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Week 5 [07.11 - 13.11.2016] Strange food

    You might have heard that some Polish dishes  are considered at least "unusual" among other nations. Even some European citizens find our pickles or sour cabbage strange. I would like to mention some unusual dishes from the whole world. As I don't want to cause disgust, I wont paste photos, but I will provide links for those who want to see how described food looks like.

1. Casu Marzu


    Let's start in Europe. This Sardinian speciality is basically cheese. Quite unusual because  a cheese maker will leave it outdoors so that special kind of flies will put its eggs inside it. The cheese is ready when  larvea will start to consume it. One should cover his/her eyes because those larvas can jump up to 15 centimeters. Also this is  its "freshness" indicator: when larvea are dead, the cheese becomes toxic and should not be eaten!

http://ruszwpodroz.pl/wp-content/uploads/2015/05/Casu-Marzu1.jpg

2. Surstromming


    I already mentioned pickled cucumbers. Our northern neighbors, Swedes, have their own pickled food - fish. I think that this is enough to consider it disgusting. Just to spice it up(spice,  got it? :P), I will add that this food is quite dangerous, and not allowed in air transportation, because it might explode. Also it smells so bad that it is suggested one should open them under water so that it smells less.


3. Kopi luvak


    Paradoxurus hermaphroditus is an Asian fox-like creature, which likes coffee berries very much. Also it is unable to digest coffee seeds. So people gather its excrement and get coffee seeds out of it and sell them as really expensive drink. Nowadays people breed civets and keep them in (usually) small cages, so the production of this specialty is considered cruel and unethical, as civets tend to live shorter and die easily in cages.


4. Hundred year eggs


  A hundred is an overstatement. Usually it takes a few weeks to prepare this meal. This is a Chinese dish. One need to put eggs in water, rice shells, tea, quicklime and clay solution. After a few weeks the meal is ready. So, yes it is basically spoiled eggs. 

    Another egg on list. Well, maybe not exactly an  egg because it is a half-developed chicken or a duck chick, still in its shell. It comes from the Philippines, and it is considered to be delicacy there. I don't know about you, but I wouldn't like to try it.


    I could go on, and on with strange or disgusting food. Icelanders eat rotten sharks, Greenlanders rotten penguins, Japanese live fish. Personally, I have tried live octopus in Korea. Never wanted to do it, however, I was offered it and didn't want to disrespect my host. It was quite good (the best seafood I've ever tried, actually), but I would never do it again, as I think it is cruel. How about you? Have you ever tried something strange? How was it?

Sources:
http://ruszwpodroz.pl/roznosci/najdziwniejsze-potrawy-swiata/
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kopi_luwak
https://pl.wikipedia.org/wiki/Surstr%C3%B6mming
http://www.podroze.pl/swiat/azja/10-najdziwniejszych-potraw-swiata/1670/

Comments

Sylwia Pechcin said…
So far I was thinking that the only thing I woulnd never try are all the kinds of seafood except of fish, but now I know that there is much more dishes that I even wouldn't like to look at. Really, I regret opening all this photos, but I was really curious how all this things look like, so I didn't stop watching :P Luckily I do not have such experiences in tasting exotic dishes and I hope that it will be it ;)
Unknown said…
All of this looks terrible...I personally hate any kind of seafood and I just couldn't even try if somebody put on my plate something like this. It's awful, how people can eat these things? It is really strange. All of this shows us that people from all over the world are different and there is always something new, something that can shock us. But eating cheese with larvas...? :D (this example hit me the most) no way...
Unknown said…
In my opinion, the worst mentioned meal is balut. It looks awful and I can't imagine someone eating almost hatched chicken and saying "It looks delicious and tastes great". It looks awful.
Hundred year egg doesn't look that bad, but I hope it doesn't smell like rotten egg.
I don't know how people can eat something stinking or some meals from this list, but as everyone knows, people around the world are eating many strange things, so strange food for us is daily meal for someone from another country.
I had opportunity to try Casu Marzu and Kopiluvak. Kopiluvak tastes like a regular coffee, maybe it's bit "waterish". Nothing special about it unlike to the Casu Marzu which is so disgusting. I was about to vomit after eating it. That was a very bad experience. It was my first and last try.

