 |
|

03/04/04, 11:26 AM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Kitsap Co, WA
Posts: 3,025
|
|
|
On Cooking Mice
Here is an article I came across while looking up African recipes on the internet. May be of use to those of you with lots of rodents and little cash...
http://www.bridgewater.edu/~mtembo/mbeba.html
|

03/04/04, 11:36 AM
|
|
Banned
|
|
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: TX
Posts: 152
|
|
|
From personal experience, the best way to eat mice is to throw them into the fire whole. And after about 15 minutes or so you've got crispy critters. A little hot sauce and some skewered grass hoppers( pluck the legs, they'll stick in your craw) and you've got a high protein survival dish. :yeeha:
mc
|

03/04/04, 11:48 AM
|
|
|
yummy
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mousecat33
From personal experience, the best way to eat mice is to throw them into the fire whole. And after about 15 minutes or so you've got crispy critters. A little hot sauce and some skewered grass hoppers( pluck the legs, they'll stick in your craw) and you've got a high protein survival dish. :yeeha:
mc
|
This sounds so good cant wait to try it
yummy
|

03/04/04, 11:53 AM
|
|
Banned
|
|
Join Date: Jan 2004
Location: TX
Posts: 152
|
|
|
This took place in a primitive skills workshop. I'll only do it again if I have to.
Didn't taste too bad though.
mc
|

03/04/04, 12:48 PM
|
|
In Remembrance
|
|
Join Date: May 2002
Location: illinois but i have a homestead building in missouri
Posts: 1,436
|
|
The following is from 'Apicius de re Coquinaria', generally acknowledged as the first cookbook. Written about the 1st c. BC. by a roman gourmet.
The recipe is for dormouse but Im sure you could substitute plain old american "mickeys".
[396] GLIRES (Stuffed Dormouse)
IS STUFFED WITH A FORCEMEAT OF PORK AND SMALL PIECES OF DORMOUSE MEAT TRIMMINGS, ALL POUNDED WITH PEPPER, NUTS, LASER, BROTH. PUT THE DORMOUSE THUS STUFFED IN AN EARTHEN CASSEROLE, ROAST IT IN THE OVEN, OR BOIL IT IN THE STOCK POT.
[GR] From my recent readings, a good substitute for laser could be garlic (mentioned as a standard Roman dish in so many places, but not at all in this book). The Dormouse is a fat arboreal rat-sized creature. So you can't get dormice? Neither can we! There was an executive decision made by Emma Turkington and myself that most 'exotic' animals taste like chicken anyway. We substituted chicken breasts, stuffed them and roast them, and then, in the fine tradition of early cookery, put currants and chives to give them a dormouse 'look'. Very amusing. Very Roman.
If you would like to read more recipes from Apicius this is the website.
http://www.geocities.com/Athens/Olympus/3296/recipe.htm
And I am also reminded of the Ratcatcher in the Phantom of the Opera:
"And they make lovely pies...."
__________________
FolioMark
Mus uni non fidit antro. ~ A mouse does not rely on just one hole.----Plautus
|

03/04/04, 01:12 PM
|
|
|
|
A few years back I watched a report on these people eating mice and they thought maybe there was a link between them eating mice and the Bolo Virus. But I don't think that they ever found a connection between the two. However it was really gross watching them eat these things. They would take the dead mouse and wrap the whole thing in a big green leaf and place it over charcoal and let it cook for a while. When it was done they would unwrap the mice, pull the skin off and then start dinning on the little creature. I'm not sure if they even gutted the little creatures or not.
I guess I thought they were as gross as my in-laws think of me when I eat squirrels and rabbits. But at least I skin and gut the animals before cooking them.
|

03/04/04, 01:16 PM
|
|
Gadabout
|
|
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 2,470
|
|
|
Can anyone provide a link for cleaning them? You DO clean them, don't you? Also, does anyone have a place to sell the hides? I might as well make a little extra cash on the side...
|

