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What does turtle taste like?

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Kenneth Leja

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Nov 14, 2003, 3:32:39 AM11/14/03
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And how do you eat it?

Katra

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Nov 14, 2003, 3:50:48 AM11/14/03
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Kenneth Leja wrote:
>
> And how do you eat it?


Tastes like chicken of course...

and you eat it very, very carefully. ;-)

Ever seen a large snapping turtle?
They are supposed to be some of the best eating.

K.

--
>^,,^< Cats-haven Hobby Farm >^,,^< Ka...@centurytel.net >^,,^<

"There are millions of intelligent species in the universe, and they are
all owned by cats" -- Asimov

Custom handcrafts, Sterling silver beaded jewelry
http://cgi3.ebay.com/aw-cgi/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewListedItems&userid=katra

Bob Pastorio

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Nov 14, 2003, 6:25:44 AM11/14/03
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Kenneth Leja wrote:

> And how do you eat it?

Country folks hereabouts in the Shenandoah Valley of Virginia eat
local snapping turtles and claim they have 7 different meats.

Different parts of the critter, so they claim, have different flavors
and chewing characteristics. In my experience, I've seen three, the
feet, the upper legs and neck, and the body meat. Different like pork
has different kinds of meat in different parts.

The legs taste like chicken. The rest is, well, different.

Pastorio

aasainz...@ix.netcom.com

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Nov 14, 2003, 7:30:38 AM11/14/03
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I had some many years ago, around the mid-50's. What I had is now a protected
species (hawksbill turtle, aka carey). Does not taste like chicken at all,
more like a gamy pork.

It is supposed to be a restorative of male potency but I was in my teens then
and could not tell the difference. At that age I needed just the opposite. ;-)

TOM KAN PA

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Nov 14, 2003, 7:49:55 AM11/14/03
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It tastes just........not like chicken.

<< And how do you eat it? >>

____Reply Separator_____
Find a restaurant that serves turtle soup. Tell the wait person, "Give me a
bowl of turtle soup and make it snappy!!"

-L.

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Nov 14, 2003, 11:58:50 AM11/14/03
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ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth Leja) wrote in message news:<32d5fa9b.03111...@posting.google.com>...

> And how do you eat it?

Many species of turtle are endangered world-wide. I don't advocate eating them.
Nothing more awesome than encountering a turtle in the wild.

-L.

Dimitri

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Nov 14, 2003, 12:08:51 PM11/14/03
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"Kenneth Leja" <ken...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:32d5fa9b.03111...@posting.google.com...

> And how do you eat it?

1. Elephant
2. With a knife and fork or a soup spoon.

Dimitri


A.T. Hagan

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Nov 14, 2003, 12:36:50 PM11/14/03
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On 14 Nov 2003 00:32:39 -0800, ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth Leja)
wrote:

>And how do you eat it?

Depends on the species of turtle.

Not quite old enough to have eaten sea turtle (that I'd admit in a
public newsgroup), but I've yet to try the softshell turtle that I
liked. Just something to its flavor that puts me off.

Snapper was pretty good. Only the lighter colored meat had anything
of a chicken taste to it. The darker meat tasted like... well,
turtle.

Once it's cleaned you can fix it about anyway you'd fix chicken.
Fried is usually how I've had it. Had one bowl of turtle soup that
was good. Had it stewed with tomatoes once that was good.

If you've never cleaned one before have someone who does know how show
you.

.....Alan.


--
Curiosity killed the cat -
lack of it is killing mankind.

Katra

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Nov 14, 2003, 12:55:05 PM11/14/03
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aasainz...@ix.netcom.com wrote:
>
> Katra wrote:
> >
> > Kenneth Leja wrote:
> > >
> > > And how do you eat it?
> >
> > Tastes like chicken of course...
> >
> > and you eat it very, very carefully. ;-)
> >
> > Ever seen a large snapping turtle?
> > They are supposed to be some of the best eating.
> >
> > K.
>

> I had some many years ago, around the mid-50's. What I had is now a protected
> species (hawksbill turtle, aka carey). Does not taste like chicken at all,
> more like a gamy pork.