Im very curious about trying Surstrooming. I have seen many videos of people trying those fermented fishes and I wonder if it was all staged up or it sticks so badly for real. Im hundred percent sure I wont try Balut. It looks too disgusting for me. Even if i look at it i feel sick.
Unknown said…
When i heard about eating fugu fish in Japan (which kills 300 people every year) i was sure nothing else can surprise.. I was wrong. The barbaric practice of cooking and eating the delicate ortolan songbird is controversial even for some of French (eating Ortolan is old french tradition which was disappering over years). Killing and selling the bird has been banned in France since the late 1990s, though the ban was not strictly enforced until 2007. Birds are kept in covered cages, encouraging them to gorge on grain in order to double their size. Then comes the eating, part pagan ritual. The birds are cooked for eight minutes and served with their heads still attached. After the shame-hiding napkin is placed over the diner’s head ( to trap the aroma of the dish), the ortolan is popped in its entirety who then proceeds to eat everything including the head and bones..
In the best french restaurants this dish become on top again
Are You surprised? iam..
Dajana Kubica said…
In Warsaw there is a bar where you can eat unusual dishes - WawPho. I ate there the silkworm larvae, which tasted like spicy sawdust and maybe less extreme dish - frog legs, which tasted like chicken in batter. I think I would be able to try most of the dishes that are considered disgusting, maybe with the exception of eggs with chicken inside. I would like to try hornets, because I heard that are very tasty. Seafood are not scary to me, and also insects. With the rest I could have a mental problem, but I wanna to overcome my fears :)
Out of all of these Kopi luvak and surstromming look the least disgusting. Probably wouldn't mind trying kopi luvak if I didn't know its origin. Surstromming looks like a regular sliced herring. I wonder if it's really that bad. The rest I wouldn't try in a million years.

Japan have all kinds of weird dishes like Shirako which is basically cod semen (it's considered the male equivalent of caviar) or tuna eyeballs.
Ihor Ahnianikov said…
I have never tried any of the described dishes, but I like fish and seafood so I would try an octopus for sure, although not a live one.

The level of disgust and "strangeness" seems to depend on what culture that person is from. For example Asians don't mind eating weird dishes like deep fried insects - it's a casual food for them. Beef is a normal food for Europeans, while people from India would find it disgusting.
Unknown said…
In my opinion the strangest is the cheese. If I didn't know how it is made I could eat it. My girlfriend's sister's boyfriend still does not eat pickles. For Spaniards the fact that we eat eggs in the morning is strange. For me it is strange that they eat a sweet breakfast. A man after this breakfast is just hungry. Strange things that I ate were snails and frogs. Both are good. A frog tastes like chicken and smells like fish.
Michał Pycek said…
The examples you have mentioned are interesting and unusual to us, Poles. I have heard about Balut while watching a traveling channel on youtube a couple of years ago, when the travelers were in Asia and the host has offered them Balut as a sign of hospitality, respect and care. They have been trying to eat it but simply couldn't since they have been complaining about the disgusting stink of this meal. They have claimed this meal was way too exotic to them..
On the other hand we do not have to look far to notice some unusual meals even in our Polish cuisine. Personally, I cannot stand the soup called ''Flaki''... To me it is not at all tasty, not at all traditional, more like something unbelievably weird, long and slimy - the opposition of a home made and warm, delicious soup.
To my Scandinavian colleagues the most unusual meals in Poland are f.eg. blood sausage (kaszanka) and brawn (salceson).
The most unusual thing I have eaten was a whale steak in Norwegian restaurant.
Unknown said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said…
The most unusual dish for me was hundred years eggs. I’m not really sure if it’s healthy to eat such a type of food. Talking about Kopi luvak, I think that Paradoxurus Hermaphroditus looks a very cute creature, but I definitely wouldn’t try a drink made out of Paradoxurus’s excrements.
I love sushi and I would like to try a live octopus. I’m sure I will like it. And also I’d try different bugs, maybe even live ones when I’ll have an opportunity. I’ve heard that bulls testicles taste like chicken, so I’d take a try of it as well. Living on the edge.
I think most of them are just very silly idea. I would never like to try for ex. this "one hundred eggs" it looks awfully to me.
I won't try most of this strange food because I'm a vegetarian and I don't eat meat.
Kacper Zaremba said…
All of those foods look way too disgusting for me. I think I wouldn't be brave enough to try any of those, specially after reading how are they made. It's very surprising for me, that someone came up with the idea of making 'hundred year eggs'. How was that invented?
kondrat said…
Same feeling. The worst thing i can imagine was eating roasted frogs, or strange bugs in Vietnam. Listed ones in this article are disgusting in equal amount as those which I ate
Unknown said…
That Casu Marzu thing came up when I was eating a grilled cheese sandwich. Gotta watch out for that.

