My Ecuadoran wife was merely 7 when my Irish grandmother passed away but strangly, generations and continents away, many of the dishes my wife prepares are reminescent of some of the wonderful tastes that came out of my grandma’s kitchen. Perhaps, it’s because both cook with love.
hubbard3188 about 1 year ago
OK, No! This is how prion disease is transmitted. Absolutely no. Eat the snout or the squeal, not central nervous system tissue.
eced52 about 1 year ago
In Vietnam they were said to suck out monkey brains through a hole in their head
Robert Nowall Premium Member about 1 year ago
Ew. Photos taste awful.
fuzzbucket Premium Member about 1 year ago
Photos don’t have the smell, or the taste.
ladykat about 1 year ago
I’ll bet Baldo thought they were tasty before he realized what they were.
Totalloser Premium Member about 1 year ago
The Brain is very high in vitamins
Linguist about 1 year ago
My Ecuadoran wife was merely 7 when my Irish grandmother passed away but strangly, generations and continents away, many of the dishes my wife prepares are reminescent of some of the wonderful tastes that came out of my grandma’s kitchen. Perhaps, it’s because both cook with love.
goboboyd about 1 year ago
Experiences to stir and reset memories. To remind you from whence you came and what makes you.
gcarlson about 1 year ago
Taste and memory are both tightly linked with smell.
ShadyLithand Premium Member about 1 year ago
Me don’t eat brain. Kuru disease
David Rickard Premium Member about 1 year ago
I wonder what memories Tia Carmen would evoke if she dipped a madeleine in tea…
Templo S.U.D. about 1 year ago
sure is hard for some people to eat offal
DaBump Premium Member about 1 year ago
Ah, the way tastes (and smells!) can bring back memories… (sigh)
chireef about 1 year ago
its is said that the sense of smell is a good way to retrieve memories