Ah well 2000 calories for 20 oz

cebiginalaska
cebiginalaska Posts: 280 Member
edited November 13 in Food and Nutrition
bsacwfiivp24.jpg

Replies

  • cebiginalaska
    cebiginalaska Posts: 280 Member
    Authentic Eskimo ice cream not store bought or made with milk like products.
  • LazyNightOwl
    LazyNightOwl Posts: 166 Member
    was it good? Just googled it and I'm not sure I'd be able to eat it, especially after seeing the calories for it lol
  • AwsBrah
    AwsBrah Posts: 5 Member
    Myron
  • missiontofitness
    missiontofitness Posts: 4,059 Member
    Whipped fat and berries...interesting.
  • cebiginalaska
    cebiginalaska Posts: 280 Member
    I love it. It tastes great.
  • WalkingAlong
    WalkingAlong Posts: 4,926 Member
    2000 calories for 20 servings of a dessert doesn't sound bad at all. Is a serving really an ounce?
  • HeySwoleSister
    HeySwoleSister Posts: 1,938 Member
    bsacwfiivp24.jpg

    Did you input the recipe? It never occurred to me that MFP would have ingredients like seal oil in the database, LOL. Aqutaq can be quite tasty, I agree, although I'm a bit of a wimp and need lots of berries involved...
  • cebiginalaska
    cebiginalaska Posts: 280 Member
    edited February 2015
    Yes I put in the recipe but it is not shared because everybody's is not quite the same. Yes they have seal oil in the database. I don't have it very often because of the calories but it is a very welcomed treat. Edit: I weighed everything with my scale and my preferred method is ounces :wink: when its all completed and ready to eat. So I just have to weigh how ever much I eat and log it :smiley:
  • dbmata
    dbmata Posts: 12,950 Member
    how would one make or have this in CONUS?
  • HeySwoleSister
    HeySwoleSister Posts: 1,938 Member
    Yes I put in the recipe but it is not shared because everybody's is not quite the same. Yes they have seal oil in the database. I don't have it very often because of the calories but it is a very welcomed treat. Edit: I weighed everything with my scale and my preferred method is ounces :wink: when its all completed and ready to eat. So I just have to weigh how ever much I eat and log it :smiley:

    Cool! I never would have expected seal oil in the database, glad it's so inclusive. Have you found their numbers for smoked salmon (what my AK village friends called "dry fish") to be accurate? I wonder if they are more correct for lox and other "wet" Euro preparations and not so much for the Alaska Native preps I grew to love when I lived there. I worked in Anchorage with a mainly Native population, so I was lucky enough to get to try all kind of delicious Native food! Where are you from in AK, if you don't mind my asking....

    Just as a point of curiosity...are you in favor of actual white fish like halibut minced up in your aqutaq? I've had it both ways and, like a true girl from Outside, I always tend to prefer whatever recipe uses more berries!
  • dinosaurparty
    dinosaurparty Posts: 185 Member
    TBH that stuff sounds amazing. I'd sacrifice a day of dieting to give it a try :)
  • WalkingAlong
    WalkingAlong Posts: 4,926 Member
    EWJLang wrote: »
    Yes I put in the recipe but it is not shared because everybody's is not quite the same. Yes they have seal oil in the database. I don't have it very often because of the calories but it is a very welcomed treat. Edit: I weighed everything with my scale and my preferred method is ounces :wink: when its all completed and ready to eat. So I just have to weigh how ever much I eat and log it :smiley:

    Cool! I never would have expected seal oil in the database, glad it's so inclusive. Have you found their numbers for smoked salmon (what my AK village friends called "dry fish") to be accurate?
    If it helps, "their numbers" are usually user-entered values. Seal oil and probably 95% of the database here is entries created by people like you and me. Some accurate, some not. (Though the seal oil entry must be decent because it's 9 calories per gram and I assume it's 100% fat, so it sounds accurate because fat is 9 calories per gram!)

  • dragthewaters
    dragthewaters Posts: 62 Member
    edited February 2015
    Wow just Googled it, it looks...interesting.

    Really cool though, I didn't even know this existed! I doubt I'll ever go to Alaska but it would be fun to try this someday.

    What does it taste like?
  • cebiginalaska
    cebiginalaska Posts: 280 Member
    EWJLang wrote: »
    Cool! I never would have expected seal oil in the database, glad it's so inclusive. Have you found their numbers for smoked salmon (what my AK village friends called "dry fish") to be accurate? I wonder if they are more correct for lox and other "wet" Euro preparations and not so much for the Alaska Native preps I grew to love when I lived there. I worked in Anchorage with a mainly Native population, so I was lucky enough to get to try all kind of delicious Native food! Where are you from in AK, if you don't mind my asking....

    Just as a point of curiosity...are you in favor of actual white fish like halibut minced up in your aqutaq? I've had it both ways and, like a true girl from Outside, I always tend to prefer whatever recipe uses more berries!

    For dry fish I just use any dry heat salmon like "Fish - Salmon, Atlantic, wild, cooked, dry heat" I don't think it is very accurate but it works. I can't find any nutrition data that also burns the skin to include it in the nutrition calorie estimation, I LOVE THE FISH SKIN it is like eskimo gum. For our fish in our aqutaq we use Northern Pike because we do not have halibut here. I am in rural alaska around the Bethel area.
  • cebiginalaska
    cebiginalaska Posts: 280 Member
    dbmata wrote: »
    how would one make or have this in CONUS?

    I don't know how authentic you guys could make it but there are recipes and directions online. Everybody makes it different.
  • HeySwoleSister
    HeySwoleSister Posts: 1,938 Member
    EWJLang wrote: »
    Cool! I never would have expected seal oil in the database, glad it's so inclusive. Have you found their numbers for smoked salmon (what my AK village friends called "dry fish") to be accurate? I wonder if they are more correct for lox and other "wet" Euro preparations and not so much for the Alaska Native preps I grew to love when I lived there. I worked in Anchorage with a mainly Native population, so I was lucky enough to get to try all kind of delicious Native food! Where are you from in AK, if you don't mind my asking....

    Just as a point of curiosity...are you in favor of actual white fish like halibut minced up in your aqutaq? I've had it both ways and, like a true girl from Outside, I always tend to prefer whatever recipe uses more berries!

    For dry fish I just use any dry heat salmon like "Fish - Salmon, Atlantic, wild, cooked, dry heat" I don't think it is very accurate but it works. I can't find any nutrition data that also burns the skin to include it in the nutrition calorie estimation, I LOVE THE FISH SKIN it is like eskimo gum. For our fish in our aqutaq we use Northern Pike because we do not have halibut here. I am in rural alaska around the Bethel area.

    Cool, I lived in Anchorage and Juneau about 20-25 years ago, had lots of friends and coworkers from the Bethel area. I even got to go out to Bethel and Kwig for a visit, which was great.

    I never could handle the skin on the dry fish. But, I worked with many Yupik folks who were more than happy to take it off my hands! I loved the fish flesh part of it, though, so delicious and with real smoke flavor, you can't get that deep flavor in the stuff that gets commercially made out of state.
  • dbmata
    dbmata Posts: 12,950 Member
    I can't even find a decent recipe. lol. I need to get up to Alaska, I think.
This discussion has been closed.