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For Adventurous Taste Buds: The Weirdest Foods from Around the World
Shark, pigeon, sheep, or maybe some brain, intestines, and liver – no, it’s not a map of the local zoo or the syllabus for your Bio 101 lab. As many of us in America are used to a standard cheeseburger and a boring bag of potato chips, it is not surprising that food from other countries around the world can seem very unusual to our bland palates. Before many of you embark on your study abroad semesters or leave for a vacation this summer, check out some of these menus from other cultures and see if they leave your taste buds tingling or you running for the toilet.
Ecuador
Cow Feet
Ecuador is notorious for its unique cultural dishes, such as roasted guinea pig known as cuy. But Eric Ahearn, a junior at Case Western Reserve University, got to try cow hooves served in soup during his study abroad semester. His host dad convinced him to try the caldo de patas (patas meaning paws or hooves in Spanish) and he admitted, “I actually didn’t know exactly what I was eating until halfway through!” He described the hooves as having an odd rubbery texture, and it must have been pretty good because he still continued to eat the soup after he learned what was in it.

Egypt
Stuffed Pigeon
Called hamaam, native pigeons are stuffed with seasoned rice and grilled in many restaurants and street vendors as a signature Egyptian dish. Windsor Hanger, our HC President and Publisher, tried stuffed pigeon on her trip to Egypt. “I’m a vegetarian, but I felt like it was once in a lifetime chance. You’re supposed to bite the neck off first – thankfully they’re decapitated. That was a little much for me. You literally pick up the whole cooked bird and bite into it. It was pretty primal.”

France
Fatty Goose Liver
A controversial delicacy from France, foie gras is made from force-feeding geese excessive amounts of corn. Feeding a goose with abnormal amounts of grain through a funnel causes the liver to grow to almost ten times the normal size, creating the fatty, rich, and buttery flavor. Duck foie gras is cheaper to produce and has become more popular in the U.S., though the force-feeding production method has been disputed as cruel and inhumane and has led it to become illegal in some countries.

Iceland
Fermented Shark
Jensen Suther, a junior at Elon University, tried this Icelandic specialty called hákarl during his Spring Break from his semester abroad in Denmark. The basking shark is poisonous when fresh due to a high content of uric acid because sharks do not have kidneys to naturally remove the acid from the body, so the fermenting process turns most of the uric acid into ammonia. The process also softens the flesh and gives it a jelly-like consistency. It is traditionally served cubed with toothpicks and with the local spirit called brennivín, also known as Icelandic schnapps, with a shot “chasing” the piece of meat. Jensen’s non-Icelandic palate described the taste as “rubbing alcohol,” most likely due to the high ammonia content, but in Iceland it is considered a delicacy.
Check out Andrew Zimmern trying hákarl on his Travel Channel show Bizarre Foods.
About the Author
Biography
Joanna Buffum is a senior English major and Anthropology minor at Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. She is from Morristown, NJ and in the summer of 2009 she was an advertising intern for OK! Magazine and the editorial blog intern for Zagat Survey in New York City. This past summer she was an editorial intern for MTV World's music website called MTV Iggy, writing fun things like album and concert reviews for bands you have never heard of before. Her favorite books are basically anything involving fantasy fiction, especially the Harry Potter series and “Jonathan Strange and Mr Norrell” by Susanna Clarke. In her free time she enjoys snowboarding, playing intramural field hockey, watching House MD, and making paninis. In the spring of 2010 she studied abroad in Copenhagen, Denmark, and she misses the friendly, tall, and unusually attractive Danish people more than she can say. After college, she plans on pursuing a career in writing, but it can be anywhere from television script writing, to magazine journalism, to book publishing.

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Comments
I would def. try all of these but the balut for sure scares me the most.
I'm currently doing a semester abroad in Thailand...and before coming over I thought I was pretty adventurous with food. After seeing the normal carts containing every type of fried bug one can catch alongside fried frogs I realized this was going to be a diet broadening experience; though I draw the line at pigs tongue!
It never ceases to amaze me how differently 'specialty' can be defined.
i'm from france and the 'foie gras' is super delicious !!! we eat it mostly in Xmas
In the Philippines, balut is usually sold when the sun goes down. It is best eaten when hot. Some children eat that, though adult men eat that as an aphrodisiac.
Nobody practically eats balut for breakfast.
I always thought I was adventurous with food, but I think I draw the line at being able to completely make out the animal you're eating. Seafood not included, of course.
On a totally different note, I just finished a research paper about the globazation of McDonald's and all the crazy foods they serve at restaurants around the world. None quite as fascinating as these, though!
this article was kind of repulsive, but i loved reading it!
I think it's strange that I am so revolted by the idea of eating Balut when I eat eggs for breakfast almost every morning. There's something about being able to see the fetus that just makes my stomach churn.
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