That thing must be probably the only piece of food I've heard about and would not eat, no matter what. Seriously, whos idea was that? Oh, that cheese is missing something, I'll add some jumping worms and wait till they get fed on it.
Unknown said…
Recently I've been to Scotland and I was surprised to see that they have pickled eggs on the market, almost everywhere. Unfortunately or better to say fortunately they were available only in a large quantities (huge jars containing about 50 eggs)so I haven't decided to give it a try. However, in comparison to the dishes descibed above they looks pretty "normal" and probably don't taste worse than our pickled cucumbers. Maybe next time I'll be tempted to try them.
Andrzej Gulak said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Andrzej Gulak said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said…
I don't envy you eating Casu Marzu at all ;) Under no circumstances I can imagine trying it or even looking at it in real life not only in the picture, although I'm very curious whether it's consumed with the larva or only the cheese itself?

On the second thought maybe I'd also dare to try Surstromming, it could be quite quaint and new experience for sure, now, when after having read this article our typical ways of preparing fishes looks so boring ;)
Unknown said…
Same case here. I wouldn't even think about trying it. Most of them doesn't even sound healthy or fun to try. If you want something challenging to eat try ghost peppers. I was always baffled how people come up with dishes like that. In most cases it's probably because of hunger or experiments to keep the food eatable (for ex. during winters).
Unknown said…
Andrzej I suppose that paying high price for that coffee makes it special, because people just want to believe they experience something unusual, thus it was worth such money. However, I totally agree that the way Kopi luvak is being made is extraordinary and worth to notice.
Unknown said…
Paulina I have exactly the same feeling, Bulut gone to far, it's totally disgusting not only culinarily but also ethically and morally. Moreover, you hit the mark with the statement that what's right for us could not look alright for people in different civilization.
Unknown said…
Of these dishes which are described in the presentation, I wouldn't eat any. I was on vacation in Croatia and I eaten pizza with seafood. The pizza was delicious. Basically I am not a foodie and I don't eat fancy meals.
Unknown said…
After so many years only recently I've found the courage to try squids - that was connected with overcoming my fear to think while consuming that they were living bugs before - after all, it wasn't so bad, they tasted quite like a chicken. Not longer than year years ago, I've also started to eat sushi, now I love it, however there was a time I considered it disgusting.
With a little concern I wonder what would be next... Apparently, it seems one could get used to anything.
Unknown said…
That's really interesting, I had no idea there is such bar in Warsaw. I admire your courage, I'd never try such an extreme food like larvae, however I feel like tasting frog legs.
All this food looks really disgusting and I wouldn’t probably eat any of this, but on the other hand im really curious about its taste. Maybe if I were blindfolded and unaware of what it is I would like it, but aware of what it is, I couldn’t probably even put it in my mouth without vomiting.
Unknown said…
The strangest food i have ever tried were snails in Paris. As far as I remember, they taste like chicken ;) However, I don't know whether I would like to taste dishes described in the presentation, some of them like Casu Marzu are too hardcore for me. I wouldn't also eat live fish, i think it is really cruel.
On the other hand, I would really like to drink Kopi luvak coffee, i heard, that it is really good.
Wojtek Kania said…
Personally I have never eaten nothing extraordinary which isn’t divergent from norms (like alive octopus), but I heard a lot of downright sick foods. In Asia are restaurants where you can buy fetus soup. It’s a huge exaggeration for me. I can understand a lot, becouse of culture etc. but this „soup” is horrible and sick. Anyway, aforementioned dishes aren’t looking good and appetizing, and I don’t want to try them.
Unknown said…
I heard about most of these strange meals which are in your article - except 'hundred year eggs'. I wouldn't try any of them, they all seem disgusting. Maybe I could try Kopi luvak coffee if the grain were obtained in natural way - from animals that live in the wild. I think Balut and Casu Marzu are the worst. I could expand this list by Foie gras or just our wieners and sausages... for me those are pretty much just as disgusting. I think that fugu fish is an interesting and unusual dish. Fugu is poisonous and you can eat it in special Japanese restaurants, prepared by skilled chefs. If it's not scary enough, you can always order Shirako fugu meal - sperm of this fish.
I never tried anything special or unusual, I usually choose proven dishes.
Unknown said…
Thanks to the author for the hidden pictures :) I do not consider myself a squeamish person, but I would never try some of these exotic dishes. Although this is very relative. If we got used to the cheese with larvae in the childhood, it would be absolutely normal. The term "traditional" is grafted depending on the culture.
Last year I had a roommate from Taiwan. When I cooked quite usual dishes such as scrambled eggs and mashed potatoes, she was observing that process with her eyes wide open and was shaking her head. I still don't know what surprised that girl so much. I was giving her ukrainian candies, and then she began to give me taiwanese sweets in response. For each of us all these goodies seemed exotic.

