Everything about Taboo Food And Drink totally explained
Taboo food and drinks are food and drink which people abstain from consuming for religious or cultural reasons.
Origins and rationale
Food taboos are often codified in a culture as rules about foods which may not be eaten, rules regarding how food is to be slaughtered, and prohibited combinations of food (some foods, even though permissible in themselves, are not allowed in combination). Some foods may also be prohibited during certain festivals, even though normally allowed; and some foods may be prohibited only to particular classes of people (for example priests), but allowed for others.
Various religions forbid the consumption of certain types of food. For example,
Judaism prescribes a strict set of rules, called
Kashrut, regarding what can and can't be eaten. In
Islamic practice, the laws of
Haram and
Halal dictate which foods may not be eaten. The meat of swine, blood and intoxicants are forbidden by the Quran.
Hindus, and
Jains often follow religious directives to observe
vegetarianism and avoid
eating meat. Hinduism has no specific proscriptions against eating meat, so some Hindus do eat meat. However, many other Hindus apply the concept of "
ahimsa" (non-violence) to their diet, so they advocate and practice forms of vegetarianism. Due to philosophical differences and dietary needs among many modern Indian Hindus,
all meat is considered a taboo except
mutton (usually in India the goat's flesh, or sometimes sheep's flesh),
chicken and
fish.
Australian Aborigines traditionally had personal
totems. While religious practices varied from group to group, it was common that the eating of the totemic animal was considered taboo, either by the entire clan, or the individual with the personal totem.
Manchus have a prohiition against the eating of
dog meat, which is a common part of the cuisine among the Manchus' neighboring Northeastern Asian peoples. The Manchus also avoid the wearing of hats made of dog's fur, common among their neighbors.
Aside from overt taboos there are unconscious cultural
taboos against the consumption of some animals. For example, even though there's no law against eating
dog meat in the United States and Europe, it's widely considered unacceptable. In Southeast Asia, most countries excluding Vietnam rarely consume dog meat either because of Islamic or Buddhist values or animal rights as in the
Philippines. Similarly,
horse meat is rarely eaten in the US and UK.
Within a given
society, some meats will be considered taboo simply because they're outside the range of the generally accepted definition of a foodstuff, not necessarily because the meat is considered repulsive in
flavor,
aroma,
texture or appearance.
Some authorities impose cultural food taboos in the form of law. For example, even after resumption to Chinese rule, Hong Kong hasn't lifted its ban on supplying meat from dogs and cats, imposed in colonial times. A fairly recent addition to cultural food taboos is that of eating the meat or eggs of
endangered species or animals that are otherwise protected by law or international treaty. Examples of such protected species include
whales,
sea turtles, and
migratory birds.
The origin of food taboos is varied. In some cases, they're a result of health considerations or other practical considerations. In others, it's a result of human symbolic systems.
Taboo food
Amphibians and reptiles
Both
Judaism and
Islam strictly forbid the consumption of
amphibians
such as frogs and
reptiles such as
crocodiles and
snakes. Nevertheless,
frogs are raised commercially in certain countries and
frog legs are considered a delicacy in
France,
Portugal,
China,
Caribbean and in parts of the
USA.
Bears
The meat of brown
bears is eaten in several parts of the world, while
polar bears are also traditionally consumed in
Alaska.
Bear meat must be cooked thoroughly as it can often be infected
with
trichinellosis.
Bears are not considered
kosher in
Judaism while
all predatory terrestrial animals are forbidden in Islam.
Observant Jews and Muslims would therefore abstain from eating bear meat.
Birds
The
Old Testament of
the Bible (
Leviticus 11:13) explicitly states that the eagle, vulture, and osprey are not to be eaten. Interestingly, bats are also included in this list of "birds". Large domesticated
fowl such as
chickens,
turkeys, and
ducks are commonly eaten in many cultures, along with their wild
game counterparts.
Pigeons are raised and eaten in parts of the
Middle East,
Asia and
Europe, where the young birds are known as "squab". Special towers are visible all over
Egyptian villages, where these pigeons are raised. They are considered a delicacy served as a main course with rice. In
North America, pigeons (as doves) are a hunted game bird in many areas, however, urban pigeons are considered unfit for consumption.