I was kidding dear. ;-)
I agree that it tastes a lot like pork, but with ever so slightly
fishy overtones.

The one that I ate was a large painted turtle. I found it alongside
the road and it had been hit by a car and was still very much alive,
unfortunately. :-( It was greviously injured with multiple breaks to the
shell and it's guts were hanging out one of the shell splits.

While I HAVE rescued and repaired some turtles (successfully I might
add!) that were hit by cars and had minor shell breakage, I judged this
one to be a candidate for euthanasia....

So, not being one to waste, I used it as an opportunity to try fresh
turtle. It was ok but I was not impressed. I'd never go out of my way
to kill another turtle just for the meat.

>
> It is supposed to be a restorative of male potency but I was in my teens then
> and could not tell the difference. At that age I needed just the opposite. ;-)

<grins> I've read about that in the body building magazines.... ;-)

Katra

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Nov 14, 2003, 1:04:38 PM11/14/03
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I actually have to agree with this. :-)
That is why I only ate a turtle that _had_ to be killed.
Before that, even tho' I was curious about trying the meat,
I could just never bring myself to kill a healthy turtle.
I run into them in the river all the time when I go snorkeling.

It's tempting tho' sometimes when you are fishing and they
keep taking your bait! <G>

From the experience with that one turtle, they are not
really worth the effort anyway.

K3

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Nov 14, 2003, 1:30:29 PM11/14/03
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ROFLMAO -- it was just two days ago that one of wife's co-worker's gave her
a can of "Snapper Soup"... for me (one who'll eat just 'bout anything) to
eat... I ate it... tasted like brown gravy with tofu.. .

LOL -- she's got the perfect "Gag" gift coming to her soon (coon) ...
"Creamed Possum w/ Sweet Potatoes garnished in Coon Fat
Gravy"...(http://www.johnsonsmith.com/website/store/product_detail.asp?UID=2
003111413190716&item_no=25232&keyword=possum&cat_keyword=&search_page_no=1)

Hey... I ate "Franklin 'da Turtle"... you can eat "Patty 'da Posssum"...

LOL!!!


--
Kendall F. Stratton III
Fort Fairfield, Maine USA
k3@(86_THE_SPAM)maine.rr.com
http://home.maine.rr.com/k3

"Support bacteria -- it's the only culture some people have!"

"Kenneth Leja" <ken...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:32d5fa9b.03111...@posting.google.com...

Dave Smith

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Nov 14, 2003, 1:18:24 PM11/14/03
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Katra wrote:

> I actually have to agree with this. :-)
> That is why I only ate a turtle that _had_ to be killed.
> Before that, even tho' I was curious about trying the meat,
> I could just never bring myself to kill a healthy turtle.
> I run into them in the river all the time when I go snorkeling.

The only time I ever killed a turtle was when I was staying on a friend's farm and we drained the pond that was our
swimming hole. We found a snapper in there that was more than two feet across, and he was nasty.

> It's tempting tho' sometimes when you are fishing and they
> keep taking your bait! <G>

It's even more frustrating when they eat your catch. We once left some fish on a stringer in the water while we
tended to something else for a while. We came back about an hour later and found a string of fish bones.


Elena Nakashima

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Nov 14, 2003, 1:42:42 PM11/14/03
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Bob Pastorio <past...@rica.net> wrote in message news:<vr9etso...@corp.supernews.com>...


I personally like turtles too much to kill them. They are beautiful
animals. But for those who hunt turtles, how do they kill them?
Indeed, why kill an animal that nature went to such trouble to
protect. If God gave turtles a hard shell, it must be for a good
reason.

Katra

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Nov 14, 2003, 2:18:20 PM11/14/03
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Dave Smith wrote:
>
> Katra wrote:
>
> > I actually have to agree with this. :-)
> > That is why I only ate a turtle that _had_ to be killed.
> > Before that, even tho' I was curious about trying the meat,
> > I could just never bring myself to kill a healthy turtle.
> > I run into them in the river all the time when I go snorkeling.
>
> The only time I ever killed a turtle was when I was staying on a friend's farm and we drained the pond that was our
> swimming hole. We found a snapper in there that was more than two feet across, and he was nasty.