As a coffee lover, I want to taste Kopi luvak. And as the saying goes, never say never. but I'm pretty sure I will never try that disgusting cheese.
Unknown said…
It all depends on personal preference and culture in which you grew up. For us, it might be strange, shocking, or unimaginable, and for locals where such dishes are normally prepared and served it is normal, good, or even adored. Interesting post, I personally will be very happy if I could try the most of these dishes. Maybe even all of them...
Honestly, I'm not a big fan of strange food. I don't think I would ever try those dishes. I don't like extraordinary dishes because if it looks bad I think it's disgusting and I just can't force myself to even look at it let alone eat it. Although one of my dreams is going to Japan and maybe when I get there I will change my mind about it. I guess we will see. The strangest dish I have ever had was octopus and I don't really think I could manage to eat something much more disgusting. It was just awful and I don't ever want to do it again. I'm a food lover and I love all kinds of great food and I don't see a reason why should I sacrifice good meal for some weird looking/smelling dish. I just don't get that. But I think that what for me is normal and great in taste for people from other exotic countries it may just be as weird as I think about theirs food.
Unknown said…
Well, you cannot say that i did not warned you :)
Why wouldn't you try seafood?
Unknown said…
Well, I have heard that Polish people are strange for eating sour cabbage and cucumbers. I guess you always can find something more unusual.
Unknown said…
For me it is most interesting, how people could find it delicious? I like scrambled eggs, but hell, i would never like to try it. If it looks that disgusting it must be bad.
Unknown said…
I think that kopi luvak is the "normallest" of mentioned couisines, there is a lot of processing before it ends up in cup, so it is not that disgusting. I have to admit that i admire you for trying casu marzu. I would never do that.
Unknown said…
That is really disgusting. I think i will skip dinner.
Unknown said…
When i was in Korea i tried silkworm larvas (its cheapest source of protein there) it was crunchy and strange, I do not recommend.
Unknown said…
Every country has its own customs, I guess.
Unknown said…
How did it taste?
Unknown said…
Bulls testicles? You mean "land oysters"?
Unknown said…
I think that one hundred year egg has to contain a lot of sulfur compounds. That cannot be healthy, since our smell was optimized to avoid unhealthy things. So if it smells bad it has to be bad.
Unknown said…
I know right? Who comes up with this stuff?
Unknown said…
Put update how does it taste :)
Unknown said…
Thats safe. I would not risk trying fugu.
Unknown said…
I guess that coffe is least disgusting among those couisines.
Unknown said…
To be honest I have never tried sth such strange as you described. But truth is that after one semester spent on English conversation with Garry Malloy I will never forget what he told us about strange food in Scotland for example fried Mars...

A deep-fried Mars bar is an ordinary Mars bar normally fried in a type of batter commonly used for deep-frying fish, sausages, and other battered products. The chocolate bar is typically chilled before battering to prevent it from melting into the frying fat, though a cold Mars bar can fracture when heated.

I am glad that the product has not received support from Mars who said "deep-frying one of our products would go against our commitment to promoting healthy, active lifestyles.
Unknown said…
I've heard about all these dishes. For me the most disgusting is definitely the first and last dish, but when I was in China I saw a lot of disgusting food which for them was the norm for example chicken foot. Apparently this is a favorite snack of children! In China, nothing can be wasted so they prepare guts on different ways. The fact they eat almost everything stems from their culture and that earlier there was little meat and a big hunger. I had no opportunity to try the hundred year eggs but on the next trip I'll do it. In my opinion that we think that some food is disgusting and the other nation don't think so, often it stems from cultural differences.
Unknown said…
If we're talking about pickles I've just read that Gordy's Pickle Jar Company put on the market new innovative pickled juice in the can, named Fine Brine. It's spicy and it's meant especially for coctails or cooking. Surprised? Can you imagine pickled martini? ;)

Here's link to the article: http://www.delish.com/food/a47614/pickle-juice/?src=socialflowFB
Unknown said…
In my whole life the only strange thing I have tried are snails and I really enjoied them. I am very open minded for new experience , if only i have opportunity to try something new.
Piotr Basiński said…
To be honest I would avoid eating strange food. It's safer to eat traditional and delicious meals.
Unknown said…
That is quite interesting, when I was in Korea i heard similar story.Probably in Europe shortage of food was not felt as much as it did in Asia, because we had less people to feed.
Unknown said…
I'm curious how does bull's testicles mixed with land oysters tastes :)
Unknown said…
To be honest, I don't like eating.
Sometimes I joke there are two kinds of people:
1. people who eat to live
2. people who live to eat.

