I remember
all the times my father tried to trick me into eating wild meat. The pale pink,
frozen, whole tattoo carcass lying in the sink which he covered with a table
cloth and forbade me to look under it. The crying cascadura as he attempted to
strip the armour from their little bodies. The stew agouti he brought back from
a lime but he told me it was curried beef. The curried deer he prepared but he
told me it was curried beef.
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Curried deer
But I tasted them all. He grew up eating these exotic meats. His father hunted at night using a home-made, carbide-powered head-lamp that he attached to his head with leather straps (I kid you not, his head), his shotgun in tow (a 20 gauge single barrel shotgun). The lamp not only provided some light in the pitch-black, heavily canopied forest, but it made the eyes of his prey shine bright, exposing its location. It wasn’t for sport. They were poor. It was to survive.
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Carbide-powered lamp similar to the one my grandfather used to hunt. He took the reflector part of a car's headlight, shined it to perfection with "silvo" and attached it to the 2 chambers -the lower chamber housed the carbide, the upper chamber housed the water. The entire unit was completely detachable. Credit to the coal miners.
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The agouti |
There is an authorized list of game species that can be
hunted for meat, sport or for sale as pets provided by the GOTT (http://www.biodiversity.gov.tt/home/trinidad-a-tobago-biodiversity/game-species.html).
Some of the animals for consumption include agouti, armadillo (tattoo), deer,
lappe, wild hog (quenk), alligator, cayman, lizards – matte and iguana. A
popular Boxing Day dish usually served curried with paratha or dhalpourie roti,
wild meat is highly sought after during hunting season (October 1st to the end
of February) with certain animal species costing far more than the now unfashionable
poultry depot chicken. Lavish Christmas and New Year’s parties boast of wild
meat on the menu.
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The lappe |
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The tattoo |
Experts have advised that cooking wild meat is different from cooking domesticated animals. You have to cater for the “gamey" taste of the meat. The meat has to be cut up into much smaller pieces and stronger
seasonings must be used. Wild meat can also be tough so cooking
smaller pieces and using a natural meat tenderizer like green paw paw (papain
enzymes in the green fruit breaks down the protein in the meat) and even
coca-cola or pepsi (the acidity of these drinks also helps break down the
protein in the meat) will do the trick. Then there's pepper!
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The quenk - I imagine so named because of the sound it makes running away from hunters! |
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The iguana |
This animal can get to a magnificent size, enough to stop traffic. Along the route to Santa Cruz one day, I saw 4 young men standing in the middle of the road holding up 3 iguanas in each hand for sale - large enough to be dinosaurs, I swear to you! Traffic extended well into the Croissee.
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Curry iguana - Skin and all....
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No, I'm sorry this looks really awful...
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The matte |
Skinning any animal is part of the preparation but I have seen some not take on this task with the lizards. A big mistake. The skins of some reptiles are tough enough to make shoes for crying out loud!
Not so much a fan if wild meat especially of the lizard variety but I know lots of fellas who love it.
ReplyDeleteI can't say I enjoy wild meat but more power to those who do
ReplyDeletewas always told Matt is a scavenger and the easiest way to find one was to dig around a latrine.
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