Nope, just finished a big plateful - I really did feel like a good feed of them after your post. Mine has beef in it and plenty of cheese - real moo cow cheese, not dairy free.
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Oh chook, I beg to differ...
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Talk:Venezuelan Beaver cheese
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Is not this statement self-contradictory: "Venezuelan beavers apparently preferred, though Venezuela has no native beavers"? What this basically tells me is that this is just three words mentioned in a single Monty Python sketch, and not a real form of cheese at all. -R. fiend 14:08, 17 August 2005 (UTC)
The fact that it's fictional is already mentioned in the article. The statement you mention above, however, is in reference to "various recipes for Venezuelan Beaver cheese have in fact been published" - I haven't seen these recipes myself, but I can easily imagine them calling for the milk from Venezuelan beavers as described. Bryan 15:31, 17 August 2005 (UTC)But there are no Venezuelan beavers, or if they are, the fact that they are Venezuelan is completely incidental, sort of like British ostriches. And while Wikipedia does have plenty of entries for fictional things, it generally does not them for things mentioned once in passing by a single person in a minor skit. Is everything ever mentioned by John Cleese automatically encyclopedic? -R. fiend 15:50, 17 August 2005 (UTC)I agree that if Venezuelan beaver cheese had only been mentioned once in passing, it wouldn't merit an article. However, the article states that it has been referenced by people other than John Cleese. I haven't seen the alleged published recipes (and I'd like to see an actual citation), but I do read Triangle and Robert, and can confirm that Venezuelan beaver cheese was involved in it. Factitious 01:55, August 18, 2005 (UTC)Venezuelan beaver cheese is also mentioned in the game for Windows Computer Systems called: "Leisure Suit Larry 7" Published by "Sierra". In the part of the game where the character is located inside the kitchen of the ship, you have to look through all the food in there and when you find a gone bad fish wrapped in a magazine where you throw the fish away and put the magazine in the inventory and bring it back to read it, well it reads the recipe for "Venezuelan Beaver Cheese" where the ingredients are: "beaver milk from a Venezuelan beaver, a pinch of salt, rennet, lime juice substitute and a hint of mold". Also the back of the magazine has the recipe for Venezuelan beaver cheese and Kumquat quiche where the ingredients are beaver cheese and sliced kumquats.
I read just this morning on the web that the EU is clamping down on the use of meat terms like Hamburger when used by producers of vegan/vegetarian products made from extended vegetable protein of whatever.
There will be large fines apparently.
Regards Philip A
Sounds fair enough. How can ham be vegan?
I read that Argentina has beavers, so maybe they have visited Venezuela?
Do the British really have ostriches?
I AM NOT A VEGAN!