'The Kitchen Of The Unwanted Animal' May Be The Craziest Food Truck Yet

It serves pigeon. And parakeet.
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Food trucks are great and all, but there's little they can do to surprise us these days. Even the most specialized, out-there truck probably isn't going to shock us.

Or so we thought. Enter The Kitchen Of The Unwanted Animal, a food truck that serves pigeon, parakeet and "pony burgers."

Located in Amsterdam, The Kitchen Of The Unwanted Animal began as part of an urban art project in 2011. Founders Rob Hagenouw and Nicolle Schatborn made a stew out of goose -- an animal not normally eaten in Holland, and one that has become a problematic pest in the country.

Hunting laws were passed in the 1970s that protected geese. Since then, the birds' population has grown to risky heights. This can be particularly problematic for farmers and anyone flying in or out of Amsterdam Airport Schiphol. The large birds are attracted to the land surrounding the airport, which can become a safety issue. Geese can interfere with airplane traffic, landing and takeoff. A large coalition called the Netherlands Control Group for Bird Strikes (NRV) formed in 2010 to manage the risks of birds to aircrafts. According to NPR, 40,000 geese are now shot every year in Holland.

When Hagenouw and Schatborn found out that these geese were being thrown away, they were inspired to put them to better use. The food truck was born and the first item on the menu was Schipol Geese Croquettes. "Everyone likes it," Hagenouw told NPR.

More than just a culinary adventure, the goose meat is meant to spark a conversation about food norms and waste. According to the United Nations Environment Programme, every year the world throws away about one third of all the food produced for human consumption. Note that statistic only factors in "food for human consumption." It doesn't even count perfectly edible but wasted meat from animals killed not to feed people but to protect them. We're talking, of course, about the geese in Holland. In other words, the UNEP's estimate for how much food we throw away is a conservative one. Food waste is one of the most pressing issues of our time.

Chefs, food manufacturers and governments all over the world are recognizing the urgent need to combat food waste. It's becoming not only a priority, but a fashionable one at that. Dan Barber's Blue Hill restaurant has just transformed into food waste pop up called wastED for two weeks. Beloved chef April Bloomfield has long promoted the nose-to-tail ethos, and James Beard-nominated Southern chef Steven Satterfield just wrote a cookbook that celebrates using the whole vegetable. Think of The Kitchen Of The Unwanted Animal food truck as an avant-garde fashion trend.

Today, the truck serves pigeon, crawfish and parakeet. It's planning to start serving fallow deer and black crow soon. Perhaps most controversially, the truck sells horse meat presented as "My Little Pony burgers." While feedback on the horse meat is predictably mixed, the truck sells about 100 of the pony burgers every day at festivals. Hagenouw told NPR, "'Ah, they have My Little Pony burgers,' little girls will say. Most of the time the girls eat the burgers; it's the mothers who don't like it."

Wherever you fall on the horse meat debate, drawing attention to the problem of food waste is a concept we can all support.

[h/t NPR]

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Before You Go

Questionable Food Trucks
Rachael Ray's Dog Food Truck(01 of12)
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Rachael Ray has a food truck, but don't expect to find any delish or yum-o human treats on the menu. It's actually a food truck for dogs -- it hawks canine treats from the Food Network chef's line of dog food, Nutrish. (credit:Nutrish)
Walgreens Food Truck(02 of12)
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Walgreens really wants people to know that it sells fresh food -- which why it decided to roll out its "Up Market: Fresh" food truck, which has offered samples of juice, smoothies, frozen yogurt and coffee since it hit the road in November on a national tasting tour. (credit:Twitter: upmarketfresh)
Oscar Mayer's Revamped Weinermobile(03 of12)
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Looks like the Weinermobile recently got a hipster makeover. The 30-foot long vehicle made its debut in New York City earlier this year alongside celebrity chef Tyler Florence. Guess he's a fan? (credit:Oscar Mayer)
Taco Bell's Food Truck(04 of12)
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We're usually dubious of fast-food chains trying to cash in on the food truck trend, but Taco Bell's doesn't actually sell tacos -- it gives them out for free. (credit:Twitter: TacoBellTruck)
Jack In The Box's "Munchie Mobile"(05 of12)
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Jack in the Box is really playing up its appeal to stoner clientele with its "Munchie Mobile" -- seriously, that's what it's called --which debuted in March in San Diego. The 34-foot truck is covered with silk-screen images of a jacked up "Jack" at the helm of a Roman-style chariot borne by a tiger and a bear. Seriously. (credit:Jack In The Box)
Sizzler's "ZZ Truck"(06 of12)
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Sizzler's food truck, called the "ZZ Truck," offers a totally different menu than its brick-and-mortar locations, which we imagine is an attempt to appeal to diners who wouldn't otherwise be caught dead inside one of its restaurants. The truck has been zipping around since late 2011. (credit:Facebook: ZZTruck)
Red Robin's "YummmMobile"(07 of12)
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The name of Red Robin's food truck, the "YummmMobile," really is spelled that way. (credit:Facebook: Red Robin YUMMMMobile)
Johnny Rockets' Food Truck(08 of12)
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Johnny Rockets' first food truck debuted in July at the Washington Redskins' training camp. (The organization's owner, RedZone Capital, also owns Johnny Rockets.) It's designed to serve up a abbreviated version of the chain's classic menu, including hamburgers, shakes, fries, hot dogs and chicken tenders. (credit:Custom Concessions)
Subway's Food Truck(09 of12)
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Does a sandwich chain with more than 20,000 locations in the U.S. need a stable of food trucks? Subway seems to think so. (credit:Subway)
Applebee's Food Truck(10 of12)
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Applebee's debuted its own food truck in the summer of 2011, much to the chagrin of HuffPost editors. (credit:Wikimedia)
Chick-fil-A's Food Truck(11 of12)
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Chick-fil-A caused a stir when it unveiled a food truck in Washington, D.C. not long before it made national headlines for its management's anti-gay stance. (credit:Chick-fil-A)
Burger King's Food Truck(12 of12)
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Yes, Burger King has a food truck. It went on tour earlier this year, hitting up 40 cities across the country. It looks like the trucks are off the road for now, but we're keeping our eyes peeled. (credit:Burger King)

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