I’d rate them right below penguin… but certainly better than hummingbird if we’re talking about the flesh. As eggs go, it’s hard to beat hummingbird egg rancheros.
Unless you have a very tiny whisk.
They’re much smaller than a typical hen, weighing about 300 gm (10 ounces), and are roughly the same weight as a domestic pigeon.
I’ll just note that as a native bird they are protected from being killed in the US.
Further, the manufacturer makes no guarantee that the device will function in a manner that even remotely resembles the picture on the box, and disclaims any responsibility for any outcome to the user no matter how meticulously they have followed the directions. Ever.
They sure look a lot bigger than that - at least the ones I see. Maybe it’s just how elongated they are.
They are the acme of eating when it comes to southwestern desert fowl.
The store-bought stuff’s ok, but when you work for your meal, it just tastes that much better.
Here’s the real question. One that has plagued me since the day I realized cartoons were not documentaries: Do coyotes actually chase and eat roadrunners?
And Penguins is practically chickens.
From Wikipedia, though I don’t know if it’s tongue-in-cheek or factual:
I must go OOC so I can ask if there’s somewhere I can buy this in poster form?
Please don’t tell me Acme.
I Can Has Roderunner Poster?
Haven’t found one but it might be possible to enlarge the image to poster size.
I found an Etsy seller (calling themselves “acme products”) selling this as a poster but I am leery of buying something like this when it’s obviously not a licensed seller and they may just be printing it out themselves.
Is the image licensed?
It was shown in one of the Roadrunner cartoons where the coyote is explaining why he’s chasing such a scrawny bird.
That’s kind of counterintuitive, isn’t it? I mean, as they approach c, shouldn’t they get shorter?