Author Topic: Eating raw eyeballs?  (Read 24033 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline intouchwithinstinct

  • Trapper
  • **
  • Posts: 54
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Eating raw eyeballs?
« Reply #25 on: March 27, 2010, 02:08:53 pm »
I wish animal heads where so openly sold here!!
"One wonders if there is not something in the life-giving vitamins and minerals of the food that builds not only great physical structures within which their souls reside, but builds minds and hearts capable of a higher type of mankind in which the material values of life are made secondary to individual character."~Weston Price~

Offline JazzIsGood

  • Scavenger
  • *
  • Posts: 25
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Eating raw eyeballs?
« Reply #26 on: March 29, 2010, 03:38:39 am »
Damn! I'm supposed to get big ol raw cow-eye-balls in the next week or two from my supplier. I had brain the other week, and it tasted like fresh raw crimini mushrooms and undercooked egg yolks, with the taste of flan. I do feel a bit smarter, too.  ;)  Maybe when if I start eating eyeballs every 2 or 3 weeks, I can reverse my near-sightedness faster. Wouldn't wear glasses anyway, plus they're a waste of money.

Goodsamaritan, what's the taste of those fish eyeballs? I once cooked up a whole fish at the WAPF's recommendation. But had no tasted for the cooked meat of those extra parts. Of course, after switching to raw 3 1/2 weeks ago, I've grown a taste for raw fish in it's entirety. But that day, I put a cooked eyeball in my mouth (snapper), and thought that it tasted oddly familiar. A good familiar, yet wierd familiar. What was that taste?

(I'll have to remember to start asking the guy who cleans my fish to save the eyeballs)
"To say of what is that it is not, or of what is not that it is, is false, while to say of what is that it is, and of what is not that it is not, is true." -Aristotle

"A legend is an old man with a cane known for what he used to do. I'm still doing it." -Miles Davis

"Duran always disturbs me. The guy is just weird. Before our first fight, both Duran and his wife gave my wife the finger." -Sugar Ray Leonard

Offline RawZi

  • Mammoth Hunter
  • ******
  • Posts: 3,052
  • Gender: Female
  • Need I say more?
    • View Profile
    • my twitter
Re: Eating raw eyeballs?
« Reply #27 on: March 29, 2010, 04:59:50 am »
cooked egg yolks, with the taste of flan. I do feel a bit smarter, too.  ;)  Maybe when if I start eating eyeballs every 2 or 3 weeks, I can reverse my near-sightedness faster. Wouldn't wear glasses anyway, plus they're a waste of money.

..., after switching to raw 3 1/2 weeks ago, I've grown a taste for raw fish in it's entirety. But that day, I put a cooked eyeball in my mouth (snapper), and thought that it tasted oddly familiar. A good familiar, yet wierd familiar. What was that taste?

(I'll have to remember to start asking the guy who cleans my fish to save the eye

    If you do eat raw flesh, Ian, get the fish whole and uncleaned.  That's how I do it when I want to eat eyes.

    Flan tasted like a strange moulten plastic to me, if I remember correctly.  That was coconut flan anyway, I didn't use eggs, or was it limble/limber or tembleque?  Anyway, I can't imagine anything with cooked eggs, milk and sugar would compare to brains. 

    Do you eat pituitary too?
"Genuine truth angers people in general because they don't know what to do with the energy generated by a glimpse of reality." Greg W. Goodwin

Offline dariorpl

  • Mammoth Hunter
  • ******
  • Posts: 1,092
  • Gender: Male
    • View Profile
Re: Eating raw eyeballs?
« Reply #28 on: April 05, 2015, 03:18:47 am »
I just found this thread today and wanted to add my experience with fish eyes. I haven't had eyes from animals other than various kinds of fish, squid and octopus. I'd like to try and I wonder if they taste similar or not at all.

There is a tiny fish here called cornalito that is around 6cm long (2 inches) and is eaten battered and fried instead of, or in addition to french fries. It's usually served with other meats that are battered or breaded and fried, such as thinly sliced beef, chicken, or squid rings. Battered and fried onion rings and breaded and fried mozarella cheese are also popular things that are served with them.

Cornalitos are traditionally eaten whole, with the head and everything. Lately (in the past 10-15 years) some people have began removing the head and the intestinal tract to make them less bitter, and I've heard some people say that it's the eyes that make it slightly bitter.

In any case, I haven't had those little fish raw because I couldn't find them fresh, only frozen. But I've had other, much larger whole fish. Such as bonito, which raw, for some reason, tastes a lot like canned tuna. Or another one called besugo which is similar to a red snapper. (I'll post a picture of the besugo, which is the first one I had whole, this one weighted 1.25kg (2.8lb) before de-scaling and was 6cm thick (2 inches). I took the picture before de-scaling it)



So after having the skin, meat and some of the internal organs (which are super bitter), I tried the eyes. I was expecting them to be horribly bitter, but wanted to have them anyway for the nutritional value. Because fish don't have eyelids, it's really bizarre to be looking straight into it's eye as you're carefully carving with a knife and pulling it away with a fork to prevent popping it and making a mess. The psychological effect of doing that while planning to put it in my mouth and chewing was a bit hard to prepare for, but then I just didn't think about it and did it. It seems that we have a tendency to associate open eyes staring at us with something being alive and watching us (I hear the same works on birds, and that some scarecrows now are just a big eye). It can be hard to tell yourself that that's not the case and that the thing is dead.

To my surprise, it was the best tasting part of the fish by far. Like others here said, it's really sweet, almost like a raspberry. And even when the fish is not 100% fresh it still tastes good (just not as good). The fatty tissue that hangs around the eye socket after you remove the eye is also very tasty (some of it sticks to the eye as you pull it out). The rest of the fish heads I could not manage to eat, so I throw them away.

Eyes from squid and octopus are pretty good also, just not as sweet, and more chewy. And they don't have the same crunchy membrane that fish have (or it might be that the fish eyes I've had were much larger)

My eyesight has improved since I've been on this diet (3.5 months so far), but I can't say if it's due to consuming raw fish eyes or everything else. I haven't had much fish eyes by comparison to everything else that changed in my diet.
« Last Edit: April 05, 2015, 06:53:21 am by dariorpl »
We now live in a world where medicine destroys health, law destroys justice, education destroys knowledge, government destroys order, the press destroys information, religion destroys morals, and banking destroys the economy

 

SMF spam blocked by CleanTalk