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  1. #1
    QUITTER Irving's Avatar
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    Well, it was probably most of the way it was cooked. I don't know how to cook very well at all, so my wife kind of supervised, but wasn't 100% on board because she was grossed out by the fact that it was snake. The one I ate was fried, so the batter tasted great. I boiled the other one to remove the bone and it ended up just being gross. Rattlesnake does have it's own taste for sure, but describing it as "chewy, stringy, shitty chicken" isn't far off either. Certainly worth a try. Don't let my bad experience dissuade you.
    "There are no finger prints under water."

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    Grand Master Know It All hatidua's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Irving View Post
    I boiled the other one to remove the bone and it ended up just being gross.
    An older guy I used to know told a story once of when he and a friend, both 9 years old at the time, decided to "live off the land" with nothing more than a .22 rifle and a coffee can to cook in. He was 85 when he told the story which would have put this about 1923 when the adventure took place (I think he said they lasted one night before 'living off the land' was no longer tempting). Apparently, he and the friend managed to find a 'black snake' (rural NC) and after killing it, boiled it in the coffee can for dinner. 76 years after that dinner he said he could still taste that snake. In his adult life he had done a great many things, including driving landing craft on D-Day, being the chair of the forestry dept. at NCSU, Etc. He had a tremendous number of life experiences and even taught a class in wilderness eating when he worked at NC State U. but he said that snake really left an indelible memory. It was a rather amusing story. Sadly he passed away several years ago but I'll long value the time I spent sitting on his porch listening to his various tales.

    From what I've previously heard, I thought rattlesnake was supposed to be palatable, don't they have annual events surrounding that cuisine in TX?

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