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Snake and Eggs? Floridians Could Soon Eat Invasive Pythons
CLICKORLANDO ^ | December 12, 2020 | Chris Perkins

Posted on 12/12/2020 5:03:37 PM PST by nickcarraway

Snake and eggs? Floridians could soon eat invasive pythons Python Bowl kicks off Friday in Florida Everglades Python Bowl kicks off Friday in Florida Everglades FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. – Donna Kalil estimates she’s eaten a dozen pythons in the last three years or so.

That’s not including the python jerky, says Kalil, a python hunter for the South Florida Water Management District. “I eat that several times a week because I take it out with me on python hunts and I eat it out there.”

State officials would like to see more people like Kalil putting pythons on the menu — not because of their nutritional value but as another way to encourage hunting to control their population.

Burmese pythons are considered an invasive species in Florida. The voracious appetite of these apex predators disrupts the food chain in environmentally fragile areas like the Everglades. Believed to have begun their Florida invasion after owners released them into the wild, python numbers have boomed and the state has struggled to reign them in.

“We would like to use consumption as another way to encourage people to remove pythons in Florida if the meat is safe to eat,” Carli Segelson, a spokesperson for the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission, wrote in an email. “The study will help ensure that is safe.”

Other invasive species are consumed — most notably lionfish — as a way to control their populations. Some people even eat iguanas.

But there’s a concern about eating pythons, and it’s one the state has started to research: The massive snakes, like some fish, could be full of mercury, a neurotoxin that is dangerous to humans.

That’s why the Florida Department of Health is working with the Florida Fish and Wildlife Conservation Commission to conduct tissue samples on pythons to determine whether they contain too much mercury for human consumption.

If the levels are safe, get ready to make new entries in your Florida invasive species cookbook.

Python is good in chili — or so Kalil says. She also likes it in stir fry.

But her favorite way to eat python is to pressure cook it for 10 or 15 minutes, sauté it with onions and garlic, and add it to pasta and sauce.

Kalil, a Miami native who gave up her real estate job to hunt pythons full time, said the meat is rubbery and tough if you don’t prepare it properly. The pressure cooker makes it more tender, she said.

And the taste? “I don’t really want to say like fish because it is more the texture of fish,” Kalil said, “but it definitely does not taste anything like fish, it tastes more like chicken.”

Or, maybe, another white meat. “I’m going to say pork,” she said. “More like a pork chop maybe.”

The Environmental Protection Agency and the Food and Drug Administration say the safe limit for mercury is 0.3 parts per million. Some of the Everglades pythons registered more than 100 times that.

“The pythons were hundreds of parts per million,” Darren Rumbold, a Florida Gulf Coast University professor.

More recently, a study found pythons in southwest Florida near and just north of Naples had concentrations of less than 5 ppm.

“We have one of the worst mercury problems in the world in the Everglades and South Florida,” said Rumbold, who was among the study’s authors.

The reason is because rainfall carries pollutants from the air to the ground and marshes in the Everglades convert the mercury into a form that is dangerous for humans.

As the state attempts to find resolution in the mercury problem in pythons, the Florida Python Challenge, the state’s annual hunt that awards cash prizes for the most, largest and heaviest pythons caught, is being squeezed out of its usual January starting date.

The delay is to maximize the number of snakes captured, Segelson said, and also an attempt to keep hunters safe from the COVID-19 threat.

“The winter months are a good time to capture pythons,” Segelson said. “However, we have also seen great success in the summer when pythons’ nests are hatching and are more likely to be found together in greater numbers. COVID was also a consideration when making this decision.”

The state hasn’t yet announced when the 2021 Python Challenge will begin.

Florida’s python hunters work mostly in the Everglades. And it’s not an especially lucrative job.

Kalil, the state’s first certified female python hunter, got her start when the state-sponsored python hunts began in March 2017. She said she’s not concerned about the delayed start of the hunt this year.

“These last nine pythons that I caught actually took me nearly a month to catch,” she said. “It definitely has slowed down. It always does this time of year, they stop moving around as much because of the cold.”

Among those nine pythons Kalil says she’ll make jerky out of five or six.

It’s a wonderful tasting meat,” she said. “But it is limiting.”

That’s even true in her house. Her husband won’t eat her python pasta.

“I don’t want say it’s an acquired taste,” she said. “It’s an acquired thought process.”

Kalil started eating pythons because they were the only animal that she caught but didn’t eat. She knew there was a mercury risk so her daughter, who is a vegetarian, bought her a mercury-testing kit. The biggest pythons tested positive so she didn’t eat them.

Even today she won’t eat pythons more than 7.5 feet long because she thinks there’s a bigger mercury danger in snakes that size.

For preparation, Kalil filets the python (you’ve got to go slowly to cut off the sinew) and chops up the meat.

A 7.5-foot python generally yields a 5-foot long filet and 3 to 4 pounds of meat.

“To put it on a plate like sautéed or whatnot in one piece would look sort of interesting,” she said.

To make jerky, Kalil marinates the python meat in mojo sauce overnight and then puts in the dehydrator for 12 to 15 hours.

The state is now working to develop guidelines for safely eating pythons, and Kalil is “thrilled” about the efforts.

“If they’re finding really high level of mercury in specific areas…that means there’s something going on with our environment,” she said. “And wouldn’t it be wonderful to use the pythons to determine where the pollutants are coming from and getting into the Everglades and be able to shut that down?”

As for the idea of eating pythons, well, clearly Kalil likes that, too.

She’s eaten three of Florida’s most popular invasive species — lionfish, iguana and python. Lionfish is her favorite, followed by iguana, and then python.

And she encourages more people to give it a try.

“If you could do the trifecta of all three,” she reasoned, “you could help the environment and still have some meat on your table.”


