💾 Archived View for tilde.pink › ~bencollver › recipe › ascii › ethnic › asia › australian › possum-… captured on 2022-06-11 at 21:52:19.
-=-=-=-=-=-=-
MMMMM----- Recipe via Meal-Master (tm) v8.04 Title: Possum or Bandicoot Soup Categories: Soups, Oz Yield: 1 servings 1 ea Small possum or bandicoot* 2 l Water 1 t Salt 1 ea Tin corn* Any other vegies desired 1 pn Celery leaves 1 pn Parsley Flour or gravox* to thicken Fried bread,1 slice per serv Skin and clean possum or bandicoot, then quarter the animal. (Video tape this please. I have no idea how to do it. Also "first you have to catch a possum or bandicoot", but then that's another story.) Place it in a large pot or camp oven along with water and salt. Cover and simmer gently for 3 or 4 hours. (Tough little devils apparently.) Add vegetables and simmer for another 1 1/2 hours (Still tough. Even the vegies are resisting being associated with this.) Strain soup through a large holed colander when meat has left bone and remove bones, especially small ones. Return soup to the pot and add parsley and celery leaves. Thicken with a little flour or gravox. Cut fried bread into 1 inch squares and serve soup over toast,boiling hot. *For those of you that haven't met a bandicoot, it is something between a possum and a raccoon, sort of, I think, maybe. *Tin of corn? Well a can I guess, 16 oz. *Now, when you boil this meat for 5 1/2 hours, strain it and throw it away, it does make me wonder why you started in the first place. *Gravox is a meat concentrate seasoning I think. The dish must be need some flavor. *Fry the bread any way you want to. *All things considered, a brick or stone would be a reasonable alternative if you don't happen to have a possum or bandicoot available. Gerry Nolan "If at first you don't succeed, destroy all evidence that you even tried." : ************************ Posted to the mm-recipes mailing list by GNolan554@aol.com This is both a test and a recipe. I haven't tried to upload a file to the MM list before. Many years back I spent a month wandering around Australia and while in Coober Pedy I found this book called: Bush Cooking by Max Bryant Published by the Kangaroo Press ISBN 0 86417 230 3 Please don't get the impression that this is what my good friends in Australia eat normally or would even consider eating. What it is, if I get it typed in, is a collection of recipes from the harsh outback where you had to make do with what you had. Some of them are even taken from the Aboriginal Peoples of Australia. These recipes are for the most part unique, unusual, and as far as I know factual. In this particular recipe, I couldn't help from adding some comments, but then I only used it for a test. Hope you enjoy it even if you never have unexpected guests and all that is available is a possum or bandicoot that you don't know what to do with. MMMMM