Many people also find the thought of eating the meat of
crows and other scavengers repulsive, as evidenced by the expression "
eating crow", nevertheless
an ethnic group in
West Bengal known as Kakmara (literally: crow-hunters) regularly hunt crows for their meat.
Eating
swans is generally considered unacceptable in Europe and the Americas, and the swan is a protected bird in England. All mute swans in Britain belong to the sovereign, Queen Elizabeth II, a historical quirk dating from the twelfth century. Nevertheless, reports about the eating of swans are seen from time to time. The camel is also considered a novelty in
Australia - for example, a camel
lasagne is available in
Alice Springs).
Caribou/Reindeer
Although
reindeer is popular as a dish in
Alaska,
Norway,
Sweden,
Finland (especially
sautéed reindeer),
Russia and
Canada, many people in the
United Kingdom and
Ireland are squeamish about the idea of eating reindeer meat. This relates to the popular culture myth of the reindeer as assistant to
Father Christmas ("eating Rudolph"), as opposed to the “cows of the north” vision of the Northern countries.
Swedish astronaut
Christer Fuglesang wasn't allowed to bring dried reindeer with him onboard a shuttle mission as it was unthinkable for the Americans so soon before Christmas. He had to go with moose instead.
Cats
In
Guangdong, China, cat is reportedly served along with snake and chicken in a dish called "The Dragon, Tiger and Phoenix". In desperate times, people have been known to resort to cooking and eating
cats, in places where it's otherwise not usual to do so; it occurred during the
Siege of Leningrad as well as in a poverty-stricken
shanty town in
Rosario,
Argentina, in
1996 (though the much-advertised cat meal was later revealed to have been set up by media from
Buenos Aires).
The term
roof-hare (roof-rabbit, German
Dachhase) applies to cat meat presented as that of a hare, another pest (or pet) used as a source of meat. Subtracting the skin, feet, head and tail, hares and cats are practically identical. The only way to distinguish them is by looking at the
processus hamatus of the feline
scapula, which should have a
processus suprahamatus.
Dar gato por liebre ("to pass off a cat as a hare") is an expression common to many Spanish-speaking countries, equivalent to "to pull the wool over someone's eyes" derived from this basic scam. There is an equivalent Portuguese expression
Comprar gato por lebre, meaning "to buy a cat as a hare". More specifically, in Brazil, cat meat is seen as repulsive and people often shun
barbecue establishments suspected of selling cat meat. The expression
churrasco de gato ("cat barbecue") is largely used in Brazil with a humorous note, especially for roadside stands that offer grilled meat on a stick (often coated with
farofa), due to their poor hygiene conditions and the fact that the source of the meat is mostly unknown. Cases of passing off cat meat as lamb
shish kabab in less reputable shops, are also regularly reported in
Egypt.
During the so called
Bad Times of hunger in Europe during and after WW I and WW II
roof-rabbit was a common food, it's still proverbial.
Cows
Many
Hindus, particularly
Brahmins, are vegetarians, abstaining from eating any meat at all, including fish (save for Brahmins in Bengal and Kashmiri Pandits who consume meat and fish). Most Hindus, except some semi-tribals and
Dalits in a few pockets of India, abstain from the consumption of
beef, as the
cow holds a sacred place in
Hindu society. However, the taboo doesn't extend to dairy products, since the preparation of dairy products doesn't involve slaughtering the animal.
According to the scriptures of early Hinduism, it's a grave sin to kill a cow, to take part in its slaughter, or to eat its flesh. The injunctions against eating beef arises within the
Vedas
such as:
Atharvaveda I.16.4
"If thou slayest our cow, our horse or our domestic, we pierce thee with the lead, so that thou shalt not slay our heroes."
Atharva Veda III.30.1
You should impart love to each other as the non-killable cow does for its calf.
RgVeda VII.56.17
Punish the killer of the cow and the man.
RgVeda VIII.101.15
Cow is pure, don't kill it.
RgVeda X.10.87.16
Those who kill the ‘Aghnya’, the cow which isn't to be killed according to the Vedic edicts, their heads should be chopped off.
Yajur Veda XIII.49
Do not kill the cow.
YajurVeda XXX.18
Award death sentence to the killer of the cow.
