I’m weirdly hooked on the cuttlefish flavored snacks they have at the Asian markets. Oh and I ate octopus last week. I felt terribly guilty, but it was delicious. Penance?
biogirl.wordpress.comsays
I suppose it is not a stretch to have cephalopod flavored cookies, when we have such ice-creams. Octopus Icecream
Anti-theistsays
I just ate a nasty cookie.
It was peanut butter and had candycane bits and M&Ms in it.
Probably 25 years ago I went with a friend to a health food store and found tofu hot dogs with “natural wiener flavoring”. I always wondered where that came from, too.
jams.n.tonessays
I think you should try to make these, PZ. For your next Friday cephalopod.
How many small glasses of that red wine did I take, really? Got to stay responsible here!
destlundsays
Wow Sven, that’s more fun than my cephalopod shirt. I gotta get me one of those.
llewellysays
Probably 25 years ago I went with a friend to a health food store and found tofu hot dogs with “natural wiener flavoring”. I always wondered where that came from, too.
Natural wiener dogs, naturally.
Silisays
But as David repeatedly have told us, there are no freshwater cephalopods.
Or so they would have us believe!
Cephalo, cephalo, cephalo starts with C!
Michael Bsays
I would ask the Japanese. If anyone would have mollusk flavoring it would be them
Brownian, OMsays
Clam juice! It’s available at your local grocer!
A capital suggestion! There’s nothing like a Caesar to warm one’s spirits on a frosty Friday!
Givesgoodemailsays
I think you get various types of mollusc flavorings depending upon which part of the polypus bush.
The seeds themselves, ground up, taste like octopus, while the seed husks are more like squid.
The root, dried and ground, have a delicate cuttlefish nose to them.
The leaves of the red mollusc bush, stewed in foods, give a gastropod taste. The blue mollusc bush should not be used.
destlund says
I’m weirdly hooked on the cuttlefish flavored snacks they have at the Asian markets. Oh and I ate octopus last week. I felt terribly guilty, but it was delicious. Penance?
biogirl.wordpress.com says
I suppose it is not a stretch to have cephalopod flavored cookies, when we have such ice-creams.
Octopus Icecream
Anti-theist says
I just ate a nasty cookie.
It was peanut butter and had candycane bits and M&Ms in it.
sasqwatch says
I calls em squiddles.
daveau says
Probably 25 years ago I went with a friend to a health food store and found tofu hot dogs with “natural wiener flavoring”. I always wondered where that came from, too.
jams.n.tones says
I think you should try to make these, PZ. For your next Friday cephalopod.
Sven DiMilo says
easy
JBlilie says
Clam juice! It’s available at your local grocer!
Cuttlefish, OM says
I make my own.
Sven DiMilo says
You can also buy squid ink.
Sven DiMilo says
via googledipity:
http://rlv.zcache.com/i_heart_architeuthis_giant_squid_ink_tee_tshirt-p2353078272724607803y69_400.jpg
puseaus says
How many small glasses of that red wine did I take, really? Got to stay responsible here!
destlund says
Wow Sven, that’s more fun than my cephalopod shirt. I gotta get me one of those.
llewelly says
Natural wiener dogs, naturally.
Sili says
But as David repeatedly have told us, there are no freshwater cephalopods.
Or so they would have us believe!
Cephalo, cephalo, cephalo starts with C!
Michael B says
I would ask the Japanese. If anyone would have mollusk flavoring it would be them
Brownian, OM says
A capital suggestion! There’s nothing like a Caesar to warm one’s spirits on a frosty Friday!
Givesgoodemail says
I think you get various types of mollusc flavorings depending upon which part of the polypus bush.
The seeds themselves, ground up, taste like octopus, while the seed husks are more like squid.
The root, dried and ground, have a delicate cuttlefish nose to them.
The leaves of the red mollusc bush, stewed in foods, give a gastropod taste. The blue mollusc bush should not be used.
Givesgoodemail says
“…which part of the polypus bush you use.”