsy date : 14/11/2007 time : 15.07
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/secondtimearound

English school dinners put me off liver as a child. I have tried it since without any drama, but I would never choose to eat it.

As well as ofal, there are other parts of the carcass that put me off - soft bone or cartelage are a no no for me, so chicken feet and pigs ears are things I avoid if they are served up. Some people seem to enjoy sucking and chewing all the meat and skin off them and I think they actually chew up the whole thing and swallow it. That is something I simply do not enjoy.
comment 1
GGrass date : 14/11/2007 time : 14.08
http://blog.nationmultimedia.com/GGrass

lungs, hearts, small intestine, large intestines, congee, liver, kidney, testicles, tongues, and what not. the list is endless.

koreans love the pig intestine and chicken kidney. they grill it, boil it, fry it, saute it, bbq it, and eat with soju, their national drink.

as for me, i can't go near any one of those, except the liver which my wife tries to feed our son. liver is said to have iron and whatever that's supposed to be good for a baby. but my son hates it as much as i do, so he doesn't touch it, but i'll eat that for him when my wife is looking elsewhere.
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