I was taught that cooks should always remove bay leaves (Laurus nobilis) from food before serving.
I never wondered much about why. I vaguely imagined they were poisonous, but if I'd exerted half a brain cell, I would have realized it makes no sense that it would be safe to cook them with the food, but poisonous to consume them whole.
My mother-in-law happened to mention the reason the other day during one of our holiday gatherings: bay leaves are rigid and sharp enough to perforate the intestine.
Wow! Now there's a reason to remove them.
Monday, December 28, 2009
Attack of the Bay Leaves
Posted at 7:31 PM
Categories: Facts I Never Knew
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3 comments:
Amen! I once got a bay leaf stuck in my throat. It HURT!
I read a fiction book once where people were murdered by someone slipping chopped up tiger whiskers into their drinks -- to much the same end.
Once again: huh!
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