Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
Reply |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Finnish forests harbor 500 varieties of edible fungi! Info he
http://www.eatandjoy.com/?p=245 The same site offers a "Manifesto for the New Nordic Kitchen" and a word for reindeer meat, poro, which the Finns hope will convince non-Finns to eat Donder and Blitzen. -- modom |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Dec 13, 8:07*pm, "modom (palindrome guy)" >
wrote: > Finnish forests harbor 500 varieties of edible fungi! *Info hehttp://www.eatandjoy.com/?p=245 > > The same site offers a "Manifesto for the New Nordic Kitchen" and a > word for reindeer meat, poro, which the Finns hope will convince > non-Finns to eat Donder and Blitzen. > -- It shouldn't take much convincing, just availability. I had reindeer in Finland and I've had caribou/reindeer in Alaska. It is delicious. -aem |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article >,
"modom (palindrome guy)" > wrote: > Finnish forests harbor 500 varieties of edible fungi! Info he > http://www.eatandjoy.com/?p=245 > > The same site offers a "Manifesto for the New Nordic Kitchen" and a > word for reindeer meat, poro, which the Finns hope will convince > non-Finns to eat Donder and Blitzen. > -- > > modom As long as they don't drink Donner and Blitzen's urine: http://www.iamshaman.com/amanita/strangefacts.htm "Reindeer go crazy for fly agaric mushroom (Amanita muscaria), which the Lapp people traditionally used for its hallucinogenic effects. Lapp shamans used to eat the mushroom during the midwinter pagan ceremonies of Annual Renewal. The first effect of eating it was a deep coma-like slumber. When the shamans woke the drug stimulated their muscular systems, so that a small effort produced spectacular results - the intoxicated person perhaps making a gigantic leap to clear the smallest obstacle. The effect on animals was generally the same, and a mushroom-maddened super-reindeer traditionally guarded each shaman. When missionaries first reached Santa's native Lapland, they found a thriving pagan myth of reindeer flight. Rather than oppose it, they shrewdly assimilated the stories into the folklore of Christmas and Saint Nicholas. This then, is the true origin of the legend of Santa's flying sleigh. The colour scheme of his outfit is taken from the unmistakable red and white cap of the fungus. Lapps still scatter the mushroom in the snow to round up reindeer. Incidentally, the urine of people who eat the mushroom contains substantial quantities of the isoxazole derivatives that produce the intoxicating effect. Impoverished Lapps knew this, and collected round the huts of rich Lapps who indulged in the mushroom at Christmas parties. When their overlords came out to relieve themselves in the snow, the serfs collected the urine to drink. When they, in turn, urinated in the snow, the reindeer fought to utilise what remained of the mushroom's intoxicating effects. There is a fairly comprehensive study of fly agaric and its effects in Mushrooms, Poisons and Panacea by Denis R. Benjamin (ISBN 0 7167 2649 1). More on this at: http://www.psms.org" -- Peace! Om "Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries. Without them humanity cannot survive." -- Dalai Lama |
Posted to rec.food.cooking
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article
>, aem > wrote: > On Dec 13, 8:07*pm, "modom (palindrome guy)" > > wrote: > > Finnish forests harbor 500 varieties of edible fungi! *Info > > hehttp://www.eatandjoy.com/?p=245 > > > > The same site offers a "Manifesto for the New Nordic Kitchen" and a > > word for reindeer meat, poro, which the Finns hope will convince > > non-Finns to eat Donder and Blitzen. > > -- > It shouldn't take much convincing, just availability. I had reindeer > in Finland and I've had caribou/reindeer in Alaska. It is > delicious. -aem We had reindeer in Canada and Alaska too. I was only 8 years old and I still remember how good it was. The smoked jerky made from the meat was also fabulous. -- Peace! Om "Love and compassion are necessities, not luxuries. Without them humanity cannot survive." -- Dalai Lama |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Help with Finnish Pie | General Cooking | |||
Finnish Rye | Sourdough | |||
Fungi | General Cooking | |||
Fungi | General Cooking | |||
Fungi | General Cooking |