Feral hogs typically look very similiar to domestic hogs, but often times have more variation in color and coat pattern. Although color can vary between white, red, and brown for recently hogs that have recently gone feral, the most common color in established feral hog populations is black. This is probably because predators, even hunters, select for easily spotted animals. In addition, because feral hogs are often times active at night, black blends well.
A mature feral hog may reach a shoulder height of 32 to 38 inches and weigh from 100 pounds up 400 pounds. Male hogs, or boars, are generally larger than the females, or sows. Hogs that are very large in size are generally not far removed from domestication, meaning that individual, its parents, or grandparents were likely domestic hogs.
Wild hogs are omnivores, generally categorized as opportunistic feeders, and typically consume between 3% and 5% of their total body mass daily. They exhibit a generalist diet consuming a variety of food sources which allows them to thrive across a wide range of environments. Throughout their range their diet is mostly herbivorous, shifting seasonally and regionally among grasses, mast, shoots, roots, tubers, forbs, and cacti as resource availability changes
Wild hogs have been listed as one of the top 100 worst exotic invasive species in the world. In 2007, researchers estimated that each wild hog carried an associated (damage plus control) cost of $300 per year, and at an estimated 5 million wild pigs in the population at the time, Americans spent over $1.5 billion annually in damages and control costs. Assuming that the cost-per-wild hog estimate has remained constant, the annual costs associated with wild pigs in the United States are likely closer to $2.1 billion today.
Most damage caused by wild hogs is through either rooting or the direct consumption of plant and animal materials
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I can find tofu everywhere, it's just basically always the same brand and "firmness" (this one specifically). The organic/vegan shops around me have flavoured tofu (though I prefer making my own marinades for that), seitan-based sausages, wheat-based steak replacements and the like, but I have not been able to find tofu with different "firmness" ratings as I've read people talking about here - they're all about the same consistency. Not sure why.
oh god yeah that one is so boring. For some reason there's no good tofu in France, whereas in German speaking countries you can buy at least white and smoked tofu at any regular grocery for under 2 bucks, and they're all different. Taifun's "ail des ours" is dope though
Thanks, I might try ordering some online to check the difference. The one I linked I still make work to be honest, it's just a lot of work - 1 hour pressing, 24 hours marinade, optionally breading it, and then into the pan it goes. Was a bit tired of soy sauce marinades; a honey+mustard marinade produced great results, for example, but still - maybe I only prefer seitan because the only tofu I can easily find is not that great.
I'm way too lazy, I never press or marinade my tofu. I just pan-fry it and add some starchy sauce so it thickens, usually with veggies. I guess I don't try to emulate meat dishes with tofu. Do you make your own seitan?
Yes I do; reducing the leftover broth to make an awesome sauce. Recipe here (though I'm tweaking it regularly).
oh I answered the same comment with my recipe, lol. I'll have to try yours!
Ah, you did ! And your suggestion to add some more spices to the dough directly helped tremendously, thanks :af-heart:
I'm glad! Though I can't use my broth as a sauce afterwards because it's already very strong, if I cooked it down it would kill me, so don't overdo it ^^
Right :-) maybe if you add some water then a thickening mix it'd work though. Worth trying at least. I dislike putting away the cooking broth - it contains tons of tasteful stuff, hence why I made a sauce of it.