skippy said:Russel Upsom-Grubs! I was wondering if maybe that was your name Irons, but then I said it to myself a couple times and figured it out. LOL
I dunno! Could be Irons likes 'em. :lol:hphoa said:Skippy, it's Russel Upsom-Grub? not Grubs!
Barren Realms 007 said:skippy said:Russel Upsom-Grubs! I was wondering if maybe that was your name Irons, but then I said it to myself a couple times and figured it out. LOL
It's the hick in Iron's. 8)
Harold_V said:Anyone see that documentary, long ago, of African natives hunting food? One of their favored delicacies are a huge grub, taken from bamboo. Watched the dude suck it right down, right after splitting the bamboo to get it out
Oz said:Harold_V said:Anyone see that documentary, long ago, of African natives hunting food? One of their favored delicacies are a huge grub, taken from bamboo. Watched the dude suck it right down, right after splitting the bamboo to get it out
Just like many things it is all in how they are prepared. Fried, most grubs are actually rather tasty to me (add some salt or fry in butter). Irons likes them raw as bait for trout. As much as I like the taste of trout though they are boney to the point you can not get a boneless filet. The best way to cook them in my opinion is all day at low heat to make the bones go soft like you have in canned salmon. Being an Easterner we used to do that with shad that were just as boney but much larger boned than our trout.
Irons said:I prefer to 'educate' them and let them go.
dtectr said:is it too late to jump in on trout discussion?
too bad - my dad would catch & gut them, then wrap them in clay-grass mixture (there's that HYPHEN again!) then bury them in the coals for a few hours. he says that when they cracked open the clay the skin stuck to the clay "brick" and the meat just fell off the gones. if you find wild onions or garlic you could pack the cavity with that before adding the clay.
trout - Mmmm ...
dtectr said:my dad would catch & gut them, then wrap them in clay-grass mixture (there's that HYPHEN again!) then bury them in the coals for a few hours. he says that when they cracked open the clay the skin stuck to the clay "brick" and the meat just fell off the gones. if you find wild onions or garlic you could pack the cavity with that before adding the clay.
trout - Mmmm ...
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