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What (roughly) does horse meat taste like?

What kind of dishes can I make with it?

Aaronut
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Willbill
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6 Answers6

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Back in the late '90s, biologist Joe Staton did a comparative study of the tastes of different animals for the Annals of Improbable Research. His hypothesis was that the relatedness of tastes of animals is correlated to their evolutionary ancestry. You can read an abridged version of his article here. Looking at the phylogenic tree at the bottom of the article, horse meat has the general flavor of beef and is most closely related to deer (venison) and American buffalo (bison). In my experience, horse meat is like a cross between venison and beef.

Edit: In case anyone was wondering, human apparently tastes like pork.

ESultanik
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    Memory from somewhere - cannibals in Australasia used to refer to cooked human flesh as "long pig"! – Michael Hetton Apr 29 '11 at 01:23
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    One nitpick... Annals of Improbable Research isn't a journal that you can write an article for. It's the winners of each years' Ig Nobel prizes. It would have been published in some other peer reviewed journal first. (I can't remember, but there's a name for journals where they just collect or point to other journal's articles. Like a college putting out a volume collecting all articles published by their faculty in a given month) – Joe Nov 25 '17 at 15:05
  • Loose term in the S Pacific. Was Bay Boy. Had double meaning. { Bay} white. {boy} pig. Was in reference to the white pigs the Spanish brought in. Could also be used in reference to light skinned persons. While the fire was being started. But I am told that people taste more like monkey than pig. My source for this was a older lady. A Grandmother. Who said I remember white man taste good. & smacked her lips. In a remote area. So maybe a miss interpitation here on the person thinking people taste like pigs. Monkey is a sweet tasting meat. Not like pork. – J Bergen Nov 26 '17 at 10:59
  • @Joe That's not true; AIR also accepts submissions of previously unpublished articles: https://www.improbable.com/about/SubmissionGuidelines.html – ESultanik Dec 04 '17 at 14:29
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Horse meat is dark red and usually quite lean. The risk is to overcook it and end up with tough meat. This probably has to do with the fact that most horse meat is "recycled" animals, that's to say horses that were not bread for meat and that spent a part of their life working.

In my part of Italy (Parma), we also eat it in its raw ground form (like a steak tartare). The traditional presentation is ground fine, spread on a white bread, salt, pepper, lemon juice and a drop of olive oil. Garlic also goes well with it. Horse meat is less likely to host parasites that are harmful to humans, so I wouldn't be too disturbed by the thought of eating it raw - and it does taste great. A filet americaine with horse meat would probably taste very good too.

Here is a recipe for picula 'd caval, a sort of horse chili from nearby Piacenza http://italianfood.about.com/od/furredgameetc/r/blr0881.htm although I would not cook it for quite that long, to avoid having tough rubbery bits at the end. For the same reason, reheating horse meat is usually a bad idea.

Here is also a discussion about the true recipe, but it is in Italian http://www.coquinaria.it/cgi-bin/ubb/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic;f=6;t=000843;p=0 of course every family has their own version and of course it is a point of religious faith that that one is the only true one - after all it is Italy.

Walter A. Aprile
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Like a filly cheese steak. I'd hate to saddle you with a bunch of recipes. Good with stallio-- scallions. Careful, frying it, since it tends to be a bit tempermental. Leaving now.

Ocaasi
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I've had it in Italy as a child - I was actually told it was beef so that I wouldn't ask questions. The big differences are that it is leaner than beef, and has a coarser texture.

Debbie A
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  • Horse is a much cleaner animal than a cow. A lean meat. Ground great in chili. Or soups. I think mule is better eating than horse, Many years ago on some job sights. When still used. Horse or mule if injured went in the stew pot on some job sights. Never had a horse steak. – J Bergen Nov 26 '17 at 11:10
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It tastes like whale meat :)

It's a red meat, with a characteristic texture. Personally, I like it a lot, but it's difficult to find if you are outside of Italy and France (as far as I know).

You can use it as a regular steak, instead of pork, for example. Pork is more delicate as a taste, horse is more intense.

Stefano Borini
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    Horse is also eaten in Japan (and Tonga, apparently). – MGOwen Aug 06 '10 at 02:21
  • It's also available in Belgium and the Netherlands. – Joe Aug 06 '10 at 02:56
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    Horse meat is fairly common in Denmark as long as you go to a regular butcher instead of a supermarket. – cyberzed Aug 06 '10 at 07:44
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    I am not sure if you were joking, but in my experience horse meat does not taste like whale meat. – ESultanik Apr 20 '11 at 19:58
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    @esultanik: I'm not joking. I had whale meat in Norway, and the closest thing it recalled me is definitely horse meat. – Stefano Borini Apr 20 '11 at 20:47
  • @Stefano: I had whale meat in Iceland and it reminded me of a cross between beef and tuna. Or maybe they just served me some tuna! I had never had whale before, so I wouldn't have known the difference. – ESultanik Apr 20 '11 at 23:42
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Horse meat is often consumed in Mongolia, especially during the long cold winter periods; it contains a lot of nutrients suitable for winter. It is very lean so its good to consume when cold, meat is quite smelly while you cook it but once it's done it is a good substitute for beef, and of course it contains a lot of collagen.

Catija
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