Now you Know
12535. Food Facts
In 1973, a Swedish sweets salesman was buried in a coffin made of chocolate.
12537. Food Facts
In China, people get their own back on poisonous scorpions by frying them.They are said to taste rather like cashew nuts.
12540. Food Facts
The Korean delicacy sannakji consists of still-wriggling slices of octopus tentacle.
12541. Food Facts
In the Philippines, fertilized duck or chicken eggs are cooked and eaten – with the unhatched chick partly grown inside. It's called balut, in case you want to avoid it on the menu.
12542. Food Facts
An American delicacy called headcheese, similar to British brawn, is made by cooking a whole cow or pig head into a mush and letting it cool into a jelly-like mass.
12543. Food Facts
Delicacies enjoyed in Iceland include puffin and svie – singed and boiled sheep's head.
12544. Food Facts
Until 1999, it was legal to enjoy ortolan in France – a tiny, rare, song bird, fattened in a dark box to three times it normal size then drowned in brandy and spit roasted for a few minutes before being eaten whole, innards included. (It was OK to leave the head and beak.) Traditionally, it was eaten with a napkin draped over your head and the plate so that none of the delicious smell could escape.
12546. Food Facts
Native Alaskan Indians bury salmon eggs in a jar for ninety days and eat them when they are truly rotten.
12547. Food Facts
Kakambian, from the Philippines, is made of diced goat – skin, hair, fat and meat all mixed together.
12548. Food Facts
At the winter festival of Thorrablot, Icelanders eat hákarl – rotten shark. Shark meat is buried in the ground for six to eight weeks then dried in the open air for two months.
12549. Food Facts
In Mongolia, camel or horse milk is stored in a cleaned horse stomach or hide bag and hung up in the ger (tent). Everyone who passes the door has to stir or hit the bag. It slowly ferments into a slightly alcoholic, cheesy, yoghurt drink which everyone drinks, even children.
12550. Food Facts
In some parts of Asia, monkey brains are a delicacy – but it's a myth that they are eaten from the head while the monkey is still alive.
12551. Food Facts
Bagoong is a very smelly, fermented paste made from mashed shrimps and eaten in the Philippines.
12552. Food Facts
In Palau, whole fruit bats, complete with skin, may be ordered as a starter or main course.
12553. Food Facts
Morcilla is a Puerto Rican sausage made with rice boiled in pigs' blood, stuffed into a sausage skin and then fried.
12554. Food Facts
In Ecuador, a family barbecue can include guinea pig and snake kebabs.
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Book : godrej: a hundred years
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