In a Feb. 19, 2013 photo, Charlie Hyde, past president of the Algonquin Club of Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, displays his plate of food _ which includes muskrat meat _ while moving through the buffet line at the annual Muskrat Dinner at the Monroe Boat Club in Monroe, Mich. Hyde and his fellow history buffs chatted about local lore and heard from a speaker about the War of 1812, but the star of the show was the sherry-soaked rodent, boiled to perfection and plated. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)
In a Feb. 19, 2013 photo, Charlie Hyde, past president of the Algonquin Club of Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, displays his plate of food _ which includes muskrat meat _ while moving through the buffet line at the annual Muskrat Dinner at the Monroe Boat Club in Monroe, Mich. Hyde and his fellow history buffs chatted about local lore and heard from a speaker about the War of 1812, but the star of the show was the sherry-soaked rodent, boiled to perfection and plated. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)
In a Feb. 19, 2013 photo, a food preparer applies sherry to muskrat meat prior to the annual Muskrat Dinner at the Monroe Boat Club in Monroe, Mich. Members of the Algonquin Club of Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, and other muskrat aficionados _ about 80 in all _ chatted about local lore and heard from a speaker about the War of 1812, but the star of the show was sherry-soaked, boiled and plated. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)
In a Feb. 19, 2013 photo, servers dish out muskrat meat and other offerings in the buffet line at the annual Muskrat Dinner at the Monroe Boat Club in Monroe, Mich. Members of the Algonquin Club of Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, and other muskrat aficionados _ about 80 in all _ chatted about local lore and heard from a speaker about the War of 1812, but the star of the show was sherry-soaked, boiled and plated. (AP Photo/Mike Householder)
MONROE, Mich. (AP) ? Most of the menu read like a typical buffet, with soup, salad, turkey, pork and potatoes. But the first offering at the annual Muskrat Dinner in Michigan was distinctive: a pot of the rodent's meat mixed with creamed corn.
"Most beginners are a little hesitant to dive in, especially when they see the carcass laid out on the plate," said Ralph Naveaux, who helped organize the event. "But those of us that have been raised on it, we just adore them. It's almost an addiction."
Members of the Algonquin Club of Detroit and Windsor, Ontario, and other muskrat aficionados ? about 80 in all ? made their way to the Monroe Boat Club, 40 miles south of Detroit, for the recent event.
The history buffs chatted about local lore and heard from a speaker about the War of 1812, but the star of the show was sherry-soaked, boiled and plated.
For these folks, chowing down on muskrat was as natural as seeing the animals scurry around local waters.
Algonquin Club member Robert Lynch, of Kingsville, Ontario, was among those looking to sample a taste of history ? muskrat was a staple of the frontier diet of the region's French settlers.
According to Lynch, muskrat can't really be compared to other kinds of meat.
"I heard somebody say that it tasted like a strong, dark turkey meat. And that would probably be the closest," said Lynch, a 70-year-old retired elementary school teacher. "But there's nothing really to compare to it. It's just different. Some would say it was an acquired taste."
Muskrats, also known locally as "mushrats" or "marsh rabbits," are not rats, but they are members of the rodent family. They eat mostly plants and vegetation, are about 20-25 inches long (including their tails) and weigh between 2 and 5 pounds.
Area residents have been dining on the marsh-dwelling critters for centuries ? ever since trappers pared away the animal's odorous musk glands and determined its meat was good to eat
Charlie Hyde, past president of the Algonquin Club, made his way through the buffet line, sat down and began to dig in.
"Yum, yum," he crowed after taking in a fork-full of muskrat meat and creamed corn.
"This is actually about the best muskrat I've had in about a year. It's the only muskrat I've had in about a year," joked the 67-year-old retired history professor from Royal Oak, Mich.
"Actually, it's very good."
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Follow Mike Householder on Twitter at http://twitter.com/mikehouseholder
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