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Dining on an emu egg
At the Mountain View farmer's market on Sunday, my favorite steak vendor had a box of emu eggs. With a little encouragement from my practically perfect apprentice, I bought one. The shells are very pretty.
Tonight, practically perfect apprentice drilled holes both ends and blew it out. Our egg had 21 ounces (2.5 cups) of meat in it. Too much for my souffle pan, so we made an enormous quiche for dinner. It was good, but not noticeably different from chicken eggs. I'm hoping someone will want the shell for an art project, it would make a really cool salt cellar.
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Is it the blue color originally, or were those dyed?
Did you open it on one end to conserve the shell? How thick is it?
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Gormflaith drilled holes in both ends, but they are fairly small holes, I think she used a 1/4 inch drill bit.
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Gee, if there's no one else ahead of me, I'd really love to try my hand at it. It looks like a person could do something like cameo etching with one of them.
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If I had time in the project que...
Besides, I'm thinking this would be better suited to a steampunk project rather than a medieval one.
One end has a smaller hole than the other one, and it's really reqularly oval rather than chicken egg shaped, so cut long ways it could easily make two salt cellars of enormous size or cut in half the other way a pair of matched goblets of reasonable size, holding a little over a cup of liquid each.
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It seems like a really interesting project to try. I've thought about hunting down an ostrich egg before, but this emu egg has more possibilities because of the lovely natural color, don't you think?
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http://gallery.sjsu.edu/encounters/polynesia/polyn-Thumb.00003.html
The German National Museum in Nuremberg also has a couple of Ostrich Egg pokals as well.
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The shell is very pretty and has provided several days of amusement, so perhaps it was worth it. :)
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Not that any one but me cares, but if folks opt to go supply-acquiring with the primary purpose of doing period ratite shell art work...
Ostriches are South African.
Aepyornis/Muelleris or "Elephant Birds" were present on Madagscar until after the 16th Century (probably went extinct in or around the late 17th Century).
Rhea's are South American.
Emu's and Cassowaries are Australian.
Kiwi's are found in New Zealand. Moas were found in New Zealand but are now extinct.
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