get real bury it.
If it died you may too
It was your son's pet treat it with respect.
2007-01-21 09:53:24
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answer #1
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answered by witchfromoz2003 6
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Actually, rabbit is quite good for you, and tastes better then chicken. It actually sells for A LOT of money at fancy 5 star restuarants. But still, because the rabbit died from such causes, the best bet would probobly be not to eat him. You don't know if that mushroom would be harmful on you, or what may happen.
But if you are looking for good recipes for rabbits in the future, there are many good recipes out there. They make great cutlets, and they also make a great shepards pie. But don't use that rabbit, if you are going to use a rabbit, get a new zealand that was bred for meat, and not just some random pet that droppe3d dead.
2007-01-21 16:21:02
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answer #2
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answered by Anonymous
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I raise ducks and have used (and read references encouraging) feeding hard boiled eggs to ducklings and chicks. It's soft and easy for them to eat, and the crushed shells add calcium to help their bones grow. For poultry, it's only fed for a few days after hatching, when they can start to eat regular feed. I suspect that it's fed to other bird breeds as a matter of pampering, as the beaks of adult birds don't need soft food and there are other protein and calcium supplements. I don't have any problem with it because commercial eggs are infertile. If you're concerned about animal cruelty, I'd get the eggs from free range birds instead of factory farms. The various transmissable spongiform encephalitis diseases (mad cow, scrapie, wasting disease of elk) are caused by prions, strange proteins that cause other proteins to "warp" into more prions. The earliest in history that I know of is Scrapie, from sheep. People were aware that sheep would get sick and scrape themselves against fences and trees until they died. The problem was, someone decided that even though it was illegal to feed sick animals to humans, they could grind them into livestock feed. They thought that cooking the meat would destroy the disease. This would have worked with viruses, bacteria or genetic diseases. But Prions are very resistant to heat. They aren't alive by any stretch of the imagination, they don't even take over cells like viruses, they're just proteins and you have to essentially burn them to a crisp to destroy them (Sorry. Not looking up my notes on required temperatures). So when animals ate the prion infested feed and humans ate the animals, the prions spread. The sick, twisted, wrong part isn't feeding meat to herbivores, it's in trying to feed sick, infected animals to anything in the human/livestock food chain.
2016-03-14 21:43:31
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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Lol. Can't you find a challenge? Why don't you go pick on cutter poet emos? Maybe they'll get discouraged and stop poisoning the internets with their garbage, or better, they'll write some machine-gun garbage in your honor.
It's okay, people; an animal can't possibly die of ingested poison in seconds. Though you can cook a pet bunny and serve it to your kids.
2007-01-21 10:16:32
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answer #4
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answered by Rachel R 4
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Look up recipes on the internet. Are you sure your son would be comfortable eating his pet? I would also be careful, who knows if there are health risks with the posion mushrooms and everything. Please keep in mind, the majority of "answers" will be negative, as this is a "Pet" category, not "Cooking". I would recommend just burying it and then going to the store and buying some chicken or something.
2007-01-21 10:19:55
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answer #5
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answered by m_mccomber 2
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you don't eat it, you bury it!
How would you like it if you ate mushrooms (that'd be stupid of u)
and dropped dead and then your son offered to cook and eat you? I'd be disgusted! If your not careful, your son's gonna grow up like hanable lector and think eating things like pets are good!
You should be ashamed!
Besides, if you ate the rabbit, you might drop dead as it did.........in that case--eat it, it might acctually make the world a better place without idiots like you!
2007-01-21 09:47:23
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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1. Season rabbit with salt and pepper. Brush one side of each piece with mustard. Heat oil and butter in a deep, non-reactive skillet and cook pieces, mustard side down, when fat is hot. Don't crowd the pan; cook in batches if necessary (or use two pans). Brown ten minutes. Season and coat other side with mustard. Brown another ten minutes.
2. Remove rabbit and add a few tablespoons of wine to pan. Scrape up browned bits with a wooden spoon. Add onions and cook until soft. Stir in flour and mix well. Add remaining wine, stock, thyme (or other herb) and bay leaf. Return rabbit to pan, bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer, uncovered, about 45 minutes.
Transfer rabbit to a platter, pour sauce over and sprinkle with parsley. Serve with rice.
Serves 2-4.
2007-01-21 09:49:21
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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have you any more of the mushies as I'm planning a party soon
2007-01-22 06:13:48
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answer #8
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answered by Hi Peepsies !!!! 2
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OMG, If the rabbit died from poison mushrooms, I would think twice about eating the poor thing. Plus, it would probably be bad for your son to be eating his pet. I think you're nuttier then squirrel shi t ~~~~
2007-01-21 09:49:21
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answer #9
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answered by Anonymous
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You do not eat family.... Unless you are from a psycho family. Bury your son's pet.... Do not eat it.
2007-01-21 09:49:13
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answer #10
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answered by Anonymous
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