FabulousFusionFood's Meat-based Recipes 9th Page
Painting of 'Still Life with Dressed Game, Meat, and Fruit' byAlexandre-François Desportes.
Welcome to FabulousFusionFood's Meat-based Recipes Page — Meat is animal tissue, often muscle, that is eaten as food. Humans have hunted and farmed other animals for meat since prehistory. The Neolithic Revolution allowed the domestication of vertebrates, including chickens, sheep, goats, pigs, horses, and cattle, starting around 11,000 years ago. Since then, selective breeding has enabled farmers to produce meat with the qualities desired by producers and consumers.
The word meat comes from the Old English word mete, meaning food in general. In modern usage, meat primarily means skeletal muscle with its associated fat and connective tissue, but it can include offal, other edible organs such as liver and kidney. The term is sometimes used in a more restrictive sense to mean the flesh of mammalian species (pigs, cattle, sheep, goats, etc.) raised and prepared for human consumption, to the exclusion of fish, other seafood, insects, poultry, or other animals.
Here I've used a broader definition of 'meat' to include the flesh of animals, birds and insects. Fish, shellfish, aquatic crustaceans and seafood are excluded and have their own section on this site as Fish and Seafood. Insects are now included in their own section as I will be increasing the number of insect-based recipes on this site over the coming months.
As this site also includes historic recipes, there will be some unusual animals in the lists (like crane and flamingos from ancient Roman cookery) also game meats (or bushmeat) will include agouti, and capybara from South America, snakes from many cultures, antelopes and cane rats from Africa. Also the culinary sub-types of birds, poultry for domesticated birds, game for game birds and fowl for Galliforms (chicken-like) and Anseriformes (waterfowl). Offal, the internal organs, feet and heads of animals also has its own section.
The alphabetical list of all the meat-based recipes on this site follows, (limited to 100 recipes per page). There are 4212 recipes in total:
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Page 9 of 43