One that size can be pretty dangerous too! Their necks are nearly as
long as their shells, so holding them by the backside is no guarantee.
They can easily take off a finger or two. :-P

So, was he tasty?

>
> > It's tempting tho' sometimes when you are fishing and they
> > keep taking your bait! <G>
>
> It's even more frustrating when they eat your catch. We once left some fish on a stringer in the water while we
> tended to something else for a while. We came back about an hour later and found a string of fish bones.

Yah. They are death on trot lines too! Trot lines are legal in Texas and
quite effective for catfish in Canyon lake. :-)

LOOoooove big catfish! Yum!

Katra

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Nov 14, 2003, 2:29:54 PM11/14/03
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My Doubleday cookbook had complete instructions on how to process a live turtle...

Usually you are dealing with a snapper. You place a stick in front of
their face and they will snap and grab onto it, and NOT let go usually.

You can then stretch out their neck and cut off their head with a pair
of poultry shears.

Never tried it, but that's what the book said...

Carmen Dioxide

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Nov 14, 2003, 3:19:16 PM11/14/03
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tomk...@aol.comic (TOM KAN PA) wrote in message news:<20031114074955...@mb-m10.aol.com>...

LOL...that's my favorite corny (or in this case *turtley*) joke. Now
I am trying to envision a turtle out of it's shell!! That must be a
funny site, indeed.

Barry Grau

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Nov 14, 2003, 4:13:03 PM11/14/03
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ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth Leja) wrote in message news:<32d5fa9b.03111...@posting.google.com>...
> And how do you eat it?

Like goo goo supremes without the marshmallow.

Dave Smith

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Nov 14, 2003, 4:18:49 PM11/14/03
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Elena Nakashima wrote:

> I personally like turtles too much to kill them. They are beautiful
> animals

My guess would be that you have never seen a big snapping turtle. Beautiful is the last word that
I would describe their appearance, or their personality. They are nasty creatures. The only one I
ever killed was the huge one that lived in our swimming hole.


Dave Smith

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Nov 14, 2003, 4:22:44 PM11/14/03
to
Katra wrote:

> Dave Smith wrote:
>
>
> One that size can be pretty dangerous too! Their necks are nearly as
> long as their shells, so holding them by the backside is no guarantee.
> They can easily take off a finger or two. :-P

Or a toe. When we found him we stuck a stick in front of him figuring that we would grab onto it and we could yank him
out of there. He snapped them right off, so we ended up using a rake handle, and he put a seep mark in that..

> So, was he tasty?

Darned if I know. We weren't about to eat anything that ugly and with a collection of parasites hanging off his legs and
neck.


Dave Smith

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Nov 14, 2003, 4:25:02 PM11/14/03
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Katra wrote:

>
>
> Usually you are dealing with a snapper. You place a stick in front of
> their face and they will snap and grab onto it, and NOT let go usually.
>
> You can then stretch out their neck and cut off their head with a pair
> of poultry shears.

Poultry shears? I have never seen poultry shears big enough for the one we killed. We used the
stick to expend his neck and used an axe. We ruled out a hatchet, just in case he let go of the
stick and went for the executioner. :-)


PENMART01

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Nov 14, 2003, 5:58:03 PM11/14/03
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In article <3FB546B8...@sympatico.ca>, Dave Smith
<adavid...@sympatico.ca> writes:

Um, that was your wife.


