The other, other, other white meat

shrubber

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http://www.ottawasun.com/news/world/2010/02/16/12896596.html

DAKAR, Senegal — An army of humanitarian organizations has been unable to end years of recurring hunger in conflict-torn Congo. Now a South American research group says it may have found another way to fill hungry bellies: with guinea pigs.

Better known as cute pets in Western nations, the small rodents could provide war-battered villages with “a much-needed source of protein and micro-nutrients in a country with some of the highest incidences of malnutrition the world,” according to the Colombia-based agricultural research institute, the International Center for Tropical Agriculture, or CIAT.

Congo’s hilly east has been plagued by violent turmoil since Rwanda’s 1994 genocide spilled war across the border, displacing millions of people and sparking years of skirmishes between soldiers, rebels and militia from both nations.

It’s not known how or when guinea pigs — native to South America — arrived in Congo, but CIAT researchers discovered them last year being kept as “micro-livestock” in the nation’s hard-hit North and South Kivu provinces, which border Uganda, Rwanda and Burundi.

“Small and easy to conceal, guinea pigs are well-suited to (Congo’s) conflict zones, where extreme poverty and widespread lawlessness means that the looting of larger domestic livestock is commonplace,” the group said in a statement.

The furry animals have other advantages: they can be fed kitchen waste and are a relatively low-cost investment compared to other livestock. Crucially, they reproduce quickly, with females giving birth to multiple litters that total 10 to 15 offspring per year.

“They also suffer from fewer diseases than pigs, chickens and rabbits, and in the event of disease outbreaks, their high reproduction rate means populations have a much shorter recovery time,” the group said.

Guinea pigs are widely eaten in parts of South America, notably Peru. The taste of the rodent has been compared to pork, dark chicken meat and rabbit. The rodents are not a common sight in rural Congolese households, unlike chickens, goats and other domesticated animals.

CIAT scientists have been investigating ways to boost livestock production through a project funded by the German government which had originally targeted pork and poultry. It has now been expanded to include guinea pigs, with trials underway in four South Kivu villages to try to find ways to improve the quantity and quality of the meat.

“None of the scientists had contemplated guinea pigs as an option in (Congo) when the project started,” said CIAT’s Michael Peters. “Now they really could turn out to be indispensable.”
 
If it keeps people from starving, I think it's great.
 
Okay...so they are cute. I think cows are kind of cute and I still eat them.:confused3
 

Sounds like a good idea to me. I'm sure that the starving kids that could go to bed with a full belly by eating guinea pigs would like the idea also.
 
Just because we don't eat a particular animal here doesn't mean other parts of the world shouldn't. Why is eating a cow or chicken ok but other "cute" animals are not. In parts of the world they eat horse, goats, scorpions, dog, rabbit, quail, pigeon, and just about any other animal in one place or another. I think it is hypocritical to tell some other part of the world that it is acceptable to eat the animals we deem food worthy but not the animals you deem food worthy.
 
I wonder if they herd them with tiny lariats and Shetland ponies?

:lmao:

Pretty soon this will be featured on a Dis dining review.

DSCF3156.jpg
 
The restaurant I work at features rabbit, duck, and venison at times, all of which are pretty darn cute IRL!
 
If it feeds the starving, I think it's great. There are so small though, it would take so many. Maybe they are very meaty? Based on that picture it doesnt look that way.
 
Is there that much meat on a guinea pig? I think it's A-okay if it will feed the starving.
 
There was an article in the Wall Street Journal a few weeks ago about why don't we feed cats and dogs to starving people instead of killing 4 million plus a year in this country in shelters.

Found it:
Let Them Eat Dog
A modest proposal for tossing Fido in the oven
http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703574604574499880131341174.html

"..unlike all farmed meat, which requires the creation and maintenance of animals, dogs are practically begging to be eaten. Three to four million dogs and cats are euthanized annually. The simple disposal of these euthanized dogs is an enormous ecological and economic problem. But eating those strays, those runaways, those not-quite-cute-enough-to-take and not-quite-well-behaved-enough-to-keep dogs would be killing a flock of birds with one stone and eating it, too.

In a sense it's what we're doing already. Rendering—the conversion of animal protein unfit for human consumption into food for livestock and pets—allows processing plants to transform useless dead dogs into productive members of the food chain. In America, millions of dogs and cats euthanized in animal shelters every year become the food for our food. So let's just eliminate this inefficient and bizarre middle step."
 
I saw Bizzare Foods guy Andrew Zimmerman eating them in South America.

You can see the video on YouTube if you are interested. They are called "cuy" (pronounced COO-EE) and they go thru the whole deal.

Not for the faint of heart so I will not post a link. It is pretty disturbing since they look so cute.
 
My wife grew up eating cuy. They cook them by the dozens and go thru many millions of them each year in some countries.
 
I have never heard of these creatures. Even though you said giant guinea pig I had no idea they were this big.

capybara.jpg


Love learning new things, thanks! It was interesting to read about them.

He looks meaty :rotfl:
 




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