Fruit Bat Soup Recipe
Yield: 4 ServingsRecipe by luhu.jp
Ingredients:
3: Fruit bats, well washed but neither skinned nor eviscerated,
Water,
1 tbsp: Finely sliced fresh ginger,
1 large: Onion, quartered,
Directions:
I knew if we were patient, this would become available. For all of
you who have been waiting patiently to make your fruit bats into
fruit bat soup, heres a recipe.
The following is a genuine recipe from Micronesia. Fruit bats, or
flying foxes, are furry, fruit and nectar eating bats about the size
of small rabbits. The make very affectionate pets.
Sea salt to taste, Chopped scallions, Soy sauce and/or coconut cream.
1. Place the bats in a large kettle and add water to cover, the
ginger, onion, and salt. Bring to the boil and cook for 40 minutes.
Strain broth into a second kettle.
2. Take the bats, skin them and discard the skin. Remove meat from
the bones and return meat, and any of the viscera you fancy, to the
broth. Heat.
3. Serve liberally sprinkled with scallions and further seasoned
with soy sauce and/or coconut cream.
Yield: 4 servings.
(From "The New York Times Natural Foods Cookbook" by Jean Hewitt (c)
1971,
Quadrangle Books, Inc. NY.
NOTE: A final word about the Jean Hewitt cookbook. It is now out of
print so I dont feel too bad about swiping a recipe from it. Despite
the above it is an excellent cookbook made up from recipes sent in by
readers to the New York Times, and tested by Ms Hewitt herself. It
comes from the days when "Natural Foods" did not just mean salt free
veggie fare, (although there are plenty of first rate, mostly simple
vegetarian recipes included). If you can get hold of a copy from a
public library, say, I recommend it.
Bill Venables, Dept. of Statistics, Univ. of Adelaide, South
Australia.
Posted by Ted Taylor. Courtesy of Fred Peters.
Source from luhu.jp
you who have been waiting patiently to make your fruit bats into
fruit bat soup, heres a recipe.
The following is a genuine recipe from Micronesia. Fruit bats, or
flying foxes, are furry, fruit and nectar eating bats about the size
of small rabbits. The make very affectionate pets.
Sea salt to taste, Chopped scallions, Soy sauce and/or coconut cream.
1. Place the bats in a large kettle and add water to cover, the
ginger, onion, and salt. Bring to the boil and cook for 40 minutes.
Strain broth into a second kettle.
2. Take the bats, skin them and discard the skin. Remove meat from
the bones and return meat, and any of the viscera you fancy, to the
broth. Heat.
3. Serve liberally sprinkled with scallions and further seasoned
with soy sauce and/or coconut cream.
Yield: 4 servings.
(From "The New York Times Natural Foods Cookbook" by Jean Hewitt (c)
1971,
Quadrangle Books, Inc. NY.
NOTE: A final word about the Jean Hewitt cookbook. It is now out of
print so I dont feel too bad about swiping a recipe from it. Despite
the above it is an excellent cookbook made up from recipes sent in by
readers to the New York Times, and tested by Ms Hewitt herself. It
comes from the days when "Natural Foods" did not just mean salt free
veggie fare, (although there are plenty of first rate, mostly simple
vegetarian recipes included). If you can get hold of a copy from a
public library, say, I recommend it.
Bill Venables, Dept. of Statistics, Univ. of Adelaide, South
Australia.
Posted by Ted Taylor. Courtesy of Fred Peters.
Source from luhu.jp