RgVeda VI.28.3 states
Enemy may not use any “astra” for example weapon on cows
RgVeda VI.28.4 states
Nobody should take them to butcher house to kill them
Mahabharata- Shantiparva 262.47
Cow is called ‘aghanya’ and thus non-killable.
It is assumed that the largely pastoral Vedic people and subsequent generations of Hindus throughout the centuries relied so heavily on the cow for all sorts of dairy products, the tilling of fields, and
fuel or
fertiliser that its status as a willing "caretaker" of humanity grew to identifying it as an almost maternal figure. The economic origins of the cow-eating taboo can be observed from
etymology: The
Sanskrit word for cattle is
pashu, which is cognate with the
Latin word
pecu, from which derives words pertaining to money in Latin (and into English) : pecunia, impecunious.
Traditionally people from lower castes, like
Dalits, ate beef and
carabeef (buffalo). In modern times, beef-eating has gained some acceptance in various parts of India, but only by those Hindus who are sometimes considered (and sometimes even scorned) by the others as being "extra-modern" or "over-Westernized". By Indian law, the slaughter of cattle is banned in almost all Indian states except the states of
Kerala and
Arunachal Pradesh. Slaughter of cows is an extremely emotional and provocative issue for both mainstream Hindus and the followers of
Hindutva.
Some ethnic Chinese may also refrain from eating cow meat, because many of them feel that it's wrong to eat an animal that was so useful in agriculture. Some Chinese
Buddhists discourage the consumption of beef although it isn't considered taboo.
Veal
Some people, especially in
Britain,
Ireland,
Canada and
United States of America, choose not to eat
veal (the meat of young cattle) due to
concerns about inhumane treatment of the calves. In the UK, this taboo is waning due to a 2007 EU directive banning veal crates and anemia-inducing diets.
Crustaceans and other seafood
Almost all types of non-
piscine seafood, such as
shellfish,
lobster,
shrimp or
crawfish, are forbidden by
Judaism, and some followers of
Christianity because such animals live in water but don't have both fins and
scales (Leviticus 11:10-12).
As a general rule, all seafood are permissible in Islam. This is based on “Lawful to you is (the pursuit of) water-game and its use for food – for the benefit of yourselves and those who travel…” (al-Maa’idah 5:96) although there are exceptions to this rule.
As with swine, crustaceans and many other forms of non-piscine seafood are scavengers that work at filtering the water. Improperly collected or uncooked seafood can be dangerous.
Dogs
In a number of countries around the world, apart from being kept as pets, certain breeds of
dogs are
slaughtered as a source of meat and specifically raised on farms for that purpose.
According to the ancient Hindu scriptures (cf.
Manusmriti and medicinal texts like Sushrut-Samhita),
dog's meat was regarded as the most unclean (and rather poisonous) food possible—it was worthy only for the lowest of the untouchable
castes — who were therefore called
śvapaca (those cooking dog's meat).
In Mexico during the pre-columbine era a hairless dog named xolitzscuintle was commonly eaten, after the colonization this custom stopped.
Donkeys
In Islam, Prophet Muhammad, in a
Hadith Al-Bukhari forbids the eating of a
donkey. The consumption of all equines is prohibited in Judaism, as equines don't have a cloven hoof.
Elephants
In Western societies,
elephants have often been associated with
circuses and used for entertaining purposes. However, in
Central and West Africa, elephants are hunted for their meat. Some people in Thailand also believe that eating elephant meat
improves their sex lives and elephants are sometimes hunted specifically for this.
Judaism prohibits the consumption of elephant meat as an unfit [forconsumption] land animal, (similarly to the prohibition on camel meat) as does Islam.
Fish
Some
Kikuyu and
Kalenjin people of
Kenya observe a taboo against the consumption of
fish. In
Somalia entire tribes have a taboo on fish and wouldn't even intermarry with tribes that do eat fish.
Certain species of fish are also forbidden in
Judaism such as the freshwater
eel (
Anguillidae) and all species of
catfish. Although they live in water, they appear to have no fins or scales (except under a microscope). (See
Leviticus).
Islamic laws are more flexible in this
and catfishes and sharks are generally seen as halal as they're special types of fish;
eel is considered permitted in the majority of the Islamic schools while
some forbid it.