---= BOYCOTT FRENCH--GERMAN (belgium) =---
---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =---
Sheldon
````````````
"Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation."

d c

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Nov 14, 2003, 11:17:01 PM11/14/03
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"Kenneth Leja" <ken...@hotmail.com> wrote in message
news:32d5fa9b.03111...@posting.google.com...
> And how do you eat it?


You fly to New Orleans (N'Awlins) and go to Brennan's and order the Turtle
Soup (with a splash of sherry)...

Mmm... mmm... I guarontee....


--
The generation that used acid to escape reality
Is now using antacid to deal with reality
http://www.dwacon.com


st...@temple.edu

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Nov 14, 2003, 11:10:46 PM11/14/03
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Kenneth Leja <ken...@hotmail.com> wrote:
> And how do you eat it?

My dad used to eat turtle soup fairly often when I was
a kid. He said it tastes like chicken. I kid you not.
Being somewhat fussy about what I eat, I have never
tasted the stuff so I can't say how it tastes from
personal experience.

Moosemeat

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Nov 15, 2003, 12:03:41 AM11/15/03
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I doubt if a snapping turtle could survive being run over by a caterpillar
tractor (Large D-8 or bigger). Try dropping it on a land mine and if that
doesn't do the job a direct hit at the waterline with an RPG might work.
Another suggestion would be to take one up to eighteen or twenty thousand
feet and using a Norton bomb sight, try to hit the tennis court behind the
White House. If a direct hit isn't scored you might still bag somebody of
importance who might be hanging around

>


Elena Nakashima

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:20:18 AM11/15/03
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Dave Smith <adavid...@sympatico.ca> wrote in message news:<3FB546B8...@sympatico.ca>...

I have. I used to have a small one as a pet. Most turtles are
beautiful but not the snapping turtle. Still, it's a wonder of nature,
fearsome looking, 'proud', nature's Sherman tank, an armoured warrior.
Magnificent in its beastliness.

Katra

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:29:43 AM11/15/03
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Ick! I hate leeches..... :-P There are fish and turtle leeches in our
local river too. If I play around with enough rocks and stuff when I
snorkel, I occasionally end up with leeches on ME! The rapidly become
"leech dip" on the sidewalk when I squish them. Ick ick ICK!!!!

Katra

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:27:36 AM11/15/03
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I dunno....
I judge snappers to be in the "so ugly they are cute" category. ;-)

They are rather mean and dangerous tho'. I kept a small one as a pet for
a couple of years and fed her goldfish. She escaped one day from her
outdoor pen. I assume she lives in the local river now...

Katra

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:30:35 AM11/15/03
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That'll work. ;-)

zxcvbob

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:49:32 AM11/15/03
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Dave Smith wrote:

They eat cute little baby ducks, you know...

Bob

Bob Pastorio

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:49:27 AM11/15/03
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Moosemeat wrote:

Moosie, I'm disappointed that you could be so wrong. I mean, all these
years of looking up to you as perhaps the best source of reliable
information on usenet and then you say this.

It's a Norden bomb sight. I saw it in a black and white movie once.

HTH

Oh, the RPG is good if you're making a pate'.

Pastorio

Katra

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Nov 15, 2003, 2:01:36 AM11/15/03
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And baby swans in spring lake.....

Honestly tho', I'm not in the habit of killing animals just because they
are not appealing in appearance and personality, (except for those two
psychotic emu that'd try to kill anyone that cornered them). I've
removed rather large snappers and other turtles from the middle of the
road and tossed them back into the river. :-)

After my one experience with turtle meat, I've marked them off the menu.
They are not tasty enough to be worth the amount of work involved in
cleaning them.

Now wild crawfish on the other hand...... ;-d

sf

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Nov 15, 2003, 3:51:30 AM11/15/03