03/04/04, 01:23 PM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: Sep 2003
Location: New Mexico
Posts: 199
|
|
|
Read G. Gordon Liddy's book, "Will". He'll tell you how to cook and eat a rat.
|

03/04/04, 01:49 PM
|
 |
|
|
Join Date: Dec 2003
Location: White Mountains, Arizona
Posts: 2,478
|
|
Quote:
|
Originally Posted by mousecat33
This took place in a primitive skills workshop. I'll only do it again if I have to.
Didn't taste too bad though.
mc
|
Same here only in southern Arizona. Threw them in the fire, unskinned or cleaned. Smelled awful, tasted almost as bad. I'll only do it again if dead drunk and I don't drink.
Skinned and cooked pack rats on the same trip were good and eaten frequently and would do again (sober).
|

03/04/04, 01:58 PM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Right HERE, of course!
Posts: 196
|
|
Yum Yum - DINNER!
__________________
.
* Homesteading information at:
homesteadingwithozarkguy.com
.
|

03/04/04, 02:03 PM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: Aug 2003
Posts: 2,395
|
|
|
That was very interesting, though probably more than I wanted to know about the dietary contributions of mice.
Jena
|

03/04/04, 02:21 PM
|
 |
|
|
Join Date: Aug 2002
Location: Tennessee
Posts: 5,197
|
|
My snakes love them. Just don't thaw them in the microwave
|

03/04/04, 05:37 PM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: Oct 2002
Posts: 84
|
|
|
The word popcorn kept crossing my mind as I was reading this thread. Now, Tango, I know why :haha:
Kathy
|

03/04/04, 07:21 PM
|
|
|
I love this!
A doormouse was a slow rat as well. They were easy to catch and the Romans had a clay vessel by the door in which they kept the captured ones. They would fatten them with scraps as well. The vessels had little air holes too small for the rats to escape.
|

03/04/04, 07:25 PM
|
|
|
|
The photo is actually a dearmouse. Its easy to id because of the crisp line separating the white from brown. Although you cannot see it in the photo, the line continues to the end of the tail. The tail is hairy, unlike a house mouse. This mouse species is the main resevoir of hantavirus that you hear about. The danger comes when you stir up a pile of fresh droppings and breath the dust. To eliminate the risk, just dampen with chlorox water before you sweep.
|

03/04/04, 08:05 PM
|
|
|
|
cooking mice is a mistake. They are, by far, best eaten raw.
Swampdweller
|

03/04/04, 08:46 PM
|
 |
Fiber Arts forum Mod.
|
|
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Southwest Michigan by way of the Northwoods of MN
Posts: 11,519
|
|
|
I love the picture of the little children carrying their mice on sticks. My son thought it was very funny too!
__________________
"Fiber is just that way, it teaches us to look differently at how things connect, to know that everything is tied together somehow."
Jacey Boggs
|

03/04/04, 09:10 PM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: Aug 2003
Location: Right HERE, of course!
Posts: 196
|
|
.
Well geeeezzzzz.........
Quote:
|
The photo is actually a dearmouse.
|
So you mean I've been eating the WRONG kind of furry little critters all this while? 
.
__________________
.
* Homesteading information at:
homesteadingwithozarkguy.com
.
|

03/04/04, 10:13 PM
|
|
|
|
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Kitsap Co, WA
Posts: 3,025
|
|
|
Is that dearmouse or deermouse? (And if you made a frappe of one in the blender, would it be a dearmousse or a deermousse?)
|

03/04/04, 10:29 PM
|
 |
Singletree Moderator
|
|
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: North Alabama
Posts: 8,848
|
|
Mousecat,
You barbeque the mice, I'll bake the wormbread and somebody get a sixpack and we got an 8 course dinner
__________________
"I didn't have time to slay the dragon. It's on my To Do list!"
|
Posting Rules
|
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts
HTML code is Off
|
|
|
All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:39 PM.
|
|