TOPICS: Food; Pets/Animals; Weird Stuff
KEYWORDS: everglades; florida; floridawoman; floriduh; food; hunting; iguana; invasivespecies; jerky; lionfish; mercury; pets; pollution; pythonhunting; pythons; reptiles; snakes; swamp; tasteslikechicken; theotherwhitemeat; yum
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To: TLI

Reminded me of eating a turkey neck. I certainly won’t go out of my way to have it again. A chicken thigh tastes like chicken too. I’ll stick to them.


21 posted on 12/12/2020 6:56:58 PM PST by Lurkina.n.Learnin (Democrats are the slumlords of American politics )
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To: nickcarraway

The ultimate weapon against these invasive species is cookbooks. Distribute them free in low income areas. Include pythons, boa constrictors, iguana, all the invasive species in the state/area in question. Sell these cookbooks to high end places for cooking implements.


22 posted on 12/12/2020 6:59:22 PM PST by Rembrandt (-a sure sign a Dem is lying - his lips are moving.)
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To: nickcarraway

It’s probably pretty good.. I’ve eaten rattlesnake and snapper turtle and snapper is, in my opinion, some of the best there is..


23 posted on 12/12/2020 7:03:16 PM PST by unread (A REPUBLIC..! If you can keep it....)
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To: livius

Red Lobster restaurants in Japan serve alligator, prepared like nuggets.


24 posted on 12/12/2020 7:06:14 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: nickcarraway

“We have one of the worst mercury problems in the world in the Everglades and South Florida.”

Your going to love this. The mercury is deposited from unique global weather patterns from coal burning in China.


25 posted on 12/12/2020 7:11:16 PM PST by Cold Heart
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To: Lurkina.n.Learnin
A chicken thigh tastes like chicken too. I’ll stick to them.

Probably a LOT safer that way, In my years in the field I didn't really eat anything that I didn't bring with me.

Of course, we were pretty hungry at the time...

.

26 posted on 12/12/2020 7:22:55 PM PST by TLI (ITINERIS IMPENDEO VALHALLA)
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To: nickcarraway

They had to work COVID in there, didn’t they.

How it can be an issue when you are outside is beyond me.


27 posted on 12/12/2020 7:28:11 PM PST by metmom (...fixing our eyes on Jesus, the Author and Perfecter of our faith..)
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To: dsc

Gator Tail nuggets are everywhere in FL. Many local restaurants sell it. Lightly battered and deep fried. Good eating.

I’ve had rattler chilli, thought it just fine. I’d definitely eat python.

How the heck does mercury get in the air? We don’t burn coal in FL.


28 posted on 12/12/2020 7:30:09 PM PST by Basket_of_Deplorables (This is all a Soros funded communist insurrection! )
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To: Basket_of_Deplorables

See post #25


29 posted on 12/12/2020 7:45:41 PM PST by Crucial ( )
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To: Basket_of_Deplorables

It comes from China. A study years ago looked into why Florida fish have high Hg. A unique global weather pattern deposits right on you.


30 posted on 12/12/2020 7:46:53 PM PST by Cold Heart
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To: Cold Heart

Great. Just frkin great.

I really, really, REALLY hate communists.


31 posted on 12/12/2020 8:05:39 PM PST by Basket_of_Deplorables (This is all a Soros funded communist insurrection! )
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To: Sixgun Symphony
“People are deluding themselves into thinking they are going to eliminate the Pythons there.”

Florida is a subtropical 'island' that was cleansed was f its tropical flora and fauna by the last glacial maximum and so it has many open ecological niches for introduced tropical species to thrive in.

When the current ice age kicks back into gear in about 15,000 years Florida will finally be free of the burmese python.

32 posted on 12/12/2020 8:30:47 PM PST by wildcard_redneck (COVID lockdowns are the Establishment's attack on the middle class and our Republic)
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To: nickcarraway

Makin'
snake in
bacon!


       

33 posted on 12/12/2020 8:43:42 PM PST by Songcraft
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To: Basket_of_Deplorables

Ever been to the Okene Rattlesnake Hunt in Oklahoma? Sounds like you might enjoy it.

I don’t know how a python would get mercury in the Everglades. I’d like to see them get lead poisoning.


34 posted on 12/12/2020 11:21:52 PM PST by dsc (Do not pray for easy lives; pray to be stronger men.)
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To: Basket_of_Deplorables

China now burns more than half of all coal worldwide. Together with India it is like 2/3.

China actually uses more coal now that the whole world consumed at 1990.


35 posted on 12/13/2020 3:02:31 AM PST by AZJeep (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=O0AHQkryIIs)
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To: nickcarraway

Troy Landry and the rest of his crew are on it!


36 posted on 12/13/2020 3:14:43 AM PST by mad_as_he$$ ("I don't know why they still make bolts." David Freiburger)
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To: Fai Mao

Excellent idea!


37 posted on 12/13/2020 3:15:50 AM PST by mad_as_he$$ ("I don't know why they still make bolts." David Freiburger)
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To: AZJeep

https://www.buywildgamemeats.com/pythonmeat.html


38 posted on 12/13/2020 3:18:46 AM PST by mad_as_he$$ ("I don't know why they still make bolts." David Freiburger)
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To: nickcarraway
When the gator season came to an end in Louisiana, the Swamp People headed to Florida to catch snakes......Those episodes are hilarious in the antics they go thru once they zero in on one and try to catch it.

They seemed to have a lot of luck catching big ones which the payoff bounty was around $300 or more.....

39 posted on 12/13/2020 3:30:49 AM PST by Hot Tabasco
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To: fastrock

Bounty wouldn’t work - folks would start raising them domestically to turn in for the bounty...


40 posted on 12/13/2020 3:33:09 AM PST by dakine
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