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On 14 Nov 2003 00:32:39 -0800, ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth
Leja) wrote:

> And how do you eat it?

What kind of turtle are you asking about?


PENMART01

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Nov 15, 2003, 4:08:03 AM11/15/03
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In article <tspbrv8m7mdat3sg2...@4ax.com>, sf
<nob...@pipeline.com> writes:

>ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth
>Leja) wrote:
>
>> And how do you eat it?
>
>What kind of turtle are you asking about?

I've eaten sea turtle, quite common in Belize. If one didn't know they'd be
hard pressed to discern a sea turtle stew from one made with beef chuck.

Katra

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Nov 15, 2003, 4:19:32 AM11/15/03
to

PENMART01 wrote:
>
> In article <tspbrv8m7mdat3sg2...@4ax.com>, sf
> <nob...@pipeline.com> writes:
>
> >ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth
> >Leja) wrote:
> >
> >> And how do you eat it?
> >
> >What kind of turtle are you asking about?
>
> I've eaten sea turtle, quite common in Belize. If one didn't know they'd be
> hard pressed to discern a sea turtle stew from one made with beef chuck.
>

> Sheldon
> ````````````

Only ignorant morons consume endangered species...
I suppose you eat Humpback whale with a side of spotted owl too?

jmcquown

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Nov 15, 2003, 8:02:49 AM11/15/03
to
Katra wrote:

> Kenneth Leja wrote:
>>
>> And how do you eat it?
>
>
> Tastes like chicken of course...
>
> and you eat it very, very carefully. ;-)
>
> Ever seen a large snapping turtle?
> They are supposed to be some of the best eating.
>
> K.

Nutty question. But I've had Turtle Soup and it is absolutely delicious!

My father says the turtles his uncle caught down at the creek in
Pennsylvania back in the 1930's were snappers and they used those in turtle
soup. These days, I believe they are farmed turtles. Dad wants me to take
him to the Owen Brennan's Cafe for lunch the next time they visit so he can
have Turtle Soup :)

Jill

AChrist787

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:06:16 PM11/15/03
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>You fly to New Orleans (N'Awlins) and go to Brennan's and order the Turtle
>Soup (with a splash of sherry)...<

Or Commander's Palace, which is also owned by the Brennans. The turtle soup at
both places is supurb. Come to think about it, I wonder where they get the
turtle meat for their soup?

Anne


AAC/AAF/AFBV62.0844.AZ
http://www.tckworld.com/opfoot

Katra

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Nov 15, 2003, 1:03:47 PM11/15/03
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BabyJane Hudson wrote:
>
> Just put it in a pot of boiling water as if it were a lobster. The
> turtle will survive the boiling for the first 20 minutes, so cook it
> about 25 minutes. Make sure you put it in head first or it will keep
> coming up for air. That happened once and I have to boil it for four
> hours before it died. I then pulled the head out and dipped it in
> butter and ate it. Much better tasting than I thought it would be. I
> did the same thing with its small tail. Even with butter, that was
> nice and crunchy.
>
> Good luck.
> BabyJane

U R 1 sick puppy......
Why don't you do this to yourself???

K.

The Michael

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Nov 15, 2003, 2:35:34 PM11/15/03
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On Fri, 14 Nov 2003 12:30:38 GMT, aasainz...@ix.netcom.com wrote:
>I had some many years ago, around the mid-50's. What I had is now a protected
>species (hawksbill turtle, aka carey). Does not taste like chicken at all,
>more like a gamy pork.

I believe it's similar to a blend of Armadillo and Wallaby.
--
Mike

Rick & Cyndi

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Nov 15, 2003, 2:59:40 PM11/15/03
to
"AChrist787" <achri...@aol.comjunkbloc> wrote in message
news:20031115130616...@mb-m22.aol.com...
: >You fly to New Orleans (N'Awlins) and go to Brennan's and

order the Turtle
: >Soup (with a splash of sherry)...<
:
: Or Commander's Palace, which is also owned by the Brennans.
The turtle soup at
: both places is supurb. Come to think about it, I wonder where
they get the
: turtle meat for their soup?
:
: Anne
========

Going slightly OT - my maternal G'ma is a "Brennan". I wonder if
we could be related...
--
Cyndi
<Remove a "b" to reply>


Mike Pearce

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Nov 15, 2003, 6:07:04 PM11/15/03
to

"AChrist787" wrote in message
news:20031115130616...@mb-m22.aol.com...