A common interpretation regarding some of the Islamic prohibitions is that animals that "live in both worlds" may not be consumed. This applies to primarily aquatic animals that nest or breed on land.
The
Greenland Norse, a civilization that lasted about 300 years following a colonization from
Iceland, might have had a taboo against fish.
Jared Diamond proposes this theory based on the fact that few fish bones or other remains have been found from Greenland Norse archaeological sites, and almost no fishing equipment. It seems they sustained themselves on agriculture, cattle, pork, goats and, as centuries passed,
seal meat, in a climate that rendered such sustenance next-to impossible.
In contrast, their Icelandic and Norse ancestors, their
Eskimo neighbours and modern Greenlanders all consume fish in abundance.
Fungi
Members of the
International Society for Krishna Consciousness abstain from fungi and all vegetables of the onion family (
Alliaceae). They believe that these excite damaging passions. Fungi are eschewed as they grow at night. The spice
Hing is used instead of onion or garlic and provides a somewhat similar taste in their exclusively vegetarian cookery.
Genetically modified food
While people in Canada and the USA in general have no problem with
genetically modified (GM) food like GM
soya,
maize or
rapeseed (canola), many
Europeans have a taboo on it as they see it as being unnatural. This is believed to due the various food scares in Europe during the 1980's and 1990's, such as
BSE/
vCJD,
salmonella and
dioxin poisoning. In the UK, only 2% of Britons are said to be "happy to eat GM foods", and more than half of Britons are against GM foods being available to the public, according to a 2003 study.
In Europe, regulations state that all food and animal feed containing more than 0.5 percent GM ingredients are required to have strict labelling and traceability, and many supermarkets proudly boast the fact that they don't sell GM foods.
Guinea pig
Guinea pigs (
cavies) were originally bred for their meat, and only became an exotic popular pet when introduced to
Europe from
South America.
Guinea pigs, or
cuy (plural
cuyes), continue to be a significant part of the diet in
Peru, mostly in the
Andes Mountains highlands, where they're an important source of protein and a mainstay of Andean folk medicine.;
In 2004, the
New York City Department of Parks and Recreation took legal action to stop vendors serving
cuy at an
Ecuadorian festival in
Flushing Meadows Park.
New York State allows for the consumption of guinea pigs, but New York City prohibits it. Accusations of cultural persecution have since been leveled.
La Molina National Agrarian University, Peru's most prestigious agrarian
university, has bred a larger, faster-growing variety of the animal that it hopes will prove a nutritional boon to the country, as well as a source of export income. This breed grows to about 2
kg, or at least twice the size of the native breed.
Capybara and Paca
The guinea pig's close rodent cousins,
capybara and
paca, are consumed as food in South America. The Catholic Church's taboo on eating meat during
Lent doesn't apply to the capybara, as early missionaries gave a faulty description to the Pope, leading him to declare it a fish.
Horses
Horse may not be eaten by observant
Jews, since under
Mosaic Law, horse meat is forbidden because the horse isn't a ruminant, nor does it have cloven hooves. In
Islamic thought, horses are generally considered
makruh, for example the meat isn't haram but the eating of it's disliked.
The eating of horse meat is a food taboo to most people in the
United Kingdom, the
US, and
Australia, and its supply is sometimes even illegal. In the UK, this strong taboo includes banning horsemeat from commercial pet food and DNA testing of some types of
salami suspected of containing donkey meat. Like
lobster and
dog, it's forbidden in
Judaism,
Hinduism, and some sects of
Christianity. In
732 AD, year of the
battle of Tours, which showed the emergent importance of cavalry,
Pope Gregory III began an effort to stop the pagan practice of horse eating, calling it "abominable". Horses were far more necessary to stop the Muslim cavalry, threatening the Christian ascendant in Europe, with their own weapons. His edicts are based on the same scripture as the Jewish prohibitions and this ban remained unlifted until the 18th century. The people of
Iceland allegedly expressed reluctance to embrace
Christianity for some time largely over the issue of giving up horse meat.
Horse meat was sold in the US during WW II, since beef was expensive, rationed and destined for the troops. The primary concern of the authorities at the time was to prevent it being marketed to the unwary as beef.
