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Squonkamaniac
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Yep do not like sheepy meat either.
elk now is good but do not care for deer either.
Cows and pigs now are right tasty.
I'm with you, Bob....but I can't eat wild game, makes me gage for some reason. I don't eat meat at all now, but when I did....no like wild meat.

It would be a cold day in hell before I ate sheep or goat too.....:devil:...:teehee:
 

The Cromwell

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I'm with you, Bob....but I can't eat wild game, makes me gage for some reason. I don't eat meat at all now, but when I did....no like wild meat.

It would be a cold day in hell before I ate sheep or goat too.....:devil:...:teehee:
Only goat I eat is in pepperoni on pizza. That is quite tasty :)

Yep most all wild meat is just too strong and gamey for me.
And Duck/goose is like eating pigeon, pretty yuck.
 

The Cromwell

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A hunk of seared decaying bovine flesh is just scrumptious. some ground horseradish, baked potato and salad with a hunk of fresh yeast bread.....
Damn getting hungry time to go for midnight snack.
A pint of Nestles Quick?
 

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Draconigena

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Can't really find fresh seafood in Arizona, therefore I don't buy any. Anything they do sell is old and very expensive...no idea why being so close to the pacific.
Well, like here, they have a captive audience... the "customer" isn't likely to have a yacht moored at the nearest ocean (or Gulf of California to you) that he flies to every weekend, so if you want seafood, they are gonna charge you an arm and a leg to get it.
 

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Squonkamaniac
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Well, like here, they have a captive audience... the "customer" isn't likely to have a yacht moored at the nearest ocean (or Gulf of California to you) that he flies to every weekend, so if you want seafood, they are gonna charge you an arm and a leg to get it.
With about 4 million people living in and around the greater Phoenix area you would think there would be customers....but apparently there isn't many.
 

Draconigena

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With about 4 million people living in and around the greater Phoenix area you would think there would be customers....but apparently there isn't many.
I am sure more people would buy it if the price was reasonable. A very large percentage of Phoenix residents are retired northerners, last time I checked, a lot of New Englanders... so maybe there is an opportunity there for a profitable business. Run a semi to San Diego and back every other day and open a "Fresh Seafood" market in Phoenix.
 

choderfett

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Hi Chouder, hope it helps your back please let me know if it does I have been thinking about getting some one of these days my friend
Will do.. trying to make sure I need to dissolve it in 50/50 juice...

Duck, goose, pheasant, and rabbit are all way too greasy for my delicate palate. :)
Love try try rabbit.. heard rack of rabbit is awesome!
 

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Squonkamaniac
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I am sure more people would buy it if the price was reasonable. A very large percentage of Phoenix residents are retired northerners, last time I checked, a lot of New Englanders... so maybe there is an opportunity there for a profitable business. Run a semi to San Diego and back every other day and open a "Fresh Seafood" market in Phoenix.
I've thought about that more than once.
 

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Squonkamaniac
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If it is all exported (assume for the profit?), that would be why steak is not found in restaurants. Or do the locals just not like beef?
I think the locals are into chicken and pork, because they raise them. Never seen an angus in S A

Oh, but guinea pigs are a local favorite, never tried one, but people go ballistic at a guinea pig feast.
 

JuicyLucy

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Wassup.. sorry was watching a movie on the tv.. now waiting on the misses to get ready to do a Costco run..
Got some cbd isolates in today.. hope it helps with the back pain

Where did you get yours?

I'm determined to order some isolates this weekend to make my own - the commercial stuff is just too damn expensive
 

Draconigena

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I think the locals are into chicken and pork, because they raise them. Never seen an angus in S A

Oh, but guinea pigs are a local favorite, never tried one, but people go ballistic at a guinea pig feast.
Chicken is, at the moment, the main meat here at Love Acres. But after that steer comes back from the butcher, we'll be doing steaks and roasts for about three years.

Guinea Pigs? That little creature that is neither from Guinea nor is it a pig? What about boars? Don't they have a bunch of them down there? I used to hunt Javelina when I lived in Tucson.
 

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Squonkamaniac
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Chicken is, at the moment, the main meat here at Love Acres. But after that steer comes back from the butcher, we'll be doing steaks and roasts for about three years.

