I concur with A.V. on the importance of eating the glands and organs , especially for people who have glandular or organ issues.
Really not.
My family doctor once told me plant-based protein powder* would give me the sexual strength of a plant. So I thought, "Wait a minute: then where do bulls get their sexual strength from exactly?!"
Their was a thread on this forum about eating adult male animals to boost testosterone or something. The thing is, virile adult males are rarely the ones who get killed in a hunt. It's a lot more often the little ones, the sick, the injured, females, or elders. Makes you wonder how predators keep high testosterone levels, if they rarely get to eat testosterone-rich preys.
I think it's a lot more belief or superstition than it is reality.
* It was an experiment, okay? I was young and care free back then...
Bulls get thier sexuall energy and strength from a series of very complex biological phenomenon, in which they are able to cultivate large amounts of nutrient rich bacteria in their guts to feed off of. The nutrients contained in the microscopic organelles of trillions of microbes is what gives the bull its vitality.
Humans and other predatory and omnivorous animals , do not have the digestive system which would be necessary to derive all the complex micronutrients and hormonal proto nutrient factors from chewed Cud. We must get these rejuvenative life supporting nutrients directly from other living animals in order to thrive.
We are extremely adaptable and the degree by which humans can subsist without consuming raw, whole, unprocessed foods is remarkable, but for people who have specific "organ" or "glandular" insufficiency, damage , or dysfunction it would be of great benefit for them to nourish their damaged organ and glandular systems with the nutrients contained in the healthy glands and organs of pure and well nourished animals. "This is common sense"
It is not true that hunters only single out the young and the weak, the persistence hunters would single out the larger and more powerful males, because although they were stronger, they often lack stamina, and once we mastered the art of the hunt our ancestors were often able to run down any animal they wanted to regardless of its strength.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=826HMLoiE_o Nor is it true that younger, weaker, older, or female animals do not also provide the raw nutrient materials by which we can build our own healthy hormonal balance upon. It is not necessarily the direct hormonal transference which is of the greatest benefit, but instead it is the building block nutrients which are contained in the specific organs and glands which are responsible for nourishing ones vitality.