You may find food sumptuous, delectable, and appetizing. But while food can tick off all the delicious adjectives in your dictionary. It can also turn out to be gross, disgusting, gross, or maybe just plain weird. Also, while we travel from one place to another, food is treated differently, or should we say, people, customize food differently. So are you adventurous regarding your tastebuds?
Even if you aren’t, find out these foods that people used to eat and savor. After learning about these foods, the only word that can come out of your mouth is, OMG! did people eat this food? They did. What is one man’s yuck is another man’s yum! Read more to find out to they appeal to your refined taste buds?
Savory Jellied Salads
The last century saw some really weird meals being cooked, including some strange salads. But who would think Americans will come up with something like ‘Jell-O-Salad.’
It may look like jellified chicken or tuna. Yes, it’s a strange combination of fruit and vegetables wrapped in lime green jelly or an equally sickly-sweet flavor. Well, we are going to pass that one for sure! No wonder the dish now gets the dead-as-the-dodo tag. You never thought you might soon find it rearing its jellied head!
Torpedo Fuel
If you have seen the film, The Lighthouse, you may have seen both characters glugging down kerosene (lamp oil). Well, there may not be any truth to that. However, there may be a few WWII sailors who consumed Torpedo juice. It is a combination of lemon, pineapple juice, and the 180-proof alcohol that was used as fuel in torpedos! What do you think was it glug-worthy? Well, we are not betting on that one yet.
Beaver Tails
You won’t think it sounds very tasty when you hear about it, right? Well, certainly not! But then some people used to feast on the tails of beavers during Lent?
In the 17th century, the Catholic church declared that since beavers were semi-aquatic, people thought them to be “fish.” They may get the fit-for-consumption tag during the 40 days, the time when Christians don’t touch meat.
Whale Poop
Ambergris is what you can call the intestinal slurry, the kind that a whale ejects from its body after ingesting creatures such as squid. It’s secreted from behind the back end of the whale and turns into a hard form in the cold water. It was popular in Early Modern Europe as a gourmet ingredient used in ice cream.
Black Iguana Eggs
Unlike what you have eaten, the Mayans would love these all-yolk eggs, as it has a leathery, rough exterior. The Mesoamerican people would farm black iguanas and stay out of water for a long time, more than the green cousins, and harvest them for consumption.
Fake bananas
During the 1940s, food started getting scarce, and most people had to rely on their rations, and they couldn’t get fresh food such as fruits. But the British people were not taking no for an answer, and they had to create something as close to the real thing as possible and thus was born fake bananas, and that was just banana essence added to parsnips!
Onion Nuggets
It was the seventies, and McDonald’s added the Onion Nuggets. They were crunchy deep-fried pieces of onion in the batter. Maybe that fad did not catch on, and they had to come up with something as popular as chicken nuggets that we love to have!
Lemonade in Milk
There are people in the UK who love their milk with Coca-Cola. This was once regarded as a very common drink in the US as you blend a little bit of Seven-Up with some cold milk and call it soda milk. There are foods such as soda floats and egg creams, which is still appeal to a lot of the frizzy-drinks-guzzling people.
Well, these are some of the foods that can certainly make it to your list of never-want-to-taste-ever! Well, what do you think do you want to taste these foods? Aren’t you glad that these are not on the menu of any of the restaurants you visit now? Or would you like to try some of these foods? Do let us know in the comments section!