However, it's fairly common in
Scandinavia and parts of
continental Europe, and is considered a delicacy in Japan, where it's also eaten raw as a type of
sashimi. Horse meat was also very popular in
Malta until a few years ago, and a few horse meat shops still exist and a few restaurants serve it for locals and tourists.
Human meat
Of all the taboo meat, human flesh ranks as the most proscribed. Historically, humans have consumed the flesh of fellow humans in rituals and out of insanity, hatred, or overriding hunger — almost never as a common part of their diet.
Very few customarily eat the
placenta after the newborn's birth, but those who advocate
placentophagy in humans, mostly in modern America and Europe, Hawaii, China, and the Pacific Islands believe that eating the placenta prevents
postpartum depression and other pregnancy complications. A variety of recipes are known to exist for preparing placenta for eating.
(External Link
) A placenta develops from the same sperm and egg cell that form the fetus, and contains cells that are genetically equivalent to those of the newborn child.
Insects
Except for certain
locusts and related species,
insects are not considered
kosher. Islam also allows the consumption of locusts, which are eaten in certain parts of Arabia today. Many find the consumption of insects to be disgusting rather than immoral. In particular, some insects and insect
larvae, such as
weevils and
maggots, are associated with food spoilage.
Many different kinds of insects have traditionally been consumed as food in non-European cultures, including
locusts,
grasshoppers, and
crickets, and larvae such as
caterpillars,
bee grubs and
witchetty grubs. For example, grasshoppers (
inago) and bee larvae (
hachinoko) are eaten in some regions of
Japan, and
silkworm larvae (
beondegi in Korean or
nhộng in Vietnamese) are a popular snack food in these countries.
Mopane worms, a species of caterpillar, are an important protein source in
South Africa. Bugs, as well as
spiders, are popular all over
Southeast Asia. In
Mexican cuisine, insects such as
chapulines and
jumiles are considered "pre-hispanic cuisine", representative of the diets of indigenous peoples prior to the Spanish conquest.
Casu marzu is a type of
cheese made in
Sardinia,
Italy that has been deliberately cultivated with the larvae of the
cheese fly to change the characteristics of the cheese.
Western taboos against insects as a food source generally don't apply to
honey (concentrated
nectar which has been
regurgitated by
bees). For example, honey is considered
kosher even though
honeybees are not, an apparent exception to the normal rule that products of an unclean animal are also unclean. This topic is covered in the
Talmud and is explained to be permissible on the grounds that the bee doesn't make the honey, the flower does, and it's only stored in bees. On the other hand, many
vegans avoid honey as they'd any other animal product.
Kangaroo
Kangaroo meat consumption has a long history in Australia by
Indigenous Australians (a staple meat in many cases) and early European settlers (Kangaroo-tail stew was a popular settler dish). However it has had a varied history as meat in Australia due to the emotive association, predominantly by foreigners, of kangaroos as pets and a national symbol. Kangaroo meat is the base of dishes in many restaurants and is available at many butchers and major supermarkets as mince, sausages and steak. The meat can also be smoke cured and makes an interesting
prosciutto.
Living animals
Islamic and Judaic law forbids any portion that's cut from a live animal. Even in cultures that don't prescribe ritual methods of
livestock slaughter, the consumption of animals that are still alive is often seen as barbaric. Notable exceptions are
ikizukuri and
oyster. These forms of
sashimi have been banned in some countries.
Another notable exception is shrimp. In Shanghai, China, and surrounding areas, live shrimp is a common dish served both in homes and restaurants. The shrimp are usually served in a bowl of alcohol, which makes the shrimp sluggish and complacent. Local belief is that live shrimp are "healthier" than those served "already dead" or cooked.
Offal
Offal is the internal organs of butchered animals, and may refer to parts of the carcass such as the head and feet ("trotters") in addition to organ meats such as
sweetbreads and
kidney. Offal is a traditional part of many European and Asian cuisines, including such dishes as the well-known
steak and kidney pie in the
United Kingdom.
In countries such as
Australia,
Canada and the
United States, on the other hand, many people are squeamish about eating offal. In these countries, organ meats that are considered edible in other cultures are more often regarded as fit only for processing into
pet food under the
euphemism "
meat by-products". Except for
liver (chicken, beef, or pork), and intestines used as natural
sausage casings, organ meats consumed in the U.S. tend to be regional or ethnic specialties; for example,
tripe as
menudo or
mondongo among
Latinos,
chitterlings in the southern states,
scrapple in the Mid-Atlantic region, and beef
testicles called
Rocky Mountain oysters or "prairie oysters" in the west.