> >You fly to New Orleans (N'Awlins) and go to Brennan's and order the


Turtle
> >Soup (with a splash of sherry)...<
>
> Or Commander's Palace, which is also owned by the Brennans. The turtle
soup at
> both places is supurb. Come to think about it, I wonder where they get
the
> turtle meat for their soup?
>
> Anne
>

Or Mandinas which is a great restaurant with very good turtle soup at about
a third of the price

-Mike

Rodney Myrvaagnes

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Nov 16, 2003, 12:47:45 AM11/16/03
to
On 14 Nov 2003 22:20:18 -0800, nicoci...@yahoo.com (Elena
Nakashima) wrote:


Magnificent it is. One reason it is so aggressive, I think, is that it
really isn't protected all that much. Its fleshy parts are so big
outside that it can't really retract them.

They float in ponds with just the little pointy tip of the nose
showing. You can't tell how big they are.

When I was about 12 (in the 1940s) I borrowed a net on a long pole and
reached under a nose. What I got was a modest size, about 15 inch
carapace, but a demon to hold onto.

You have to hold them far enough aft so they can't bite your hand, and
they have very long necks. But, if you hold them that far back, the
hind legs can keep clawing at your hands. I don't thik I could have
held one much bigger (they do get much bigger.)

I got it into a saddlebag on my bicycle and took it home. I tried to
build a pen for it by the kitchen stoop out of rocks. My uncle got a
leech off its shell with carbon tetrachloride.

WIthin a day it got loose, and scared the daylights out of the lady
next door, who came on it in her garden. I took it back to the pond it
came from.

Rodney Myrvaagnes NYC J36 Gjo/a


"Wanting to meet a writer because you like his work is like wanting to meet a duck because you like pate."
Margaret Atwood

EskW...@spamblock.panix.com

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Nov 16, 2003, 12:49:56 PM11/16/03
to
In rec.food.cooking, Elena Nakashima <nicoci...@yahoo.com> wrote:

> If God gave turtles a hard shell, it must be for a good
> reason.

Maybe it is for the same reason he gave us rocks?

Just a guess.

--
...I'm an air-conditioned gypsy...

- The Who

Katra

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Nov 16, 2003, 3:00:25 PM11/16/03
to


BWWaaahahahhahahah!!! ;-D
That was funny!

Thanks!
K

--

sf

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Nov 16, 2003, 3:39:21 PM11/16/03
to
On 15 Nov 2003 09:08:03 GMT, penm...@aol.como (PENMART01)
wrote:

> In article <tspbrv8m7mdat3sg2...@4ax.com>, sf
> <nob...@pipeline.com> writes:
>
> >ken...@hotmail.com (Kenneth
> >Leja) wrote:
> >
> >> And how do you eat it?
> >
> >What kind of turtle are you asking about?
>
> I've eaten sea turtle, quite common in Belize. If one didn't know they'd be
> hard pressed to discern a sea turtle stew from one made with beef chuck.
>

I only remember eating it as a kid in Florida, before they
were protected. Tastes like chicken.

sf

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Nov 16, 2003, 3:40:18 PM11/16/03
to
On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 03:19:32 -0600, Katra
<Ka...@centurytel.net> wrote:

>
>
> PENMART01 wrote:

> > I've eaten sea turtle, quite common in Belize. If one didn't know they'd be
> > hard pressed to discern a sea turtle stew from one made with beef chuck.
> >
> > Sheldon
> > ````````````
>
> Only ignorant morons consume endangered species...

The turtles he ate were farm raised and probably a crossbred
species.

Katra

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Nov 16, 2003, 4:23:22 PM11/16/03
to


They are farming sea turtles? Ok, so I learned something today. :-)
Is there any more information on it?

Thanks!
K.

WardNA

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Nov 16, 2003, 8:37:55 PM11/16/03
to
>Many species of turtle are endangered world-wide. I don't advocate eating
>them.

I was served an excellent turtle stew, made of a sea turtle of which there was
at that time a maximum allowable take, at a small restaurant in Oaxaca. It was
excellent, but enough like veal that I don't see any reason not just to be
content with veal.

>Nothing more awesome than encountering a turtle in the wild.

I admit I've never done this. But, still, I think my standard of awesomeness
may be higher than the one indicated here.

For 12 years, I've lived quietly with a red-eared slider, who divides his time
between paddling in 15 gallons of water and basking under a full-spectrum
40-watt light bulb. I've had better and worse companions. These guys live
about 25 years; he was at least 5 years old when I got him, and this one's
evidently committed to getting his share, so we could still have another 8
