I saw millet for sale in a so-called "natural foods" store, in bulk, so I bought some. Boiled it up, ate it. Liked it.
Another "nobody eats that stuff" story I remember had to do with the arsenic level in the Wailoa river in Hilo, Hawaii ("the shortest river in the USA"). Techs found high levels of arsenic in the intestines of a certain kind of fish, but disregarded it because "nobody eats fish guts". But guess what? Filipinos call it "baloong".
"Twinkies are considered a delicacy in my country"
I saw millet for sale in a so-called "natural foods" store, in bulk, so I bought some. Boiled it up, ate it. Liked it.
Another "nobody eats that stuff" story I remember had to do with the arsenic level in the Wailoa river in Hilo, Hawaii ("the shortest river in the USA"). Techs found high levels of arsenic in the intestines of a certain kind of fish, but disregarded it because "nobody eats fish guts". But guess what? Filipinos call it "baloong".
"Twinkies are considered a delicacy in my country"