In some regions, such as the EU,
brains and other organs which can transmit
bovine spongiform encephalopathy ("mad cow disease") and similar diseases have now been banned from the foodchain as
specified risk materials.
Opossum and Raccoon
Until around the mid-20th century,
opossums and
raccoons were widely eaten game animals in the United States. Today, these animals are generally hunted and trapped for their fur and occasionally eaten, especially in the southern
United States. Even older editions of
The Joy of Cooking feature recipes for cooking opossum and raccoon. Their meat is considered to be rich in protein and is used to make stews, cuisine, and specialty dishes. The consumption of their meat is usually abstained; since these animals are frequent
scavengers,
omnivores, and the fact that some raccoons are being kept as exotic pets.
Opossums often remind people of
rats, and might be considered an unclean animal to eat.
Because raccoons have a vague relation to dogs and bears, some cultures may consider eating raccoon meat comparable to eating dog meat.
Pigs/Pork
Consumption of pigs is forbidden among Muslims, Jews,
Seventh-day Adventists, and others. There are various theories concerning the origins of this taboo (for example Qur'an 16:115, Biblical injunctions in Leviticus 11,7-8 and Deuteronomy 14,8), but none have been universally accepted.
In the 19th century some people attributed the pig taboo in the Middle East to the danger of the parasite
trichina. This theory still circulates outside scientific circles, but is now rejected by most anthropologists.
Materialistic beliefs attempt to prove that the pig taboo is just a product of practical considerations.
Marvin Harris posited that pigs are not suited for being kept in the Middle East on an ecological and socio-economical level; for example, pigs are not suited to living in arid climates and thus require far more water than other animals to keep them cool, and instead of grazing they compete with humans for foods such as grains. As such, raising pigs was seen as a wasteful and decadent practice.
A common explanation to the fact that pigs are widely considered unclean in the Middle East is that they're
omnivorous, not discerning between meat or vegetation in their natural dietary habits. The willingness to consume meat sets them apart from most other domesticated animals which are commonly eaten (cows, horses, goats, etc.) who would naturally eat only plants.
There is also a controversial theory that there might have been a
Scottish pork taboo many centuries ago.
Primates
The consumption of
monkeys and
apes such as
chimpanzees,
gorillas,
mandrills and
guenons is quite common in rural areas of
Sub-Saharan Africa.
Bonobos (also known as pygmy chimpanzees), have been extensively hunted
in
Congo to the level that they're now
considered an
endangered species.
In certain parts of Congo the hands and feet of gorillas are regarded as a delicacy and are served to special guests.
Some consider the consumption of primates to be too close to human cannibalism due to the similarity of our own species. The similarity increases the danger of
viruses. Most of it's "
bushmeat" or caught from the wild, in areas of high primate populations such as Central Africa and southeast Asia. One of the major theories for the origin of the
human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in humans is the butchering of primates infected with a
similar virus
Rabbit
The book of
Leviticus in the
Bible classifies the
rabbit as
unclean because it doesn't have a split hoof, even though it does chew and reingest partially digested material (often loosely translated "chew the cud" in English). Further possibilities against the consumption of rabbit may also include the phenomenon known as
Rabbit Starvation, a form of acute
malnutrition caused by excess consumption of any lean meat (specifically rabbit) coupled with a lack of other sources of nutrients.
Rats and mice
In most Western cultures,
rats and
mice are considered either unclean
vermin or pets and thus unfit for human consumption, traditionally being seen as carriers of
plague. However, rats are commonly eaten in rural
Thailand,
Vietnam and other parts of
Indochina.
Cane rats (
Thryonomys swinderianus and
Thryonomys gregorianus) and some species of
field mice are a rich source of protein in Africa.
Bamboo rats are also commonly eaten in the poorer parts of
Southeast Asia
In
Ghana,
Thryonomys swinderianus locally referred to as "Akrantie", "Grasscutter" and (incorrectly) as "Bush rat" is a common food item. The proper common name for this rodent is "
Greater Cane Rat", though actually it isn't a rat at all and is is a close relative of
porcupines and
guinea pigs that inhabit Africa, south of the Saharan Desert. In
2003, the U.S. barred the import of this and other rodents from Africa because an outbreak at least nine human cases of
monkeypox, an illness never before been seen in the Western Hemisphere.
