How to Cook a Cat

by Michael
(London, UK)

No..you try and cook me and you'll pay..-photo by Dan4th (Flickr - see link base of page)

Two useful tags. Click either to see the articles:- Toxic to cats | Dangers to cats

No..you try and cook me and you'll pay..-photo by Dan4th (Flickr - see link base of page)

17th February 2010: A top Italian food writer has described how to cook a cat on national Italian television and been sacked for it. Beppe Bigazzi offered the recipe on the Italian version of the British television program Ready Steady Cook despite being encouraged during a commercial break to stop. In Italy the programme is called La Prova del Cuoco.

Bigazzi suggested that for optimum flavour the meat should be soaked in spring water for three days before being stewed. So we are talking about a cat casserole.

He said that cat casserole is a famous dish in his home region of Valdarno, Tuscany, Italy. He has eaten cat casserole many times and he says that cat meat tastes better than chicken, pigeon and rabbit.

Later, after the phone lines nearly jammed because of a flood of complaints, he said he was joking, but not that much!

Apparently, in the 1930s and 1940s in Italy, in the countryside around Arezzo people ate cat. And cat eating was not confined to Arezzo but in times of hardship it was routinely practiced. In the city of Vicenza the people are referred to as magnagati. This means, "cat eaters" in English. To differentiate rabbit from cat, butchers used to leave the rabbit's head on! It makes you want to become vegetarian.

So for people who want to know how to cook a cat, the answer is cat casserole and any casserole recipe will probably do as long as you soak the meat as described. But don't do it, please, as it is illegal in most western countries as it would probably fall under animal cruelty laws that are fairly uniform across Europe and north America.


Note: Before I go on, I wish to make it clear that I hate the idea of eating cat meat. Why? A lot of people think it is OK as it is no different to rabbit or horse or any other animal, they argue. But I disagree strongly. Cats are domesticated wildcats. They are human companions and not farm livestock that has been bred, raised and killed under controlled conditions to be eaten - although factory farming is horrible too. It is illegal to kill cat to eat it and that apparently applies to Italy as well as England (and I am sure in many other countries).


But cat eating is not that rare. Here are some more horrible examples for the record:

  • 1529: Ruperto de Nola suggested how to cook a cat. This time is was spit roasted cat basted in garlic and olive oil. The recipe included the words, "Take the garlic with oil mixed with good broth so that it is coarse and pour it over the cat and you can eat it for it is a good dish".
  • In Spain hunters have historically tried to sell skinned cat as a hare to avoid the generally agreement that it is unacceptable to eat domestic or wild cat.
  • 2007: the Australians' hatred of the feral cat surfaced when at a cooking contest in Alice Springs feral cats were killed and cooked. Feral cat is tough apparently. I hope some Australians chocked on it.
  • China: cat meat is eaten in certain parts of China. But China's middle class dislike the practice and have pressured the authorities to ban it. Proposals are being made, it seems, to criminalise cat eating with a penalty of 15 days in prison.

In book entitled, "Extreme Cuisine" By Jerry Hopkins, Anthony Bourdain, Michael Freeman, the authors mention that under the media spotlight poor people in Argentina in 1996 where reported as eating their own domestic cats.

They also referred to another Australian feral cat story (there are many, believe me) in which in the same year of 1996, it was reported that a certain John Wamsley, the managing director of an oraganisation called Earth Sanctuaries, recommended "pussy tail stew". He suggested people catch and cook feral cats. In parts of Australia it is legal to "ground shoot" feral cats.

In China cat meat is meant to be good for health and as the people become wealthier they can pay more attention to their health.

So there you have it, how to cook a cat. A concept that is abhorrent to me and I am sure all the regulars to this website but something that is quite widespread. One final twist. Euthanised cats both feral and domestic find their way into cat food and preparing that is an all together different way to cook a cat.

