Show us what interesting stuff you've eaten on your trips.
Just be glad I travelled in the days LONG before digital photos! Some highlights

(but just in words - you'll have to use your imaginations!)
- Stewed beaver in Ghana. [No, doesn't matter what the menu said, beavers
don't live in Ghana. These were agouti (water rats) ... and delicious.]
- Basturma in Upper Egypt. [Think pastrami, with a thick black-peppered crust. But this was never beef - the best was made from donkey or camel meat.]
- Spatchcocked sparrows - also in Egypt; small, crunchy, and delicious. Freshly grilled by a street vendor on Ezebekiyah Square in Cairo. Damnit - the grilled crabs were superb too; small, and sweet.
- Sea Urchins in a beach cafe near Dakar, in Senegal, very briefly grilled. Exquisite.
- A perfectly normal lamb kebab beautifully cooked in a Cairo backstreet restaurant..... with a couple of sheep testicles slipped in for regular, respected customers. It's not just the flavour I remember, but the texture - and the "bite". The way they burst like meaty grapes in my mouth.
- Tripe in Yemeni soups. Sublime.
- "Elderly" mutton - wrapped in banana leaves, and
very slow roasted in soil pits. Quite the most exquisitely tender and flavoursome meat I've ever tasted. In a lorry drivers' caff in Bajil, Yemen.
- Camel kebabs - a little tougher and gamier than sheep!
- Melokhia (Jews' Mallow), a green vegetable. Finely chopped and cooked with care, in a highly garlicked chicken/rabbit stock. Green. Gelatinous. A bowl of slimy snot. And delicious. A matter of personal pride, that I can cook it far better than my Arab ex-partner.
For those who may be feeling nauseous at my (lack of?) taste, there are a few things I have tried .... and won't ever touch again. No way. Never. Fesikh (Egyptian; fermented fish sauce). Guavas (vile; just vile). Kimchi. And Middlesborough's chicken parmo.