Guinea Pigs? That little creature that is neither from Guinea nor is it a pig? What about boars? Don't they have a bunch of them down there? I used to hunt Javelina when I lived in Tucson.
There are boars, but just about everyone has a couple pigs in various stages of life prior to butchering it.

I have Javelina's in the backyard at night, I feed them veggie scraps. They stink so bad I couldn't figure out how anyone could possibly eat one, let along skin the damn thing, you can smell them coming a quarter mile away....man they are REALLY pungent....:blech:
 

Draconigena

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I have Javelina's in the backyard at night, I feed them veggie scraps. They stink so bad I couldn't figure out how anyone could possibly eat one, let along skin the damn thing, you can smell them coming a quarter mile away....man they are REALLY pungent..
I didn't noticed a really bad smell about the ones I hunted (between Mt. Wrightson and Tombstone), but back then, I also did not do my own skinning and processing, and when the butcher was done, although a little gamey, they weren't too different from a pig.
 

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Squonkamaniac
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I didn't noticed a really bad smell about the ones I hunted (between Mt. Wrightson and Tombstone), but back then, I also did not do my own skinning and processing, and when the butcher was done, although a little gamey, they weren't too different from a pig.
Oh my god, those things stink to high heaven. Maybe there a different bred in the Tucson area....duh hogs here are nothing I would even touch, let alone skin.....:blech:
 

Draconigena

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Oh my god, those things stink to high heaven. Maybe there a different bred in the Tucson area....duh hogs here are nothing I would even touch, let alone skin.....:blech:
This is way out on a limb, but could it be the difference between the ones I found in the mountains who ate only on the wild and the ones near Scottsdale who live on the flat and are eating the garbage humans throw out?
 

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Squonkamaniac
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This is way out on a limb, but could it be the difference between the ones I found in the mountains who ate only on the wild and the ones near Scottsdale who live on the flat and are eating the garbage humans throw out?
There is no difference....I could smell a Javelina when they got close to me while deer hunting, damn they are rendolant..!
 

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Squonkamaniac
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Perhaps the heat perpetuates the smell?

And I've never seen one alone, they travel in packs, usually a dozen or more, which probably allows me to smell that odor much easier.
 

MyMagicMist

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I have Javelina's in the backyard at night, I feed them veggie scraps. They stink so bad I couldn't figure out how anyone could possibly eat one, let along skin the damn thing, ...

Boil them out of the skin. That's how we did when a friend had us to their place to slaughter, well domestic hogs at any given. After you boil the skin loose from them you can take it from the cauldron and start cutting it up to make 'cracklins' or pork rinds. Cut the skin up and dump it all slowly and carefully down into a 55 gallon steel drum of hot lard/veggie oil/peanut oil, let it deep fry. Our friend was taught along the belief you used everything, or at least as most of it you could. Pickled snout can be yummy during Autumn in stews, or right out of the picklin's jar/s. :)

And sow's ears can make good coin purses. :) T'is the reasoning behind the expression, "oh your wife she got the sow's ear" meaning your wife was in charge of the money.

Wow. Boy do I now feel ancient, membering I learned about the sow's ear as a wee little boy. Ah well, least I'm still going. :)
 
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Squonkamaniac
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Boil them out of the skin. That's how we did when a friend had us to their place to slaughter, well domestic hogs at any given. After you boil the skin loose from them you can take it from the cauldron and start cutting it up to make 'cracklins' or pork rinds. Cut the skin up and dump it all slowly and carefully down into a 55 gallon steel drum of hot lard/veggie oil/peanut oil, let it deep fry. Our friend was taught along the belief you used everything, or at least as most of it you could. Pickled snout can be yummy during Autumn in stews, or right out of the picklin's jar/s. :)
Morley, your making me gag, and my back hurts.....:)
 

Draconigena

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There is no difference....I could smell a Javelina when they got close to me while deer hunting, damn they are rendolant..!
Did you perhaps mean "redolent"? (emitting an odor, very aromatic) :oops:
Perhaps the heat perpetuates the smell?
And I've never seen one alone, they travel in packs, usually a dozen or more, which probably allows me to smell that odor much easier.
The ones I tracked in the mountains SE of Tucson were usually in groups of two to four.
 

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