Fact Book
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.
12519. Food Facts
Honey found in ancient Egyptian tombs has been tasted by archaeologists and found to be edible still, after thousands of years.
12522. Food Facts
The Japanese make natto by leaving soy beans to rot in straw until slimy and sticky – and very smelly.
12524. Food Facts
Iowa State University's Department of Entomology has published recipes for cooking with insects, including banana worm bread, crackers and cheese dip with candied crickets and mealworm fried rice.
12526. Food Facts
In France, over 40,000 metric tons (88 million pounds) of snails are consumed every year.
12527. Food Facts
Mealworms are supposed to taste better if cooked while still alive.
12528. Food Facts
Blood soup is popular in many parts of the world. In Poland, people eat a duck blood soup called czarnina; in Korea, pig blood curd soup is called seonjiguk; and in the Philippines people eat a pig blood stew called dinuguan.
12529. Food Facts
Sea slug is eaten in China and Spain. It's often sold dried and has to be soaked to restore it to its slimy, squishy glory.
12530. Food Facts
Water cockroaches are roasted and eaten in China – leave the wings and legs.
12531. Food Facts
When a pig is roasted in Cuba, the skull is cracked open and each guest takes a spoon to share scoops of brain.
12532. Food Facts
In Mexico, a black fungus which infects maize is canned and sold. It looks like black slime with a few yellow lumps in.
12535. Food Facts
In 1973, a Swedish sweets salesman was buried in a coffin made of chocolate.
12537. Food Facts
In China, people get their own back on poisonous scorpions by frying them.They are said to taste rather like cashew nuts.
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Fact
Cryptorchidism is a medical condition in which one or both testes have not descended properly.
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