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![]() "slenon" wrote in message . com... ...I think I'd prefer the locusts over locust beans. One of the sources I consulted claimed that the beans are inedible. But then, I've heard the same about mesquite and some others. Mesquite beans were most definitely eaten by at least some of the southwestern U.S. Indians.....the Papagos, for instance, if memory serves. Then too, many pulses (kidney beans, for example) really do carry a fairly heavy load of toxins and must be cooked properly to render them safe. Nevertheless, except in dire emergency, I think I'll take my chances with the veggies. Wolfgang |
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Wolfgang:
One of the sources I consulted claimed that the beans are inedible. But then, I've heard the same about mesquite and some others. Mesquite beans were most definitely eaten by at least some of the southwestern U.S. Indians.....the Papagos, for instance, if memory serves. Then too, many pulses (kidney beans, for example) really do carry a fairly heavy load of toxins and must be cooked properly to render them safe. Nevertheless, except in dire emergency, I think I'll take my chances with the veggies. I recall, hopefully correctly, seeing "locust bean gum" in some lists of ingredients. The SW tribes such as Papagos were often called "diggers" by the tribes who claimed better hunting and farming land. They pretty much ate every thing that they could scrape up to survive. Quite a lot of our choicest foods require processing to eliminate toxins. Cashews come to mind. And truth be, I'd have preferred other fair than the insects at the time I found eating them necessary. Of course, local veggies weren't much better. -- Stev Lenon 91B20 '68-'69 Drowning flies to Darkstar http://web.tampabay.rr.com/stevglo/i...age92kword.htm |
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![]() "slenon" wrote in message m... Wolfgang: One of the sources I consulted claimed that the beans are inedible. But then, I've heard the same about mesquite and some others. Mesquite beans were most definitely eaten by at least some of the southwestern U.S. Indians.....the Papagos, for instance, if memory serves. Then too, many pulses (kidney beans, for example) really do carry a fairly heavy load of toxins and must be cooked properly to render them safe. Nevertheless, except in dire emergency, I think I'll take my chances with the veggies. I recall, hopefully correctly, seeing "locust bean gum" in some lists of ingredients. The SW tribes such as Papagos were often called "diggers" by the tribes who claimed better hunting and farming land. They pretty much ate every thing that they could scrape up to survive. Quite a lot of our choicest foods require processing to eliminate toxins. Cashews come to mind. And truth be, I'd have preferred other fair than the insects at the time I found eating them necessary. Of course, local veggies weren't much better. I'm still writing the TR, but when we arrived in Goma, our hostess met us at her door and fed us lunch, Congolese-style. The first thing on the menu, and the tastiest treat by far, was honey-fried locusts. Without their legs, they look almost like tiny shrimp. They are so good that when they are in season (every half dozen years or so), the locals use small baggies of them as legal tender. We talked about John the Baptist and eating locusts, and decided that it was a very tasty way to eat. --riverman |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
The politics of nature | Sportsmen Against Bush | Fly Fishing | 290 | January 12th, 2004 08:42 PM |