Foo - General Tso's Chicken revisited

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View Full Version : General Tso's Chicken revisited


root11
10-25-08, 04:24 PM
It can also be called General Tso's Roadkill now. So, a guy sees a deer getting hauled into the Chinese restaruant and calls the police. They find the restaurant people butchering the deer in the kitchen.

The story indicates that they were not sure if it was roadkill or not, but it has been confirmed to be roadkill. Eww.

http://www.buffalonews.com/cityregion/southernsuburbs/story/473728.html:eek::eek::eek:


mconlonx
10-25-08, 06:24 PM
It was probably going into beef dishes. Maybe the ribs would have ended up as spare ribs.

Nothing wrong with roadkill. In our town, you can get on a list to claim roadkill after an accident where the police are called... Only trouble with roadkill is that a lot of the meat is unusable--bruised, or contaminated if there are compound fractures and/or internal injuries.

JoelS
10-25-08, 06:30 PM
Fresh roadkill is certainly harvestable (not sure that's a word), pending organ damage and fluid leakage inside the carcass. In some states and jurisdictions, the law allows the inadvertent killer of said animal by means of motor vehicle while travelling on the public byways to keep the animal, butcher, and consume.


wahoonc
10-25-08, 06:56 PM
Why not as long as the meat is usable. Guy in the UK (http://www.bbc.co.uk/insideout/southwest/series6/roadkill.shtml) does it all the time. Save money if you are a meat eater.:lol:

Aaron:)

DirtPedalerB
10-25-08, 10:49 PM
i love general Tso's chicken!!! hot and sweet. here in Bama when someone hits a deer the first F150 that drives by usually picks it up

MrCrassic
10-25-08, 11:20 PM
Probably would've tasted better.

Durward_Kirby
10-25-08, 11:55 PM
Probably too old for the stew...

http://www.techesq.net/odd/lazy_roadcrew1.gif

x136
10-26-08, 12:07 AM
Fresh roadkill is certainly harvestable (not sure that's a word), pending organ damage and fluid leakage inside the carcass. In some states and jurisdictions, the law allows the inadvertent killer of said animal by means of motor vehicle while travelling on the public byways to keep the animal, butcher, and consume.While I don't really see a problem with consumers of meat products eating a road-killed deer, I hope no one is much relying on such a method.

Late at night, while driving through Montana, a deer jumped out in front of the SUV in front of me (one of the larger Chevrolet models, as I recall). I pulled over to make sure everyone was okay, and noticed that, while the family was fine, the SUV was toast. Had the deer jumped out in front of my POS rental PT Cruiser instead, I'd probably be dead.

gapowermike
10-26-08, 07:53 AM
Sounds hoaxish. I just heard a similar story from Savannah, Georgia at an establishment in Pooler that starts with an N.

It would almost certainly be going to a beef dish.

Michael

Ed in GA
10-26-08, 08:25 AM
Sounds hoaxish. I just heard a similar story from Savannah, Georgia at an establishment in Pooler that starts with an N.

It would almost certainly be going to a beef dish.

Michael


Well, in Savannah you really never know. Anything could be possible.



http://i301.photobucket.com/albums/nn50/Ed_in_GA/IMGP0585.jpg

celerystalksme
10-26-08, 09:32 AM
if it was a fresh kill, i'd love to eat that junk!