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3dfxzone.it => Off Topic => Topic started by: Kreshna Aryaguna Nurzaman on 01 February 2007, 12:42:12

Title: Spider as food
Post by: Kreshna Aryaguna Nurzaman on 01 February 2007, 12:42:12
Just found this article (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9687163/) on MSNBC:

QuoteSome bravery as a side dish
Forget liver: Here are 7 foods that truly require a fearless stomach

It was Jeffrey Steingarten, author of "The Man Who Ate Everything," who most recently insisted that we should embrace the universe of foodstuffs around us. You've heard variations on this spiel: Try everything once because (this part gets repeated in your most motherly tone) if you don't try it, you won't know if you like it.

Those principles are fine for Brussels sprouts and sweetbreads. But seeing as it's the time of year when grossing people out gets semi-official sanctioning from a semi-official holiday, now is the moment to consider foods that push the envelope of edibility.

We're not talking about haunted-house, peeled-grapes-as-eyeballs gross. We're talking about food that can churn your stomach without the aid of a blindfold.

and

Quote7) Spiders. Entomologists might disagree, but the practice of eating insects doesn't seem nearly so bad as it sounds at first.  

But the line has to be drawn somewhere, and arachnids seem to be a good place to draw it.  Spider-eating is practiced in a number of places, but Cambodia seems to be the place where it has drawn the most attention, thanks to a practice of eating meaty finger-sized tarantulas known in Khmer as a-ping. For about a dime per arachnid, you can get a cheap, ample meal of the critters fried up with salt, pepper and perhaps a bit of garlic. (Keep in mind that a full restaurant entree can be found in Phnom Penh for under $2.)

And of course, there's pic as well. Look at the size of the spider.

(http://msnbcmedia3.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/051024/051024_friedspider_vmed_3p.widec.jpg)


Also found some interesting pics here (http://damylen.smugmug.com/keyword/spider/1/35550938).

(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y71/kreshna_iceheart/artistic/spider-food-01.jpg)

(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y71/kreshna_iceheart/artistic/spider-food-02.jpg)

The question is how does spider actually taste? Anyone have ever tried spider before? I haven't tried it myself, but since Chelicerates and Crustaceans belong to the same phylum (Arthropoda, ,that is), then I guess spider should taste quite similar to crab or lobster, shouldn't it?
Title: Spider as food
Post by: Obi-Wan Kenobi on 12 August 2009, 03:46:58
omfg this looks grose haha but it may be very healthy on the otherside, I dunno about the poison of these creatures heh, These Tarantula's look alot like the Bird Eating Spider from Australia, these are highly venomous, I suppose the venom wears off when these things I cooked haha.

I do wonder what they tast like but on the other side I may not want to know rofl :D :D
Title: Spider as food
Post by: Geraldine Dundon on 20 April 2015, 06:58:43
I've never tried one and never will..I didn't even know that it can be eaten.
Title: Spider as food
Post by: heartyanxious on 15 July 2015, 15:56:23
I will never eat spiders I mean look at its hairy legs [xx(]
Title: Spider as food
Post by: heartyanxious on 15 July 2015, 15:59:39
"The taste has been described as bland, "rather like a cross between chicken and cod", with a contrast in texture from a crispy exterior to a soft centre. The legs contain little flesh, while the head and body have "a delicate white meat inside". There are certainly those who might not enjoy the abdomen, however, as it contains a brown paste consisting of organs, possibly eggs, and excrement. Some call it a delicacy while others recommend not eating it." - Wikipedia

[xx(][:0][?]
Title: Spider as food
Post by: heartyanxious on 22 July 2015, 11:44:12
Some tribes in Africa eat them. Tarantulas, I think. They believe that eating spiders make them stronger.
Title: Spider as food
Post by: Geraldine Dundon on 04 May 2016, 11:58:41
I couldn't imagine myself eating a spider even it is a fried one but according to others its taste is like a cross between chicken and cod.
Title: Spider as food
Post by: heartyanxious on 09 September 2016, 15:12:57
what the hell! this is the most gross food i've ever seen.
Title: Spider as food
Post by: Geraldine Dundon on 13 March 2017, 13:47:06
Yeah, that's the best word - gross!
Title: Spider as food
Post by: heartyanxious on 18 March 2017, 01:55:50
QuoteOriginally posted by Kreshna Aryaguna Nurzaman

Just found this article (http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/9687163/) on MSNBC:

QuoteSome bravery as a side dish
Forget liver: Here are 7 foods that truly require a fearless stomach

It was Jeffrey Steingarten, author of "The Man Who Ate Everything," who most recently insisted that we should embrace the universe of foodstuffs around us. You've heard variations on this spiel: Try everything once because (this part gets repeated in
your most motherly tone) if you don't try it, you won't know if you like it.

Those principles are fine for Brussels sprouts and sweetbreads. But seeing as it's the time of year when grossing people out gets semi-official sanctioning from a semi-official holiday, now is the moment to consider foods that push the envelope of edibility.

We're not talking about haunted-house, peeled-grapes-as-eyeballs gross. We're talking about food that can churn your stomach without the aid of a blindfold.

and

Quote7) Spiders. Entomologists might disagree, but the practice of eating insects doesn't seem nearly so bad as it sounds at first.  

But the line has to be drawn somewhere, and arachnids seem to be a good place to draw it.  Spider-eating is practiced in a number of places, but Cambodia seems to be the place where it has drawn the most attention, thanks to a practice of eating meaty finger-sized tarantulas known in Khmer as a-ping. For about a dime per arachnid, you can get a cheap, ample meal of the critters fried up with salt, pepper and perhaps a bit of garlic. (Keep in mind that a full restaurant entree can be found in Phnom Penh for under $2.)

And of course, there's pic as well. Look at the size of the spider.

(http://msnbcmedia3.msn.com/j/msnbc/Components/Photos/051024/051024_friedspider_vmed_3p.widec.jpg)


Also found some interesting pics here (http://damylen.smugmug.com/keyword/spider/1/35550938).

(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y71/kreshna_iceheart/artistic/spider-food-01.jpg)

(http://i3.photobucket.com/albums/y71/kreshna_iceheart/artistic/spider-food-02.jpg)

The question is how does spider actually taste? Anyone have ever tried spider before? I haven't tried it myself, but since Chelicerates and Crustaceans belong to the same phylum (Arthropoda, ,that is), then I guess spider should taste quite similar to crab or lobster, shouldn't it?



Not everyone thinks the way you do but, some of the countries embrace your belief and eats exotic food. Spiders? haven't tried it though. Hahaha
Title: Spider as food
Post by: Geraldine Dundon on 30 June 2017, 16:02:27
BTW, I think this "delicacy" is available in Thailand. Im not sure though with spiders, but crickets and bugs are being sold there too.