Michael Avatar

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Ground shooting of feral cats in Autralia

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How to Cook a Cat

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Feb 09, 2012 Eating Cats Isn't Cruel
by: Anonymous

Eating cats is just as cruel as eating any other animal that can think. Cats eat meat, wouldn't that make them cruel, it is also healthy for humans to eat meat (not the corn fed crap meat from factory farms, but healthy animals that make healthy meat) Maybe I would eat a cat from a shelter or a really mean cat. I love cats and am working on a new breed (not a designer breed to make money off of, a natural breed from feral cats)


Feb 07, 2012 Soylent Green is People!
by: EatMe

There is a big problem with homeless people in most large cities. If we apply the suggestions on how to deal with stray cats (I don't believe in feral cats--only ones that have been mistreated by the least civilized animal on this planet--humans)...

Hmm. Read "A Modest Proposal" by Jonathan Swift...


Aug 26, 2011 Dinner
by: Anonymous

So no one has a recipe for a full grown maine coone? I think the tail will be the best it is so so long. Is there a good sauce to serve with cat tail; ever wonder what happened to the rest of the manx's tail?


Jul 26, 2011 Thanksgiving dinner? <-- Troll
by: Finn Frode, Denmark

Forgot to fill in my name - I'm not Anonymous. 😉

Finn Frode avatar


Jul 26, 2011 Thanksgiving dinner? <-- Troll
by: Anonymous

Troll. Ignore.

Finn Frode avatar


Jul 26, 2011 Thanksgiving dinner?
by: Anonymous

I have a full grown Maine Coone cat, he is about 25 pounds now. Do you think it would be ok to cook him for Thanksgiving, and if so do you have a good recipe...he has big meaty legs. Funny thing is I live in the city and have noticed that there are no longer a stray problem, i live in a very multicultural area. Im sure they have all been consumed by hungry neighborhood families


May 03, 2011 good eating
by: ctelwood@gmail.com

A big problem today is all the stray cats and dogs
Instead of pissing away tax payers hard earned money on extremely over inflated veterinary bills for the supposedly old farts that can't afford to have their pets spayed or neutered have an open hunting season on them.It would cut the population down to a manageable amount , save we taxpayers money and feed the elderly who can't make it on SOCIAL SECURITY alone.


Sep 18, 2010 I wonder.
by: Margaret

I wonder how many people continued to drink milk during the height of the mad cow disease?


Sep 15, 2010 Cat eating yes its a taboo
by: Denius

I cannot understand why it is so much worse to eat a 'pet' animal (especially when there are so many stray and unwanted cats) but eating a carnivore is, in general, taboo and not part of nature. Lions and other predators eat vegetarians, not other carnivores. Dog that is raised to be eaten (yes I have eaten it in Indonesia) is fed only rice or other non-animal food. It's hard to get a cat to eat only vegetarian. But if you could do so - say maybe soy products - it would be healthy and in my view permissible. But what is truly horrible, as mentioned above, is the practice of rendering animal carcasses to put back into animal feed. Now that is true cannibalism. And really misguided, that's one of the probable causes of mad cow disease.


Mar 14, 2010 Thanks Ruth and Finn.
by: Margaret.

Thanks Ruth and Finn for your comments, Ruth like all animal lovers I absolutely abhor declawing, that's one of the differences between pet owners and pet lovers.
Finn, I watched the clip of 'To serve Man' on Youtube, it's quite comical now but I think it got the message accross.
Margaret.x.


Mar 07, 2010 To Margaret
by: Ruth

Thank you Margaret,I'm writing another article for my blog on 'more ignorance about declawing' it's incredible what some people say.
I'm not on my own blog much now as Michael's PoC gets much more attention and visitors and I've 'met' some wonderful people on here !
I'll have a look at that website, thanks for that too.When we had a CP branch here, Babz (my sis)and I ran the lost and found part and it was the best feeling when we could match a lost cat with a found cat.

