Photo: Santo Chino, Flickr
The "bizarre food" craze shows no signs of abating. Spurred on by television personalities and tell-all books, intrepid eaters continue to search the globe for the strangest -- and most off-putting -- edibles they can get their hands on. Which explains the skyrocketing popularity of the latest extreme tourist activity in Cambodia: hunting and eating tarantulas.
The hairy spiders are considered a delicacy in Kampong Cham Town and Sukon, and locals have begun offering visitors the chance to capture their own. The hunting party visits forests and cashew plantations to find the spiders, catching the nocturnal creatures while they're sleeping by poking sticks into their holes.
And then, cue the dinner bell. Deep frying the spiders is a popular technique -- they're served with salt and garlic. Prefer a drink? No worries. You can get your tarantula mixed into a rice wine and jack fruit cocktail.
It's hip to eat savory ice creams, and if you go to a food festival you're bound
to see something in the creamy, cold category no matter what the topic - even, yes,
We know there's always been weird food out there,
ever since man first started pounding tiny bits of grain to make a fine powder, mixing it with naturally-occurring
bacteria and warm liquid expressed from an animal, letting it sit for a couple of hours, heating it up, and eating it
(boy, bread's weird, isn't it?).