I'm definitely in the first group ;) So it's impossible to bribe me with any food - amazing dishes, sweets and so on.

Some time ago I tried octopus, but it was fried, not alive! Could you describe it in detail? How to do it? What part of octopus first? Is she bemused?

Moode said…
All the food mentioned above is really a big surprise! I was also amazed that in Newfoundland, Canada the make a seal flipper pie! It is supposed to made only between April and May during the annual seal hunting season. I saw the pie for the first time in the move The Shipping News starting Kevin Spacey and Cate Blanchett. I have heard that it is very fat in taste and similar to badly cooked liver. And this does not encourage me to try it at all.

In Egypt we have this traditional dish called Feseekh which is served during Sham-El-Nessim festival (our Easter). This is a fermented fish (grey mullet) – you prepare it with lots of salt. It has a very strange smell however it is very tasty.
I heard about some of them, especially Surstromming, and I think that every country has it's own speciality food that is more or less unique and there will always be somebody who would consider it disgusting :). I have very picky taste and I seriously can't stand bad food as long as I have access to good one, and I'm rather careful when it comes to something I've never ever tried before, to not offend somebody who spent time prepairing it (and very often, culture itself). It's nice to try new tastes though, I got positively shocked many times when I considered given food average at best, but it turned out to be actually very tasty :).
Jarek_Ziem said…
I haven’t tried any of them and I don’t want to.
The best kitchen is from ICELAND. I don't know how they manage invent those meals but I think the cold, harsh environment and extremely poverty was behind it. For example: Súrir hrútspungar - Sour ram's testicles
That brings us to ram's testicles, this is a tricky one. Iceland used to be a very poor country, full of poor farmers that would make the most of anything they could eat. So, that includes the testicles of the ram, and many more.
We can all thank God that our "ogorek kiszony" is the weirdest dish for foreigners and our kitchen is considered good tasting and healthy.
Unknown said…
This comment has been removed by the author.
Unknown said…
Personally, I'm big fan of Polish cusine and it is hard for me to imagine that people eat such strange dishes. I'm fascinated by typical local cuisine from different countries and always curious about new tastes but, at the same time, I'm sensitive to any dirty smells or bad looking food. Despite my love to trying new things, I decided only to try seafood which was some kind of barrier for me to cross.
Unknown said…
I love eating raw meat (beef tartar and beef carpaccio are my favourite disches) and sushi, but eating something that is alive when I i put it in my mouth is too much. There's a good evolutionary reason why some things are disgusting to us and we probably should not eat those things.
I agree with Robert and Paweł. Eating some of those dishes means deceiving our own sense of taste. If something doesn't smell nor taste good then for sure it is not meant to be eaten, with an exception to medicine. I don't like that kind of experiments with food. What were the inventors of such dishes trying to achieve? I honestly don't know.
I really enjoy experimenting with food and different types of cuisine. I would like to try all of those dishes you descriped in your post.

Sometimes it's probably not wise to try everything though. Especially when you are offered it in suspicious cirumstances. My friend ate a fermented herring on the last Woodstock festival. We were walking around the campsite area and some guys wanted us to try this herring from a can. They opened the can and it absolutely stinked in about 10 meters radius I'd say. He did try it and had to use a lot of wine to cover this smell up.
KamilG said…
I have never eaten strange food, but I would like to say you about Chilli Burger, the spiciest burger around the world. It was the reason that 5 people went to hospital., so now customers must sign disclaimer about their responsibility to eat it. For me it's curious that this man made from ordinary burger, such dangerous food.
Unknown said…
I dont really like foreign food. I prefer my own Country dishes like "schabowy". I always eat that kind of food mostly when i come to my grandparents. We have stomach adapted to our food and food from abroad could send us to hospital mostly when we eat in country like Egypt or Turkey

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