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Anyone eaten magpie?
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jamanda
Downsizer Moderator


Joined: 22 Oct 2006
Posts: 35056
Location: Devon
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 7:39 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Dpack will be your man for this one. He seems to have eaten most things.

Bulgarianlily



Joined: 01 Jun 2008
Posts: 1667
Location: South West Mountains of Bulgaria
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 7:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Rook pie is traditional, is there much difference between rooks and magpies?

Brownbear



Joined: 28 May 2007
Posts: 14929
Location: South West
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 8:01 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Lorrainelovesplants wrote:
On the islands (Lewis and such) they eat the seabirds. We have a friend who's familyhave certain rights to a part share...and they get so many of these birds (its a certain breed - cant remember if its gannets or puffins or what) which the islanders cull.

Back in the old days it used to supplement their diet...god knows why they still do it. Apparently they taste like fishy tough chicken....yeuch!
Never heard of eating magpie...

There's a guy in Camelford who eats roadkill fox and badger, but I think he's maybe not quite right. He's been on the telly.


I think it's the 'guga', a sort of gannet or cormorant, oily and leathery. My MiL is from Unst and remembers having to eat herring gulls when the salt fish ran out in the Winter, and the sea was too rough for weeks to go fishing. If they couldn't get gulls they had to go to sea anyway, and lose a few men doing it, or starve. She can still fry up a nifty plate of herrings over a peat fire, and claims that the greatest of human inventions are heating and indoor plumbing.

If anyone ever waxes lyrical to her about the wonders of the ascetic life she makes mincemeat out of them.

Green Rosie



Joined: 13 May 2007
Posts: 10498
Location: Calvados, France
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 8:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

I've eaten rook pie. I was a very long time ago but I seem to remember you only used the breast meat. And the birds you eat are the fledglings just before the leave the nest.

cab



Joined: 01 Nov 2004
Posts: 32429

PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 9:26 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Rookling is, I'm told, delicious.

Magpie is, I'm told, dreadful. Doesn't the name 'magpie' derive from 'maggot pie', which is meant to denote the flavour?

Still, nothing ventured, nothing gained. You may as well try.

With slightly older rooklings, once they've fledged, theres an old trick of taking the breasts off and soaking them overnight in milk. Apparently by morning the black meat has turned white and the white milk has turned black, and its meant to make them easier eating. This isn't necessary for the younger birds. Although I should add I've never done this, its all second hand information from my dad (who isn't always to be trusted )

Lorrainelovesplants



Joined: 13 Oct 2006
Posts: 6521
Location: Dordogne
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 9:32 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

What a mine of disgusting information we are!

Is there no depths to which man has sunk



Actually, bearing this thread in mind, I shouldnt tell my kids friend off when he eats the debris from his eyes (sleep)!!

crofter



Joined: 11 Feb 2007
Posts: 2252

PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 9:34 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Brownbear wrote:


I think it's the 'guga', a sort of gannet or cormorant, oily and leathery.


Yes. Gannets. Cormorants were hunted here during the war, for the London Restaurant trade. Sold as "Shetland duck"! I have never eaten a herring gull, but their eggs are wonderful.

mark



Joined: 14 Jul 2005
Posts: 2191
Location: Leeds
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 9:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

I think Magpies have rather to much carrion in their diet to want to eat them ...

I don't think its an accident that people have a tradition of eating Rook which eats insects, grubs ect etc
Rather than the similar Carrion Crow which eats, well carrion!

I think people confusing these 2 birds may lead people to think of the Rook as a carrion eater

so i don't really parallel rooks and magpies as a food source

lottie



Joined: 11 Aug 2005
Posts: 5059
Location: ceredigion
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 10:20 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

[quote="cab"]Rookling is, I'm told, delicious.

Magpie is, I'm told, dreadful. Doesn't the name 'magpie' derive from 'maggot pie', which is meant to denote the flavour?




I think the pie in magpie refers to the fact that the bird is black and white. I have an old farmhouse cookbook with a recipe for rook pie,just using the breasts of fledgelings---think it was a recipe that went out of favour with the end of meat rationing and the growth of prosperity.

mark



Joined: 14 Jul 2005
Posts: 2191
Location: Leeds
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 11:14 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

It is thought that the Mag bit is short for margaret.
margaret was common female name and was was used to donate the hit chat or gossip thought to be typical of women
a magge tale - was a bit of nonsese of a made up story
- so it is a "chattering pie"

so where does the pie bit come from? - probably originally the name of the bird derived from the latin
pica = magpie - this changed in english to pye in the middle ages

It appears that the description pied came olong later to mean black and white like a magpie.

chez



Joined: 13 Aug 2006
Posts: 35934
Location: The Hive of the Uberbee, Quantock Hills, Somerset
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 11:28 am    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

mark wrote:
I think Magpies have rather to much carrion in their diet to want to eat them ...


Yes, that's how I feel.

My dad used to to catch rooks in the depression and sell them to people for food.

mihto



Joined: 03 Feb 2008
Posts: 3273
Location: West coast of Norway
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 4:57 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Brownbear wrote:
Lorrainelovesplants wrote:
On the islands (Lewis and such) they eat the seabirds. We have a friend who's familyhave certain rights to a part share...and they get so many of these birds (its a certain breed - cant remember if its gannets or puffins or what) which the islanders cull.

