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Nutria for Human Consumption

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    Nutria for Human Consumption

    Link to recipes, Nutria for Human Consumption - Nutria.com

    The nutria (/ˈnjuːtriə/) or coypu (/ˈkɔɪpuː/) (Myocastor coypus)[

    'Invasive and delicious': The federal government is begging people to eat this massive, harmful rodent species

    Click image for larger version

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    #2
    They love to dig holes in levees and play in the water. We had alligators placed in our canals to eat them. It would take BAGS of cement to fill up some holes. I watched a nutria one afternoon scouting for birds. That thing cleaned itself like a cat for a good 15 minutes.

    If eggs and beef and chicken and a host of other things get "too expensive," it may be time to eat them dudes.

    Comment


    • Carolyn
      Carolyn commented
      Editing a comment
      Sheriff Harry Lee in New Orleans had his department shoot them.

    #3
    I saw an episode of, and I want to say Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern, where he went athe swamp in Louisiana and spent time hunting, cooking, and eating Nutria. It appears that these little fellows are quite tasty. If they were available I would certainly give them a try.

    Comment


      #4
      I saw that article the other day - it's hard to contemplate eating a rodent, but... supposedly they're tasty.

      Comment


      • LA Pork Butt
        LA Pork Butt commented
        Editing a comment
        I remember reading something like that. The article said if they could remove the stigma of rodent they would find their way into restaurant menus.

      • RobertC
        RobertC commented
        Editing a comment
        Squirrels are rodents, as are beavers. Rabbits aren't rodents but they're closely related to rodents.

      • 58limited
        58limited commented
        Editing a comment
        I've eaten tree rat - its pretty good. I'd try nutria.

      #5
      From Wikipedia:
      A small number of game meat websites on the internet sell nutria meat for consumption. As of 2016, at least one Moscow restaurant serves nutria meat dishes.[56] In 1997 and 1998, Louisiana attempted to encourage the public to consume nutria meat. Nutria meat is leaner with a lower fat content and lower in cholesterol compared to ground beef.[57] In an effort to encourage Louisianians to eat nutria, several recipes were distributed to locals and published on the internet.[58] People in poor and rural Louisiana have trapped and consumed nutria meat for decades.

      Marsh Dog, a US company based in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, received a grant from the Barataria-Terrebonne National Estuary Program to establish a company that uses nutria meat for dog food products.[59] In 2012, the Louisiana Wildlife Federation recognized Marsh Dog with "Business Conservationist of the Year" award for finding a use for this eco-sustainable protein.[60] A claimed environmentally sound solution is the use of nutria meat to make dog food treats.[61]

      In Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan, nutria (Russian and local languages Нутрия) are farmed on private plots and sold in local markets as a poor man's meat.[56] As of 2016, however, the meat is used successfully in Moscow restaurant Krasnodar Bistro, as part of the growing Russian localvore movement and as a 'foodie' craze.[56] It appears on the menu as a burger, hotdog, dumplings, or wrapped in cabbage leaves, with the flavour being somewhere between turkey and pork.[62]

      Comment


        #6
        Maybe a Team Cook.

        Comment


        • SheilaAnn
          SheilaAnn commented
          Editing a comment
          captainlee I’ll take it under advisement 🤢

        #7
        Originally posted by Bkhuna View Post
        I saw an episode of, and I want to say Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern, where he went athe swamp in Louisiana and spent time hunting, cooking, and eating Nutria. It appears that these little fellows are quite tasty. If they were available I would certainly give them a try.
        Andrew Zimmern doesn't top my list of culinary experts.

        After all, he eats pig uterus and enjoys it.

        Comment


        • bbqLuv
          bbqLuv commented
          Editing a comment
          I wonder if he ever ate Pork Bung?

        • Alan Brice
          Alan Brice commented
          Editing a comment
          Seems to have been in the news lately. Also a candidate for team status.

        #8
        I hear the Nutria have a lot of nutrients and are quite nutritious. But they taste quite neutral......

        Comment


        • Clark
          Clark commented
          Editing a comment
          That is neus to me.

        #9
        Reminds me of getting served guinea pig in Peru. No then, no now. Just no.

        Comment


          #10
          I've eaten racoon and beaver meatballs, and they were fine, but given the recipe, I didn't really get a sense of the unique taste of the meat. They didn't detract from the recipe either.

          I'd try nutria.

          (My grandfather said they'd eat crow during the depression)

          Comment


          • captainlee
            captainlee commented
            Editing a comment
            Must be related to Jed Clampet.

          • bbqLuv
            bbqLuv commented
            Editing a comment
            After 73 years, I still find myself having to eat crow 😒

          #11
          You can buy it online.

          Nutria Meat, Buy Nutria Meat, Nutria Meat recipes, Nutria Meat price, Nutria Meat from Exotic Meat Market, Nutria Meat near me, Nutria Meat online, Nutria Meat for human food, Nutria Meat for pets, Nutria Meat on Google, Anshu Pathak Nutria Meat, Meat


          At $40 a pound I might consider heading south and doing a little hunting.

          B

          Comment


            #12
            Don't eat Ben or Willard will take revenge.
            Willard (2003) - Official Trailer

            Comment


              #13
              I’ll stick with Nancy Regan’s advice and “just say no”.

              Comment


              • bbqLuv
                bbqLuv commented
                Editing a comment
                'Just say no", You are aging yourself, LOL

              #14
              They used to a have a $5 bounty on them.

              Wed spend the after drinking beers and shooting varmits, and then trade the varmits for more beer money

              Comment


                #15
                Shot a ton of Muskrats when I was a kid. Never ate them. Never would. It's a swamp rat.

                Pretty sure these rodents are similar.

                Comment


                • BFlynn
                  BFlynn commented
                  Editing a comment
                  One of my buddies from down there said it's not bad.
                  Something his Gramma and her generation cooked fairly regularly.
                  I got the impression it was in the "if that's what's there I'll eat it, but I won't pick it over anything else".

                • Spinaker
                  Spinaker commented
                  Editing a comment
                  Hahaha, that is a great way to put it. BFlynn

                • dubob
                  dubob commented
                  Editing a comment
                  Folks have been eating muskrats (AKA marsh hares) for a very long time. Check this out: https://www.deadlinedetroit.com/arti...onroe_michigan

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