By V.L.
Hendrikson, 3/20/12, Wall Street Journal
"Did you try the
scorpion?" asked Explorers Club member Lois M. Kahan.
Yes, actually—we loved it
with the snow pea, though it tasted more like vodka than our drink. And the
sauce served atop the roasted bull penis was divine. The duck tongue was rich
and flavorful, but the deep-fried earthworm was a bit bitter for our taste.
The Explorers Club
showcased these "sustainable culinary curiosities" at its 108th
annual dinner at the Waldorf-Astoria on Saturday night. Guests in black
tie—including actor Dan Aykroyd, filmmaker (and keynote speaker) Ken Burns and
astronaut Buzz Aldrin—clinked glasses and talked about their most recent
excursions to places ranging from Ethopia to Everest.
"No goat eyeball for
me," said one guest as she ordered an Explorers Martini, with a smoked-bourbon
sugar rim and a garnish of skewered eyeball (it was chewy, tasting—not
surprisingly—of gin).
Chef Gene Rurka has
planned the dinner's menu since about 1990, when he transformed the annual
event into a feast of far-flung foods.
"If you've never had
a cockroach, you should really try one," Mr. Rurka said, explaining how he
infused them with citrus, banana and apple. He's quick to point out that the
menu does not include "things you'd never want to eat, like whale, puffin,
shark." Which is to say, none of the animals offered are considered
threatened or endangered.
During the sit-down
dinner, medals and honors were handed out to several of the club's illustrious
members—deep-sea divers, paleontologists and conservationists. Traditional
Native American and Maori dancers took the stage, and zoologist Jim Fowler, a
former host of the television show "Wild Kingdom," helped wrap a
Burmese Python around Mr. Aldrin and Holly Heston Rochell, the late actor
Charlton Heston's daughter.
Guests were treated to
reel after reel of footage from destinations like the Galápagos, Mongolia and
the Badlands, encouraging them to consider the evening's theme, "How Far
is Far: Remote Exploration." There were also expressions of concern for
the oceans, wildlife and the overall environment.
"We've got 10
years" to save the oceans, said marine toxicologist Susan Shaw, who
received a citation of merit from the club. She appealed to the members to act,
saying that if any group could help, it would be the Explorers Club.
Once upon a time, what we
now think of as accessible was remote, said club President Lorie Karnath. The
Explorers Club flag has flown in places once considered unreachable—Antarctica,
Easter Island, the moon. These days, Mars is the next frontier, said Mr. Aldrin
in his closing remarks. "How far is far is constantly being
reinvented," he said.
That left us to wonder
what sort of culinary curiosities the explorers would bring back from the Red
Planet.
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