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Lamprey-si belut yang ganas

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Post time 13-2-2012 11:38 AM | Show all posts |Read mode
aku nak kongsikan sejenis belut yang ganas..mempunyi gigi bertaring. Lumprey ni akan melekat pada badan ikan dan menyedut isi ikan nie sampai kenyang..Lumprey ni juga mampu mencegah pembekuan darah..







  






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Post time 13-2-2012 11:51 AM | Show all posts
mencegah pembekuan darah ?
hbs blh bawa maut ke idak ni?
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Post time 13-2-2012 12:02 PM | Show all posts
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 Author| Post time 13-2-2012 12:20 PM | Show all posts
kenal kawal..tak boleh biarkan lama..nanti berlubang ..waaaa
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Post time 13-2-2012 12:52 PM | Show all posts
eehhh geli
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Post time 13-2-2012 01:01 PM | Show all posts
kalo pada bdn manusia?
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Post time 13-2-2012 01:02 PM | Show all posts
Errkkkkkkkk!! Mmg geli.........
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Post time 13-2-2012 01:48 PM | Show all posts
berlubang2 badan ikan tu?? eeeee kalau manusia???
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Post time 13-2-2012 02:14 PM | Show all posts
ganasnye!!!
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Post time 13-2-2012 02:22 PM | Show all posts
macam lintah pelahap lak...
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Post time 13-2-2012 02:24 PM | Show all posts
yukksss...
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Post time 13-2-2012 02:33 PM | Show all posts
takutnya la....
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Post time 13-2-2012 03:35 PM | Show all posts
Ngeri seyh tgk dari dekat
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Post time 13-2-2012 04:59 PM | Show all posts
serupa lintah ...
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Post time 13-2-2012 05:01 PM | Show all posts
laju je aku scroll ke bawah... x sanggup nak tengok lama2... rase semacam je gelinye...
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Post time 13-2-2012 05:11 PM | Show all posts
dengar2 lamprey ni sedap...

The sea lamprey (Petromyzon marinus), which evolved some 250 million years ago, belongs to a near-extinct family of jawless fishes. A lamprey is a long scale-less river fish which looks very much like an eel. Its downward slanting mouth consists of a large, tooth-lined sucking disc. Once it has latched onto the side of another fish, the lamprey opens a hole in its host by wiping its raspy tongue across the skin. The parasite then secretes an anticoagulant that keeps this wound open so that the lamprey can feed on the prey's blood and tissue.

The Lamprey Pie consists of this baked eel-like fish, set in cool syrup and covered with a large raised crust.

Most royal families of England were particularly fond of lampreys, as it was considered a delicacy at the English Courts. The tradition was for the people to present the monarch with a lamprey pie every Christmas. Baked lampreys were cooked in a syrup inside the pie. When the crust was opened, the liquid was mixed with wine and spices, and then spooned onto slices of white bread in a dish warmed over a chafer or hotplate. The lamprey was then cut into "gobbets a thin as a groat," and placed on top of the bread and sauce.

The City of Gloucester, in token of their loyalty to the royal family, presented a lamprey pie annually at Christmas to the sovereign. This was sometimes a costly gift, as lampreys, at that season, are very rare. The custom was discontinued in 1836, except on the occasion of coronations, because of the cost.

1135 - King Henry I (1068-1135) of England was known for his lust of eating the lamprey and is reported to have died from a "surfeit of lampreys," as the chronicles said, although most historians believe that he died from food poisoning. According to Charles Dickens (1812-187) in his novel A Child's History of England:

    He spent most of the latter part of his life, which was troubled by family quarrels, in Normandy, to be near Matilda. When he had reigned upward of thirty-five years, and was sixty-seven years old, he died of an indigestion and fever, brought on by eating, when he was far from well, of a fish called Lamprey, against which he had often been cautioned by his physicians . . .

1200s - So great was the demand for lamprey in the reign of King John (1167-1216) of England, that he issued a royal license to one Sampson, to go to Nantes to purchase lampreys for the use of the Countess of Blois. The same king issued a mandate to the sheriffs of Gloucester forbidding them, on their first coming in, to be sold for more than two shillings a piece. According to the Royal Cookbook, King John also levied a fine of 40 marks on the city of Gloucester for failing to"pay him sufficient respect in the matter of his lampern."

1230 - The website Gode Cookery - Tales of the Middle Ages, reports a royal order to the sheriff in Gloucester in the 1230s that stated:

    "...since after lampreys all fish seem insipid to both the king and the queen, the sheriff shall procure by purchase or otherwise as many lampreys as possible in his bailiwick, place them in bread and jelly, and send them to the king while he is at a distance from those parts by John of Sandon, the king's cook, who is being sent to him. When the king comes nearer, he shall send them to him fresh."

1472 - Platina, a.k.a. Bartolomeo Sacchi (1421-1481), a humanist, author and historian, wrote the first dated cookery book in 1472. The first half of his book discusses all kinds of food and spices, their nature, and their cultivation. The second half is drawn primarily from chef Martino d’Rossi and his Italian cookbook (most of Platina's recipes were borrowed from a manuscript written by Martino, who lived during the 1450-75 period).  In the English translated version of Platina's De honesta voluptate, by Elizabeth Buermann Andrews, he writes about an Eel Torta recipe, and also the fact that he doesn't like the pie:

    Eels in a Torta - To boiled eels that have been cut into bits, add either milk from other fish or finely chopped soft fat. Cut up a little mint and parsley. Add an ounce of pine kernels, a like amount of raisins, a little cinnamon, ginger, pepper, clove, and mix. Then spread it into your crust. You should add a little best oil. When it is nearly cooked, dissolve two ounces of ground almonds in verjuice with saffron and pass through a strainer and gently spread this over the whole top. Palladius Rutilius is marvellously fond of this dish, even though it is not good.

1886 - Famous chef Charles Elme Francatelli (1805-1876), late maitre d'hotel and chief cook to English Queen Victoria (1819-1901), wrote the following on lamprey:

    "one being the sea or marine lamprey, which is abundant at Gloucester and Worcester, where it is dresed and preserved for the purpose of being given as presents. The other sort, the lampern, is much smaller. This is to be found in the Thames and may easily be obtained at any London fishnger from the month of October till March, at which period they are in season. The lamprey is considered to be in best condition during the month of a April and May when it ascends the Severn

resepi lamprey..

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Post time 13-2-2012 07:28 PM | Show all posts
gelinya nengok
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Post time 13-2-2012 09:48 PM | Show all posts
eeeyuu takutnye skerinya tengok gigi yg banyak tu. aku penah tgk panorama ke apatah kat tv1 ada penternakan belut gak derang kasi makan ikan keli idup idup kat belut tu.. sian plak ikan keli tu tak leh nak wat apa2x..
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Post time 14-2-2012 10:22 AM | Show all posts
Lamprey = nama ala2 mak Lampir...
benda ni bahaya tak?kalu lintah sedut darah je,ni spai berlubang badan ikan...
bleh beza ke dgn belut biasa tu?
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Post time 14-2-2012 11:21 AM | Show all posts
klu lintah dia sedup darah, yg ni semu dia sedup....ngeri gak tu...
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