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Horsemeat for dinner anyone?

(60 Posts)
grannyactivist Fri 21-Feb-14 10:27:31

Would you? Could you?
www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-24952823
I do think she's brave to raise the issue and her passion for horses is well documented, so she presumably has the horse's best interest at heart.

Experigran Fri 21-Feb-14 10:39:40

I think it would depend entirely on how hungry I was.

Galen Fri 21-Feb-14 10:40:14

I have. Don't like it.

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 21-Feb-14 11:22:37

No I wouldn't. She has said stupid things before. Totally out of touch with the rest of the population.

Not many people keep cows, sheep or pigs as pets. Horses? Ah yes! Different. hmm

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 21-Feb-14 11:24:45

According to her single people should n't be occupying houses. The housing shortage is down to selfish people getting divorced. Oh wait a minute..... hmm

feetlebaum Fri 21-Feb-14 11:28:18

Horse? Very good, sweet and clean meat - I have no problem with it.

feetlebaum Fri 21-Feb-14 11:30:59

I sometimes think that Princess Anne is the sanest member of the family...

janerowena Fri 21-Feb-14 11:31:19

I have eaten it, unwittingly at first in Belgium at a horsemeat and chips van. It was lovely, the only giveaway (in daylight) being yellowish fat. I couldn't tell the difference between it and stewing beef. I was ofered a horsemeat steak at a belgian friend's house a few years later - again, no difference. So, much as I love horses - why not? If they are going to be humanely killed, why waste them? I do hate waste. (If anyone wants a tough old bag to chew on after my own demise, they are very welcome!)

glammanana Fri 21-Feb-14 11:32:58

She is certainly her fathers daughter when it comes to opening her mouth before her brain engages into gear.hmm

Aka Fri 21-Feb-14 11:46:44

Is she? I thought she always kept quite a low profile. She certainly supports a lot of charities and doesn't normally seek publicity. On reading the article it appears horse charities think she is speaking good sense and I can see her reasoning behind this.

Elegran Fri 21-Feb-14 11:52:11

Jings when did she say that single people should not live in houses? I can't find anything about it online.

As for eating horsemeat, I have never knowingly done so, but if I were hungry enough I would find it delicious.

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 21-Feb-14 12:17:42

Elegran she blamed the housing shortage on singles having houses to themselves.

Ok, she wasn't advocating caves.

rosesarered Fri 21-Feb-14 12:24:41

I could eat horesemeat, and in past holidays on the Continent, probably unwittingly did.However, I don't like the idea of it, and that's the difference.I like horses, and I also like ducks [ so can't eat them!]

Mishap Fri 21-Feb-14 12:29:05

I have eaten horse in France and regularly eat duck. Unless we are veggies, one meat is much the same as another in terms of whether it is right to eat it.

jinglbellsfrocks Fri 21-Feb-14 12:33:29

No it's not. Think Pony Club. [wrings hangs in despair]

ffinnochio Fri 21-Feb-14 12:46:46

""I chuck that out for what it's worth because I think it needs a debate."

I think she'd do well on GN.

Galen Fri 21-Feb-14 13:02:51

I love duck either Peking or a l'orange.

sunseeker Fri 21-Feb-14 13:16:49

If selling horsemeat for food in UK will stop the export of animals to the continent then I am all for it. (Although having said that I seem to remember there was a call for banning the export of live animals - did that happen?)

Meat is meat and so long as the animals are well cared for during their lives and humanely destroyed I don't think it would be a problem.

Of course someone is now going to say why not eat dogs and cats but not many of us keep horses in our homes!

Lona Fri 21-Feb-14 13:43:00

I don't eat a lot of red meat, but I would certainly eat horse if it was on offer.
The thought of eating a cat or dog however, makes me feel a bit queasy. No logic there at all!
If I was hungry though..........anything except jellied eels [yuk]

Mishap Fri 21-Feb-14 13:47:52

We have a very disordered and ambivalent attitude to animals. Do we love them and treat them as substitute humans, or do we eat them? Where do we draw the line. It is a debate that defies logic.

thatbags Fri 21-Feb-14 15:16:46

Haven't read the thread. I'm just replying to the OP.

Yes, I'd buy and eat horsemeat. If the animal that my meat comes from has been properly looked after and humanely killed, I don't mind what animal it is except as to taste, chewiness, ease of cooking, etc. If a life form, animal or plant, is edible I'll eat it subject to the above considerations.

Aka Fri 21-Feb-14 15:22:39

Rat, squirrel (grey of course), hedgehog, dormouse (or are they protected), guinea pig, rabbit......??

Joelise Fri 21-Feb-14 15:29:11

I have probably eaten horse , unknowingly in France.
My SIL on holiday in Vietnam & Cambodia ate, & I have photographic proof, cricket, snake, frog, scorpion, crocodile & a black cruncy looking insect, about 3 inches long yuck. My DD had more sense & ate normal food. When ever he goes away to non European countries he always samples the most extraordinary fare.

thatbags Fri 21-Feb-14 15:41:12

People in desperate straits have eaten rat (e.g. on ships; have you read the Jack Aubrey sailing books by Patrick O'Brien? great series) and probably most of those others too, aka. I was talking about farmed animals really. I've eaten rabbit. Guinea pigs are eaten in South America – bred to be eaten in fact. Goats also. Hedgehog is supposed to be very tasty if you can get past the fleas.

Ariadne Fri 21-Feb-14 15:46:28

It's all meat / flesh, whatever the animal. And I won't eat any of it.