• @badlotus@lemm.ee
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    632 years ago

    Guinea pigs were bred as livestock by the Inca in South America. They used to be a dish reserved for nobility but now us plebs have access to Cuy in the supermarket. 😃

    • Thorned_Rose
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      2 years ago

      Some people still do raise them for food 🙂

      When you’ve got not fridge and the environment isn’t always condusive to curing and preserving meat, it’s very handy to raise an animal that’s a smaller amount of meat (say one meal) than something like a goat, pig, chicken or cow.

      They breed easily and rapidly, eat scraps and vegetation that humans normally don’t. So folks keep a herd of Guinea pigs and just slaughter whatever they need for a meal.

      It’s very clever and much more environmentally friendly than clearing forest for larger animals.

      • R0cket_M00se
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        232 years ago

        Reduce, Reuse, Recycle, eat small mammals.

        Got it, updated for 2023.

    • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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      2 years ago

      That they would be reserved for nobility seems like it must be wrong. These are tiny animals that wouldn’t take much effort to raise. A small family could easily eat one. Just grab a pair and start raising them.

      It’s not like a cow where you need large amounts of grazing land and then when you kill it, you have huge amounts of meat to deal with.

      This is why animals in English have three names. One for the animal, raised by the commoners with Germanic origin (cow). One for the meat, eaten by the wealthy with French origin due to the Norman conquest (beef). And one used in scientific contexts coming from Greek or Latin (bovine)

        • @PetDinosaurs@lemmy.world
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          2 years ago

          Because the poor peasants could afford to eat it and the French version (would be poulet or something like that) never caught on.

          Sorry. That was supposed to be in the original comment, but I guess I forgot.

      • Wolf Link 🐺
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        12 years ago

        Maybe not “reserved” but eaten less frequent? Let’s say a poor peasant during that time owned 10 guinea pigs and had the choice to either slaughter one of the little guys for one single meal, or sell some to the higher-ups and buy less expensive food that will last for a week or two, then it would make sense if the peasants ate less of them than nobility even if it wasn’t explicitly forbidden.

    • Clay_pidgin
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      112 years ago

      I’ve had cuy in Perú. It’s pretty good and unsurprisingly not unlike rabbit. It’s not much meat considering the amount of work.