Catch and Cook SKUNK | IT’S LIKE DIFFUSING A BOMB! | We Ate The Whole THING!

This is the FIRST time in history that skunk has been SHOWN to be EDIBLE! Other historical records mention it, but none have shown the exact process! We’re making HISTORY!

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Full Skunk Cleaning for Eating (Very Graphic) contains full skinning, gutting and de-glanding process): ???

Skunk is the ultimate survival food because no one else will know how to eat it but you!!! Even Bear Grylls who drinks his own urine and will shove stuff up his butt to get hydrated couldn’t do it!!!!!

I will include a full version of the skinning and de-glanding in a future video which is very likely to be marked as “age restricted.” Keep watching this description for links…!

In this part, we show in detail how to really prepare skunk for eating. This is very likely the only living proof that skunk can be made edible, putting Jeremy and I in a very unique club consisting of most likely a handful of people who have ever eaten and ENTIRE SKUNK!

To my best knowledge this is the ONLY LIVING PROOF that this can be made edible and palatable. Many historic documents casually mention it as table fair, but none that I know have detailed instructions about exactly how the processing and cooking should be done.

Jeremy (One Wildcrafter) also demonstrates a technique for getting rid of skunk smell using a common and natural household product.

Adam Craig Outdoors also stops in for a taste-test!

Shawn Woods tried, but was not successful: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H0E9YCoDyyE
Bear Grylls failed too: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GkZCayKC5eE

Here is one historic record of skunk eating from a book called “What to Eat, and how to Cook It (New York 1863) by Pierre Blot:
https://www.loc.gov/resource/rbc0001.2014bit16065/?st=gallery

Opossum, Otter, Raccoon, Skunk, Woodchuck, Fox, etc.

We cannot say that we have had much experience in cooking the above, but all these animals are eaten by many persons in different parts of this and other countries. We have eaten of all of them except the raccoon, and we must say that we found them good.
It is well known that when our soldiers retook possession of Ship Island, they found plenty of raccoons on it, and ate all they could catch. One day we happened to meet a sub-officer who was there at the time, and enquired of him about it. He said he had never eaten any raccoons before, and did not know that they were eatable; but now he would eat them as readily as rabbits, as they were quite as good.

The best time to eat either of the animals enumerated above is from Christmas to the 15th of February; squirrels also are not good in warm weather.

How to prepare them.—As soon as the animal is killed skin it, take the inside out, save the liver and heart, and wash well with lukewarm water, and a little salt, in and outside; then wipe dry with a towel, put inside of it a few leaves of sage, bay leaves, mint and thyme, and sew it up. Hang it outside in a place sheltered from the sun, such as the northern side of a building; leave it thus five or six days, then take off and cook.

We were hunting one day in New Jersey, northwest of Paterson, with a friend and two farmers living there, when one of them shot a skunk. We asked him how much he could get for the skin. He said it was not worth-while to take it to town, but that he would eat the animal, as it was very good.

We thought at first that he was joking; but putting his gun and game bag to the ground, he looked at us earnestly and said, “Gentlemen, you seem to doubt; I will show you how it is done.” We soon saw that we had been mistaken.

He made a fire, took hold of the skunk by the head with one hand, and with a stick in the other, held the skunk over the fire. He burnt off nearly all the hair, taking care to avoid burning the skin, commencing at the hind legs; then, -with his hunting knife, he carefully took off the bag containing the fetid matter, and skinned and cleaned it.

We then examined the skunk, and although it had not been washed, we could not find any part of it which had smell, and if we had not seen the whole operation, we certainly would not have thought that it was a skunk, the very name of which is repulsive.
The following week we dined with the farmer, ate some of that identical skunk, and found it very good.
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