Fact Book
12469. Food Facts
In the 1800s, it was common to mix ground bones into flour to make it go further.
12470. Food Facts
The British black pudding is a sausage made of congealed pigs' blood with lumps of fat embedded in it. It is often fried and eaten for breakfast.
12471. Food Facts
Soft ice-cream of the type sold in ice-cream vans is given its slithery smoothness by an extract of seaweed.
12472. Food Facts
Baby eels, called elvers, are eaten in parts of Europe, including east England. They are very thin, so lots are cooked, tangled together like spaghetti.
12474. Food Facts
In Mexico, the alcoholic drink tequila is often served with a worm in the glass – the worm should be swallowed whole with the drink.
12475. Food Facts
Romany people in Europe, and poor peasants, used to cook wild hedgehogs by rolling them in mud and baking them in the embers of a fire. When the mud dries, the spines can be peeled off with the mud.
12476. Food Facts
Cow's tongue is often sold with the salivary glands – the parts that make spit – ready for boiling. The tongue can weigh up to 2.3 kilograms (5 pounds).
12477. Food Facts
In Europe, some people make blood pudding from the blood of a pig or cow mixed with rice, milk and sugar and then baked.
12478. Food Facts
To make the expensive pate de foie gras, geese are forcibly fattened with grain so that their liver swells to many times its natural size.
12479. Food Facts
In England, lampreys – a fierce fish that looks like an eel – are traditionally cooked in a sauce flavoured with their own blood.
12482. Food Facts
Roast dog is sold on the streets of Vietnam.The back half of the dog comes with the tail intact.
12483. Food Facts
Caviar is the eggs of the sturgeon fish. It is so valuable that an operation is sometimes used to remove the eggs without harming the fish, which then goes on to make more eggs. Previously, the fish was gutted while still alive so that the eggs could be as fresh as possible.
12484. Food Facts
Mealworms – golden-coloured larvae that eat grain – are farmed in the USA and sold live in pots of bran for cooking. The bran is for the meal-worm to eat while they are waiting, as otherwise they will eat each other.
12486. Food Facts
Birds nest soup is a delicacy in China. It's made from the nests of a special variety of swift that builds its nest from dried strands of its own spit.The nest is soaked in water to soften it, then any sticks and feathers are removed before it is made into a gluey, sticky soup.
12487. Food Facts
In China, bear paws are roasted in clay – the fur comes off with the dried clay when they are done.
12488. Food Facts
In France, rats found in wine cellars were sometimes cooked in a sauce flavoured with red wine, over a fire of burning wine barrels.
12489. Food Facts
In the 1800s, naturalist Frank Buckland served meals such as mice on toast, roasted parrots and stewed sea slug. He tried to make soup from an elephant's trunk, but even after several days' cooking it was still too chewy.
12490. Food Facts
The Aztec dish tlacatalalli was a stew made from corn and human beings.
12491. Food Facts
Once, at a Roman banquet, a slave stabbed the stomach of a roast boar to release a flock of live thrushes.
12492. Food Facts
In Texas, armadillos are sometimes roasted in their shells, stuffed with carrots, apples and potatoes.
12493. Food Facts
The Akoa pygmy tribe eat elephant meat with a serving of live maggots.
12494. Food Facts
Truffles are a kind of fungus that grow underground in forests in Europe.Truffle hunters use pigs to smell them out. The best truffles are extremely valuable.
12495. Food Facts
In the Middle Ages, a peacock was often roasted with its feathers on.The skin was inflated first to stop the feathers burning, and then pierced when the bird was cooked so that it appeared as though it were alive when served.
12496. Food Facts
Some Amazonian tribes used to make a soup with the ground bones of their dead relatives.
12497. Food Facts
US Airforce pilot, Captain Scott O'Grady, was shot down over Bosnia in 1995 and survived for six days eating only ants.
12498. Food Facts
In 1135, King Henry I of England died from eating too many lampreys – a kind of eel that sucks its victims to death.
12499. Food Facts
In some countries where people don't have food processors or forks, mothers chew up food to put into their babies' mouths.
12502. Food Facts
In Vietnam, cobra hearts are a common snack. They can be eaten raw, even still beating, with a small glass of cobra blood or dropped into a glass of rice wine. The kidney is often included as an extra titbit.
12504. Food Facts
Eel skin is so hard to remove that some people pull it off with pliers.
12505. Food Facts
Camels' feet are cooked in a light stock and served with vinaigrette. Only the feet of young camels are considered tasty.
12507. Food Facts
The Scottish dish haggis is made by cutting up the heart, lungs, liver and small intestine of a calf or sheep and cooking it with suet, oatmeal, onions and herbs in the animal's stomach.
12508. Food Facts
Australian aborigines like to eat witchetty grubs – the larvae of the ghost moth – raw and wriggling. Or they can be barbecued on wire for a couple of minutes, like a kebab.
12509. Food Facts
The original recipe for baked beans included bear fat and maple syrup.
12510. Food Facts
A restaurant in England recently offered snail porridge on its menu.
12511. Food Facts
In China, sharks' fin soup is made from the salted, sun-dried fins of sharks. It is like a bowl of glue, as the fin contains a lot of gelatine.
12513. Food Facts
Roman feasts sometimes included the popular delicacy flamingo tongues.
12514. Food Facts
In the Faroe Islands, a favourite dish is puffin stuffed with rhubarb.
12515. Food Facts
In China, eggs are buried underground until they go exceptionally bad and are then sold and eaten as ‘hundredyear- old' eggs. In fact, they are about two years old. The yolks turn green and the whites turn grey or black.
12517. Food Facts
The Air Force Survival Manual issued to US airmen explains which bugs to eat in an emergency for maximum taste and nutrition.
12518. Food Facts
The last meal of Oklahoma Bomber Timothy McVeigh was almost a litre (2 pints) of mint choc-chip ice-cream.
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At 840,000 square miles, Greenland is the largest island in the world. It is three times the size of Texas. By comparison, Iceland is only 39,800 square miles.
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