Back in the old days it used to supplement their diet...god knows why they still do it. Apparently they taste like fishy tough chicken....yeuch!
Never heard of eating magpie...

There's a guy in Camelford who eats roadkill fox and badger, but I think he's maybe not quite right. He's been on the telly.


I think it's the 'guga', a sort of gannet or cormorant, oily and leathery. My MiL is from Unst and remembers having to eat herring gulls when the salt fish ran out in the Winter, and the sea was too rough for weeks to go fishing. If they couldn't get gulls they had to go to sea anyway, and lose a few men doing it, or starve. She can still fry up a nifty plate of herrings over a peat fire, and claims that the greatest of human inventions are heating and indoor plumbing.

If anyone ever waxes lyrical to her about the wonders of the ascetic life she makes mincemeat out of them.



I have eaten cormorant. The bird is common here and sometimes hunted. The meat does not keep and must be eaten at once. The taste is oily unless put in milk over night. Fishy tough chicken is probably as good a description as any. The meat is dark. Not very nice food but an interesting experience. Needs a nice sauce with a liberal helping of sour cream.

Magpie I would try given a chance. There are plenty around; what they eat is a mystery. There is neither carrion or garbage dumps here. I have seen them feast on crap apples and they would probably go for fledglings. These are all grown up and gone south, however. The magpies love cats, but not for eating. I suppose they need a reason to laugh in the deep dark midwinter.

Atomic Shrimp



Joined: 17 Nov 2008
Posts: 17

PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 8:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Thanks for the replies. I'm not too worried at this stage about what they eat - if that alone were to put me off, I would never eat crab!

Understood though, that the flavour of an animal's diet can come through in its flesh - it's probably going to depend a little bit on where and when the magpies are caught, isn't it? - i.e. urban ones, or those near busy roads are going to be eating more carrion - those from more rural areas are going to be eating more nestlings (and lamb's eyes, if there's any truth to that).

whitelegg1



Joined: 05 Apr 2005
Posts: 409
Location: Woodford Green
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 8:19 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

Cormorant Recipe:
Having shot your cormorant, hold it well away from you as you carry it home; these birds are exceedingly verminous and the lice are said to be not entirely host-specific. Hang up by the feet with a piece of wire, soak in petrol and set on fire. This treatment both removes most of the feathers and kills the lice.

When the smoke has cleared away, take the cormorant down and cut off the beak. Send this to the local Conservancy Board who, if you are in the right area, will give you 3/6d or sometimes 5/- for it. Bury the carcase, preferably in a light sandy soil, and leave it there for a fortnight. This is said to improve the flavour by removing, in part at least, the taste of rotting fish.

Dig up and skin and draw the bird. Place in a strong salt and water solution and soak for 48 hours. Remove, dry, stuff with whole, unpeeled onions: the onion skins are supposed to bleach the meat to a small extent, so that it is very dark brown instead of being entirely black.

Simmer gently in seawater, to which two tablespoons of chloride of lime have been added, for six hours. This has a further tenderising effect. Take out of the water and allow to dry, meanwhile mixing up a stiff paste of methylated spirit and curry powder. Spread this mixture liberally over the breast of the bird.

Finally roast in a very hot oven for three hours. The result is unbelievable. Throw it away. Not even a starving vulture would eat it.


See here for a good page on Crow Recipes
https://www.crowbusters.com/recipes.htm

Peete

mihto



Joined: 03 Feb 2008
Posts: 3273
Location: West coast of Norway
PostPosted: Mon Jan 19, 09 8:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote
    

whitelegg1 wrote:
Cormorant Recipe:
Having shot your cormorant, hold it well away from you as you carry it home; these birds are exceedingly verminous and the lice are said to be not entirely host-specific. Hang up by the feet with a piece of wire, soak in petrol and set on fire. This treatment both removes most of the feathers and kills the lice.

When the smoke has cleared away, take the cormorant down and cut off the beak. Send this to the local Conservancy Board who, if you are in the right area, will give you 3/6d or sometimes 5/- for it. Bury the carcase, preferably in a light sandy soil, and leave it there for a fortnight. This is said to improve the flavour by removing, in part at least, the taste of rotting fish.

Dig up and skin and draw the bird. Place in a strong salt and water solution and soak for 48 hours. Remove, dry, stuff with whole, unpeeled onions: the onion skins are supposed to bleach the meat to a small extent, so that it is very dark brown instead of being entirely black.

Simmer gently in seawater, to which two tablespoons of chloride of lime have been added, for six hours. This has a further tenderising effect. Take out of the water and allow to dry, meanwhile mixing up a stiff paste of methylated spirit and curry powder. Spread this mixture liberally over the breast of the bird.

Finally roast in a very hot oven for three hours. The result is unbelievable. Throw it away. Not even a starving vulture would eat it.


See here for a good page on Crow Recipes
https://www.crowbusters.com/recipes.htm

Peete





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