Historically, rats and mice have also been eaten in the West during times of shortage or emergency, such as during the
Battle of Vicksburg and the
Siege of Paris.
Dormice were also domesticated and raised for food in
Ancient Rome. In some Asian countries, mice are eaten, and go by the name of
vole. In
France, rats bred in the wine stores of
Gironde were cooked with the fire of broken wine barrels and eaten, dubbed as
cooper's entrecôte. In some communities the
muskrat (which isn't a rat at all) is hunted for its meat (and fur) (for example some parts of
Flanders); see also under "
Fish" for consumption of
beaver tails.
Snails
Snails have been eaten for thousands of years, beginning in the Pleistocene. They are especially abundant in
Capsian sites in North Africa but are also found throughout the Mediterranean region in archaeological sites dating between 12 000 and 6000 years ago.
They are also seen a notable
delicacy in
France and other Mediterranean countries. However, in Britain, Ireland, and America, eating them may be seen as disgusting. Some English-speaking commentators have used the
French word for snails,
escargot, as an alternative word for snails, particularly snails for consumption.
As they're
mollusks, snails are neither
kosher nor
halal.
Vegetables
In certain versions of
Buddhism and
Hinduism, vegetables of the
onion genus are taboo. Specifically,
Buddhist cuisine traditionally prohibits
garlic,
Allium chinense,
asafoetida,
shallot, and
Allium victorialis (victory onion or mountain leek), while
Kashmiri Brahmins forbid "strong flavored" foods. This encompasses garlic, onion, and spices such as
black pepper and
chili pepper, believing that pungent flavors on the tongue inflame the baser emotions. In
Jainism, any kind of roots are considered taboo, since the process of unrooting causes the organisms associated with the root in the soil to die.
Although virtually all vegetables are allowed in Islam, some eccentric rules forbade some vegetables, most notably Al-Hakim of
Egypt forbidding
molokheya the national dish, due to its being a favorite of historical sectarian rivals.
In
Yazidism, the eating of
lettuce and
butter beans is taboo. The Muslim religious teacher and scholar, Falah Hassan Juma, links the sect's belief of evil found in lettuce to its long history of persecution by Muslims and Christians. The
Caliphs of the
Ottoman Empire carried out massacres against the Yazidis in the 18th and 19th centuries, with the faithful slain in the lettuce fields then dotting northeastern
Iraq. Another historical theory claims one ruthless potentate who controlled the city of
Mosul in the 13th century ordered an early Yazidi saint executed. The enthusiastic crowd then pelted the corpse with heads of lettuce.
The
followers of Pythagoras were vegetarians (in fact "Pythagorean" at one time came to mean "vegetarian"), however
their creed prohibited the eating of beans. The reason is unclear: perhaps the
flatulence they cause, perhaps as protection from potential
favism, but most likely for magico-religious reasons.
Although it isn't a taboo in a strictest sense, many
Germans, in particular older Germans, won't eat
swede (Swedish turnip, rutabaga), as they see it as a "
famine food", not for general consumption. This taboo existed from the 1916-17 famine
(Steckrübenwinter) when Germany had one of the worst winters in memory, where often the only food available was swedes. This led a distaste to the vegetable which still continues today.
Whales
International Whaling Commission passed a moratorium on commercial whaling on
July 23,
1982 that came into force for the 1985-86 season.
Norway resumed commercial whaling of
minke whales in 1993 and it's still a popular meat, especially on Norway's western coast. Once considered an inexpensive substitute for beef, whale meat is now a highly priced delicacy.
Iceland resumed commercial whaling in 2006.
Japan's whaling is officially done for research purposes. This is specifically sanctioned under IWC regulations that also specifically require that whale meat be fully utilized upon the completion of research. Many international scientific and environmentalist groups argue that the killing isn't necessary to conduct the research. The resultant meat is widely available in supermarkets, but isn't widely eaten.