Kattaddorra signature Ruth


Mar 07, 2010 To Serve Man
by: Finn Frode, Denmark

I didn't know the 'To Serve Man' episode of Twilight Zone, but I easily found an excerpt on You Tube. Love the closing narative:
'The metamorphosis from being the ruler of a planet to an ingredient in someone's soup.' 😉

Finn Frode avatar


Mar 06, 2010 Well done Kathy.
by: Margaret McCann

Good for you! Isn't there enough meat eaten in the western world without starting on domestic animals? I can understand desperation driving somebody to eat a cat but obviously some people have no empathy for living (or dying) creatures.
For some reason it reminds me of an old 'Twilight Zone' episode (some people reckon I live there) when aliens landed on earth, they brought a book with them called 'To Serve Man' the human race in their arrogance thought that the aliens came to be our servants, what they actually came for was to serve man up on a plate. How would we like that?

Ruth, love your blogsite. Have you seen a website for lost and found cats, it's run by a lady called Sue, it's national and international. www.mymoggy.com spreading the word.
Margaret.


Feb 20, 2010 Good one Kathy
by: Ruth

Oh Kathy, that has really made me laugh and cheered me up no end !
What a good one ha ha haaaaaaa
You've given me the idea now...look out unwanted guests ......

Kattaddorra signature Ruth


Feb 19, 2010 kitty casserole
by: kathy

My idea of kitty casserole is to fix some Macaronis in a dish wih some cream soup and mix in a can of your favorite cat food. My cousins and I fixed this dish one time for a not so favorite drunken friend of ours. He didnt know the difference and ate quite well that day. I think the Italian cook should try it and add it to his favorite reciepes.


Feb 18, 2010 Flesh and blood
by: Ruth

It's no joke at all that an idiot broadcasted how to cook cats and I'm glad people complained.
Since becoming vegetarian I have become even more aware that all living beings whether human, animal, bird or fish are all made of the same 'material'
Eating any other being which had a face is eating dead flesh. Putting another being made of the same 'material' as me, inside me, I could never bring myself to do again !
A few years back an ex neighbour had been abroad and amongst the holiday photos was one of her eating a cooked guinea pig.I was horrified !
But what's the difference, if you eat meat you eat flesh whatever the animal the flesh once belonged to.
We really are wild animals ourselves.

Kattaddorra signature Ruth


Feb 17, 2010 How to cook a cat
by: Rudolph.A.Furtado

"One humans food is another humans poison", is very true regarding the eating habits of different cultures in different country's."dog Meat" is considered a delicacy in the Philippines , Korea and part of China. "Horse Slaughter" is common in some Western contry's and Japan, their meat used mostly in the "Pet Food Industry". "Ferdinand", the "Kentucky Derby Winner" was the most famous "Race Horse" to wind up at the " Slaughter House" in Japan, creating a furore in the U.S.A once this news became public, a cruel fate to a once majestic "Race-Horse"."Pork Meat" and "Beef Meat" consumption is considered sacrilageous amongst certain religions, yet a delicacy amongst most populations. In all this "Non- Vegetarian " taboo food habits of different cultures and religious backgrounds can "Cat Consumption" be considered unique? As cat lovers we can hope for the best of care and upkeep towards our own pets but definitely have no control over the rest of humanity.I am quite sure that "Cat Meat" is definitely consumed by humans amongst certain populations.
Rudolph avatar


Feb 17, 2010 Taboos
by: Finn Frode, Denmark

Taboos are a cultural thing and things eaten with pleasure in one culture may cause others to vomit, but as far as I know the meat of carnivors has a very limited following.
Maybe it's because early mankind discovered eating it had some bad effects on their health - or maybe just because it was too dangerous hunting for. This taboo is firmly rooted in myself too and I have no intention of changing that.
Back in the 70's I actually spoke to somebody who claimed he had cooked and eaten a cat and it tasted like rabbit. I was not however not entirely convinced, as his story could have been caused by something he smoked instead. 😉
But allow me to confess that I have in the past eaten a plant eating animal that a lot of people have tabooed from eating at all - namely horse. It's not seem very often in the butcher's shop these days, so I reckon demand has gone down...

Finn Frode avatar


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