before he checks out, if someone doesn't eat him first.

Neil

sf

unread,
Nov 16, 2003, 8:47:29 PM11/16/03
to
On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 15:23:22 -0600, Katra
<Ka...@centurytel.net> wrote:

>
>
> sf wrote:
> >
> > On Sat, 15 Nov 2003 03:19:32 -0600, Katra
> > <Ka...@centurytel.net> wrote:
> > >
> > > Only ignorant morons consume endangered species...
> >
> > The turtles he ate were farm raised and probably a crossbred
> > species.
>
>
> They are farming sea turtles? Ok, so I learned something today. :-)
> Is there any more information on it?
>

Actually, I tried to find you evidence via the web, but the
farm we visited only talks about their release program.

When we visited it, we were shown tanks of crossbred turtles
that they said were for the commercial market.
Unfortunately, they don't talk about it on their web
pages... or at least the ones I looked at.

I guess eating sea turtle is "so" not PC, they don't dare
mention it (even if they are farm raised - like venison).

:)

Katra

unread,
Nov 16, 2003, 10:22:22 PM11/16/03
to


Well, it's a start... <G>

I did my own google search also, and all I could find was turtle farming
for release, not for sale.

I'm a big believer in aqua culture. Salmon, Sturgeon, etc.
Anytime we can start "farming" a luxury item and take the pressure off
the wild populations, the better! :-)

I'm waiting for abalone farming to really take off so I can enjoy that
wonderful mollusk again!

http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=abalone+farming

I still draw the line tho' at consuming cetaceans. I feel that they are
sentient and eating them is tantamount to cannibalism.

sf

unread,
Nov 18, 2003, 3:14:14 AM11/18/03
to
On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 21:22:22 -0600, Katra
<Ka...@centurytel.net> wrote:

>
>
> sf wrote:
> >
> > Actually, I tried to find you evidence via the web, but the
> > farm we visited only talks about their release program.
> >
> > When we visited it, we were shown tanks of crossbred turtles
> > that they said were for the commercial market.
> > Unfortunately, they don't talk about it on their web
> > pages... or at least the ones I looked at.
> >
> > I guess eating sea turtle is "so" not PC, they don't dare
> > mention it (even if they are farm raised - like venison).
> >
> > :)
>
>
> Well, it's a start... <G>
>
> I did my own google search also, and all I could find was turtle farming
> for release, not for sale.
>
> I'm a big believer in aqua culture. Salmon, Sturgeon, etc.
> Anytime we can start "farming" a luxury item and take the pressure off
> the wild populations, the better! :-)
>
> I'm waiting for abalone farming to really take off so I can enjoy that
> wonderful mollusk again!
>
> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&ie=ISO-8859-1&q=abalone+farmin

They grow slowly.... but if they can farm sturgeon, why not?
My wallet eagerly awaits the time I can easily afford
abolone once again.


>
> I still draw the line tho' at consuming cetaceans. I feel that they are
> sentient and eating them is tantamount to cannibalism.
>

I can't even begin to imagine knowingly eating one....

blake murphy

unread,
Nov 22, 2003, 10:02:34 AM11/22/03
to

i think i would insist on dinnder and a show, at least, first...

your pal,
blake

Greg Zywicki

unread,
Nov 25, 2003, 9:27:25 AM11/25/03
to
Katra <Ka...@centurytel.net> wrote in message news:<3FB5CF51...@centurytel.net>...

> zxcvbob wrote:
> > They eat cute little baby ducks, you know...
> >
> > Bob
>
> And baby swans in spring lake.....
>

If they take goslings too, I have an idea for a service to offer to
municipal governments and golf courses looking to reduce the Canadian
Goose population.

Greg Zywicki

"Gamera pest removal. 'because Godzilla is busy right now.'"

Katra

unread,
Nov 25, 2003, 1:03:46 PM11/25/03
to

The big snappers are HUGE and could probably take a Canadian gosling in
one snap. ;-P They do resemble godzilla! <G>

Hey, let the hunters take care of the geese! I've heard it's pretty tasty.

Scott Palmer

unread,
Nov 25, 2003, 2:30:07 PM11/25/03
to

"Katra" <Ka...@centurytel.net> wrote in message
news:3FC39982...@centurytel.net...

Back home my grandfather used to take my brother and me to one of the ponds
behind his house where we would learn to shoot with a 22 rifle by shooting
turtle heads when they popped out of the water. You can't kill too many at
a time, though or it'll make a mess of your pond(too many bodies for nature
to deal with).
Other than that I can't think of any way to kill a turtle unless you catch
it when you're fishing and then cut it's head off.

-Scott


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