The United States
Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972 prohibits, with certain exceptions, the taking of marine mammals in United States waters and by U.S. citizens on the high seas, and the importation of marine mammals and marine mammal products into the U.S. Despite the general ban on whale hunting in the
United States and
Canada, some indigenous groups are allowed to hunt for cultural reasons.
Taboo drinks
Alcohol
Some religions—most notably
Hinduism,
Islam,
Baptists and other
Evangelical Christians,
Jainism,
Sikhism, the
Bahá'í Faith,
Latter-day Saints, the
Nikaya and most
Mahayana schools of
Buddhism—forbid or discourage the consumption of
alcoholic beverages. See also:
Christianity and alcohol
Blood
Drinking
blood is a strong taboo in many countries, and is often vaguely associated with
vampirism (the consumption of human blood).
Although
blood sausage, or blood made into cake form, is quite popular in many parts of the world, it's considered repulsive in most of the
United States. In Britain and some Commonwealth countries, "black pudding" or "blood pudding" is made from blood and some filler grains and spices, often oatmeal. Blood sausage is also popular in Finland (
mustamakkara) and some Baltic nations for example Poland (
kaszanka), Latvia and Estonia, as well as in Germany (
Blutwurst), Hungary (
véres hurka),
Spain (
Morcilla),
Catalonia (
Botifarra),
México (
Moronga)
Slovenia (Krvavica),
Peru (
Relleno), Puerto Rico (Morcilla) and
France (
Boudin). In Portugal, a traditional dish known as
cabidela is made by cooking chicken or rabbit in its own blood, sometimes diluted with vinegar. In China,
Thailand and
Vietnam coagulated chicken, duck, goose or pig blood, known in Chinese as "blood tofu" (血豆腐 xuě dòufǔ) is used in soups, such as the classic Thai dish
kuay tiaw reua (boat noodles). In the Philippines, a popular dish called
dinuguan is made from pig's blood and seasoned with chili and is traditionally eaten with rice cakes. In Sweden, the blood soup
svartsoppa is traditionally eaten on certain holidays. A type of black pudding, blodpudding, is often eaten with
lingonberry jam. Polish cuisine has a version
czernina, which is enjoyed by many adherents in certain regions. In
Laos, and sometimes
Thailand (especially the
Northeast), a raw version of
laap, a meat salad, is made with minced raw meat, seasoned in spices, and covered with blood.
In the western region of Santander
Colombia a dish called
pepitoria is made from rice cooked in goat blood. As noted above, some people in China and Vietnam consider certain types of snake blood to be an aphrodisiac, and drink it with rice wine. Mexicans from certain regions eat goat's stomach stuffed with pork blood and vegetables as a delicacy.
Followers of
Judaism and
Islam are forbidden to drink blood or eat food made from blood. In Judaism all mammal and bird meat (not fish) is
salted to remove the blood. Jews follow the teaching in
Leviticus 17:10-12, that since "the life of the animal is in the blood", no person may eat (or drink) the blood. However, they've no rules regarding blood transfusions since the blood isn't consumed and because a transfusion is a medical procedure (Jews may break kosher laws, and Muslims may break harams, if doing so will save life).
Christian Scientists also refrain from blood and blood products.
According to the
Bible blood is only to be used for special/sacred purposes in connection with worship [Exoduschapters 12, 24, 29; Matthew 26:28; Hebrew 9:22]. In the first century,
Christians, both former
Jews, and new
Gentile converts, were in dispute as to which particular features of Jewish law were to be retained and upheld by them. The apostles decided that, among other things, it was necessary to abstain from consuming blood. Acts 15:28,29, "For it seemed good to the
Holy Ghost, and to us, to lay upon you no greater burden than these necessary things; That ye abstain from meats offered to idols, and from blood, and from things strangled, and from fornication: from which if ye keep yourselves, ye shall do well, Fare ye well." (
King James Version) These New Testament verses repeated certain elements of the Jewish law, and included the prohibition regarding blood, thus making it also binding upon the early Christian church.
Coffee and tea
Hot drinks are taboo for members of
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and some other
Mormon groups. Most Mormons interpret this as referring exclusively to
coffee and
tea (for example not hot cocoa or herbal tea). It is also sometimes extended as a taboo against
caffeine in general, including
cola drinks .
See also
Further Information
Get more info on 'Taboo Food And Drink'.
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