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/ck/ - Food & Cooking


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File: 69 KB, 750x422, inuit-food-cuisine-recipes (1).jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8210537 No.8210537 [Reply] [Original]

Has any anon tried eskimo cuisine? It looks basically like extreme sashimi.

>> No.8210539
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8210539

>> No.8210543

They're called Inuits, you racist.

>> No.8210548
File: 345 KB, 4932x3504, Maktaaq_Feast_1_1997-05-07.jpg [View same] [iqdb] [saucenao] [google]
8210548

A meal of Muktuk: raw frozen whale skin and fat.

I imagine it could actually be tasty, accompanied with spirits.

>> No.8210568

what do/did the Inuit people do for vegetables?

I doubt just eating seals and bears fulfills your dietary requirements.

>> No.8210581

>>8210537

It's literally not cuisine.
The Inuit are a people that never discovered cooking.

>> No.8210598
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8210598

>>8210537
I really want to go to alsaka someday, it's my biggest wish

>> No.8210702

>>8210581
That's not true, it's just that their diet is almost exclusively carnivorous because of where they live.

>> No.8210971

>>8210581

how dare people who live on ice not access to access to abundant firewood and skillet shaped rocks and plants to use as seasoning.

>> No.8210974

>>8210971
>abundant
try any shits above the treeline

>> No.8210981

>>8210539
That looks fucking yummy

>> No.8210988

>>8210598
anon, it's not hard to get there

>> No.8211315

I live in Alaska. I spent time in some rural Inuit villages for work, and I can tell you it's mostly bad. The dried caribou and smoked salmon are good but they get boring. Almost nothing is fresh, they have to save way too much for the 6 month winters. It's not very good

>> No.8211422

>>8210581
>It's literally not cuisine.

>it's literally the definition of cuisine

Go back to starbucks

>> No.8211431

>>8210568

iceberg lettuce

>> No.8211438

>>8210568
Muktuk, among other things, has vitamin C in it.

>> No.8211672
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8211672

>>8211431

>> No.8211695
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>>8211431

>> No.8211727
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8211727

>>8211431

>> No.8211750

>>8210598
You can make that happen very easily. Do your dreams, don't wait

>> No.8211835

>>8210568
A lot of berries grow in the tundra in the summer- these are picked and eaten, but also preserved or dried for the long winter. Cloudberries are my favorites among the arctic berries.

>> No.8211864

>>8211835
It's not an arctic berry

>> No.8211874

>>8210537
Most people would freak out about it, but it's alright.
T.leaf

>> No.8211958

>>8210548
>i imagine it could actually be tasty accompanied with spirits

i certainly wouldn't want to eat it sober

>> No.8212325

>>8210543
All Inuits are Eskimos but not all Eskimos are Inuits.

>> No.8212384

>>8210543
>>8210581
see >>8212325
I've known one and a half Eskimos. One is half Inuit, quarter black, quarter white. The other is 100% Yup'ik. He used to flip his shit when white people trying to be politically correct call him 'Inuit' rather than Eskimo or Yup'ik.
He looked like an Asian Val Kilmer.

>>8210537
I was friends with the half Inuit guy at university. He, a Mexican dude and I made a deal: we'd spend summer in Alaska with his family, winter break in Italy with mine and spring break in Mexico with that dude's.
During my summer in AK, I tried only two traditional dishes. One was a disgusting ice cream thing made with mashed fruit and Crisco and the other was some weird caribou soup. The rest of the time, dude's Inuit mother just cooked typical North American ready meal and dinner kit stuff. I don't think they have much of a cuisine due to lack of agriculture.

>> No.8212470

>>8212384
>much of a cuisine due to lack of agriculture

Since I admire your adventuresome spirit, I'll be gentle. The fact that you didn't have well prepared indigenous Inuit cuisine has more to do with the systematic extinguishing of a culture thousands of years old, by the forces of enculturation, than any other single cause.

>> No.8212498
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8212498

anyone have that cute pic of the girl eating the bloody meat?

>> No.8212564

>>8211874
I heard there are some parts of the polar bear you should avoid eating though.

Like apparently, polar bear liver I think? Is so dosed up with vitamin a, that you would quickly die from consuming polar bear liver. the vitamin a becomes like poison to your body.

>> No.8212603

>>8212564
Yes, so much vitamin A that it would kill most animals, human included.

>> No.8213950

>>8210568
Meat is a complete food source as long as it has enough fat.

>> No.8214037

>>8210568
They eat animal intestines. Muscles have tons of protein but the intestines contain everything that that animal had been eating, thus doing their foraging for them.

>> No.8214050

>>8212498
Are eskimos asian?

>> No.8214080

>>8214050
did you ever take a history class?

>> No.8214091

>>8214080
truly an important piece of information

>> No.8214095
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8214095

>> No.8214117

>>8214091
truly a dim human being. Generation Z, everybody.

>> No.8214119

>>8214050
yes, and so are native americans

>> No.8214395

>>8210568
Actually, if you eat the organs as well, you'll get all the vitamins and minerals you need. You'll be missing fiber and water, but water is easy to get, and fiber, well, they're used to the diet.

>> No.8214409
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8214409

>>8211431